Frederick Romberg Architect

Frederick Romberg, (Friedrich Sigismund Hermann Romberg), (21 June 1913 in Tsingtao - 12 November 1992, Melbourne), was a Swiss-trained architect who migrated to Australia in 1938.Romberg was known as the "middle term" in the architectural partnership of Grounds, Romberg and Boyd (Gromboyd) formed in Melbourne 1953 and dissolved in 1962. Ascribed his Swiss education as well as his awareness of great European academic tradition, he brought in the heritage of Switzerland and Germany to be re-formed into architecture appropriate to Australia with an intellectual preparation of design and execution. He led the way in exploring empiricist reinterpretation of modernism in the 1940s, His buildings are characteristically empiricist in intention and form, using local materials within the formal framework of modernism. In the 1950s, his buildings adopted forms of Australian rural architecture, and, beginning in 1983, gradually became well known in outskirt suburb areas of Melbourne’s architectural community.

Personal facts

Frederick Romberg
Birth dateJune 21, 1913
Birth place
Qingdao
Date of deathNovember 12, 1992
Place of death
Australia , Melbourne

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Architect

Significant building
MacFarland Library Ormond College
Newburn Flats
ETA Foods Factory

Frederick Romberg on Wikipedia

External resources

  1. http://users.tce.rmit.edu.au/E03159/ModMelb/mm2/lect/30%27s%20&%2040%27s/fr/html/fr.html