Hakon Ahlberg

Gripsholm Castle, Mariefred
Former Brunnsvik Folk High School, Ludvika Municipality

Hakon Ahlberg (June 10, 1891, Harplinge – March 12, 1984, Stockholm) was a Swedish architect, editor and author, best known as the official architect for the repair and restoration of Gripsholm Castle near the town of Mariefred in central Sweden. He was one of the founding members and first president of SAR, the Swedish Architects’ Association, and was well known as an active participant in architectural debate in Sweden, and was editor-in-chief of the Swedish architectural journals Arkitekten in 1922 and Byggmästaren 1922–24. He was also president of the Swedish Academy of Fine Arts 1954–62.

Ahlberg studied architecture at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, completing his studies in 1914. He also undertook studies at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts in 1914–1917, one of his most influential teachers being Ivar Tengbom.

Ahlberg's principal role in Swedish architecture was not as a “leader of style” but as an idealistic leader, as an organiser and spokesman of the Swedish architectural profession. He was president of the Swedish Association of Architects.[1]

As an architect he was part of the brief movement called Nordic Classicism, but with clear links with Swedish vernacular architecture, as expressed in the simple wooden houses he designed for the Swedish trade union-run folk high school in Brunnsvik, Ludvika parish in 1928. He designed a number of churches (e.g. Mälarhöjden Church, Stockholm, 1929), museums, and hospitals as well as housing. His most important works are the Arts and Crafts pavilion at the Gothenburg exhibition in 1923, and the PUB department store in central Stockholm from 1924. Ahlberg designed a number of hospitals, including the Sidsjön mental hospital in Sundsvall 1939–44, the Children's clinic in Oslo, Norway (1946–50), and the University Hospital in Maracaibo in Venezuela (1946–54).

Mälarhöjden Church, Stockholm, 1929

In 1957 Ahlberg was awarded the Prince Eugen Medal[2] and in 1973 the Alvar Aalto Medal.

References and sources

References
  1. The International Who's Who 1943–44. 8th edition. George Allen & Unwin, London, 1943, p. 7.
  2. "Prins Eugen Medaljen" (PDF). Retrieved 14 February 2015.
Sources

External links

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