
Gottfried Boehm, architect of concrete churches, dies at 101
ABC News
German architect Gottfried Boehm, who was famous for his concrete brutalist-style church buildings, has died at 101
BERLIN -- German architect Gottfried Boehm, who was famous for his concrete brutalist-style church buildings, has died at 101. Boehm's Cologne architecture office on Thursday confirmed his death on Wednesday night but didn't give a cause. Boehm, who was born in Offenbach in central Germany in 1920, built more than 50 churches, many of them in his signature concrete style. He was one of the most famous postwar architects in the country and in 1986 became the first German to receive the renowned Pritzker Architecture Prize. One of his most best-known sacral buildings is the Catholic pilgrimage church Mary, Queen of Peace, in Neviges near the western city of Duesseldorf. Built in the brutalist style and consecrated in 1968, the church became famous for its irregular roof and forum-like interior.More Related News
