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  1. John Hargrave (architect) Omagh Courthouse, County Tyrone, was completed in 1814. John Hargrave ( c. 1788 −1833) was an Irish architect who was active mainly in Ireland in the early 19th century. [1] Born in Cork c. 1788, Hargrave was the third son of architect Abraham Addison Hargrave (1755−1808).

  2. Hiroshi Hara (原 広司, Hara Hiroshi, born 9 September 1936) [1] is a Japanese architect and author on architecture. His major works, including Kyōto Station, the Umeda Sky Building in Osaka, the Yamato International building in Tokyo, the Sapporo Dome in Hokkaidō, and other important structures in Japan, have earned many awards.

  3. John Patrick Sheehy (born January 19, 1942) is an internationally known American architect. He was previously the Chairman of the Board of Principals at the architectural firm The Architects' Collaborative (TAC), working there from 1970 until 1994. He is also a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects [1] and a member of the Royal ...

  4. From 1996 to 1998, he served as president of the Royal Society of Ulster Architects. [citation needed] He was chief executive of Health Estates Agency (2003-2008) and later deputy secretary and chief estates officer at DHSSPS from 2008-2013. [citation needed] In 2013, he retired from the role of deputy secretary and chief estates pfficer (DHSSPS).

  5. James Charles Cavanagh was born in Melbourne in 1874, [1] the third son of an Irish born builder and contractor, John Cavanagh [1] ( – 18 March 1895 [2] ). In 1881 his family moved to Adelaide, South Australia, where his father took on a position as supervisor of public buildings in the Government Architect's Department. [2]

  6. John Wells (1789–1864), was an English-born architect who had his works displayed at the Royal Academy in the 1820s. He is best known for his work in Montreal , Quebec , most notably the Bank of Montreal Head Office and St. Anne's Market , that afterwards housed the Parliament Buildings at Montreal.

  7. John Henry Price (1867 – 10 April 1944) was the first person to hold the office of 'City Architect' in Manchester Corporation's newly created City Architect's Department of 1902. He was responsible for a number of well known Manchester landmarks, and is credited with influencing the design of other buildings constructed during his tenure, such as Manchester Fire Station.