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  1. Opened in 1963 and widely regarded as one of the most architecturally important buildings of its era, the Engineering Building at Leicester is utterly distinctive. It stands out among the older and new parts of campus, forming (with the Attenborough Tower and the Charles Wilson Building) one third of the architectural triptych that defines the ...

  2. Leicester, United Kingdom: Address: University Road, LE1 7RH: Coordinates: Current tenants: University of Leicester: Construction started: 1959: Completed: 1963: Design and construction; Architect(s) James Stirling, James Gowan: Structural engineer: Frank Newby

  3. 20 de ene. de 2020 · Engineering Building in Leicester Technical Information. Architects: James Stirling & James Gowan; Location: Leicester University, Leicester, England; Client: University of Leicester; Topics: Brick, Glass, Educational Architecture, Universities; Style: Postmodernism; Project Year: 1959-1963

  4. For now, however, the Stirling and Gowan achievement can be thoroughly measured in their just-finished Engineering Building at Leicester University. Its design goes back to 1959, although it was occupied by students and faculty for the first time only in the fall of 1963, and its interior arrangements were still incomplete in certain details at ...

  5. The Engineering Department University of Leicester by architect James Gowan was built in Leicester, England in 1960 - 1963. It was then remodeled in 1988, 1999, 2015-2017. Engineering Department University of Leicester - Data, Photos & Plans - WikiArquitectura

  6. Inaugurado en 1963 y considerado como uno de los edificios más importantes desde el punto de vista arquitectónico de su época, el Edificio de Ingeniería de la Universidad de Leicester, proyecto de los arquitectos James Stirling y James Gowan, es absolutamente distintivo.

  7. Form and function. Built in 1959-63, the new building looked different from anything else planned for the campus. Professor Edward Parkes took the lead in specifying the functionality of the building which led to a unique design in order to satisfy the needs of the engineers.