Test your knowledge of famous architects: Wright, Utzon, Gehry, Zaha Hadid, Le Corbusier, and more. 10 questions.
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Which architect designed Fallingwater, the house cantilevered over a waterfall in Pennsylvania?
Answer: Frank Lloyd Wright
Frank Lloyd Wright designed Fallingwater (1939) for the Kaufmann family — its dramatic concrete cantilevers hovering over Bear Run creek are the definitive statement of Wright's Organic Architecture, integrating building and nature.
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Which architect won the competition to design the Sydney Opera House with a concept sketched on an envelope?
Answer: Jørn Utzon
Danish architect Jørn Utzon won the 1957 competition with his visionary shell-roof design. The project was notoriously troubled — Utzon resigned in 1966 before completion, and the building opened in 1973.
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The Centre Pompidou in Paris, with its coloured pipes and ducts worn on the outside, was designed by which pair of architects?
Answer: Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers
Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers won the 1971 competition for the Centre Pompidou — their inside-out design, with colour-coded mechanical systems exposed on the facade, became the founding statement of High-Tech architecture.
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Which architect designed the titanium-clad Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, which single-handedly revitalised a post-industrial city?
Answer: Frank Gehry
Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Bilbao (1997) is the canonical example of the 'Bilbao effect' — the idea that a single iconic building can transform a city's economy and cultural identity. Its titanium scales shimmer like fish scales by the Nervión river.
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Who designed the glass pyramid entrance to the Louvre in Paris?
Answer: I.M. Pei
I.M. Pei designed the Louvre Pyramid (1989), commissioned by President Mitterrand as part of the Grand Travaux. The 21-metre glass pyramid provides natural light to the underground lobby and is now one of Paris's most recognised landmarks.
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Which architect founded the Bauhaus school in Weimar in 1919, uniting fine art and craft in a single curriculum?
Answer: Walter Gropius
Walter Gropius founded the Bauhaus in Weimar in 1919, with the manifesto of uniting all creative arts under the idea that craft was the basis of all art — the school's influence on modern design, typography, and architecture remains immeasurable.
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What historic achievement did Zaha Hadid reach when she won the Pritzker Prize in 2004?
Answer: First woman to win the Pritzker Prize
Zaha Hadid became the first woman to win the Pritzker Architecture Prize in 2004 — the award's 'Nobel Prize of architecture' — recognised for buildings like the MAXXI in Rome and the Heydar Aliyev Centre in Baku.
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Le Corbusier's Five Points of Architecture defined his modernist manifesto. Which of these was NOT one of his five points?
Answer: Symmetrical stone facade
Le Corbusier's Five Points were: pilotis, roof garden, free floor plan, horizontal ribbon windows, and free facade — a symmetrical stone facade is the opposite of his modernist principles, rooted in historical styles he rejected.
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Which characteristic material is most closely associated with the work of Japanese architect Tadao Ando?
Answer: Exposed board-formed concrete
Tadao Ando is celebrated for his precise, poetic use of board-formed exposed concrete — surfaces that bear the texture of the wooden formwork are left raw, creating a serene, meditative quality in buildings like the Church of the Light in Osaka.
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Oscar Niemeyer designed the civic buildings of Brasília — but who was responsible for the urban masterplan of the new Brazilian capital?
Answer: Lúcio Costa
Lúcio Costa won the 1956 competition for Brasília's urban plan with a design shaped like a bird or airplane — Niemeyer designed the iconic buildings (Congress, Supreme Court, Presidential Palace) that populate Costa's axial plan.