1680s in architecture

Buildings and structures

 * 1680
 * St Clement Danes, London, designed by Christopher Wren, is completed.
 * Church of San Lorenzo, Turin, designed by Guarino Guarini, is substantially completed.
 * Star Building at Windsor Castle and Cassiobury House in England, designed by Hugh May, are completed; and his work on St George's Hall, Windsor Castle, is beginning.
 * 1681
 * Basilica of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice, designed by Baldassare Longhena in 1631, is dedicated.
 * Sobieski Royal Chapel in Gdańsk, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.
 * Old Ship Church Puritan meeting house in Hingham, Massachusetts, which will become the oldest church building in continuous ecclesiastical use in the United States, is erected.
 * Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragoza, Aragon, is begun to the design of Francisco Herrera the Younger (completed 1754).
 * 1682
 * Abingdon County Hall in Oxfordshire, England, designed by Christopher Kempster, is completed.
 * Tom Tower at Christ Church, Oxford, England, designed by Christopher Wren, is completed.
 * College of Matrons in Salisbury, England, probably designed by Christopher Wren, is built.
 * Khan al-Wazir in Aleppo is completed.
 * 1683
 * The Old Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, probably designed by the mason Thomas Wood, is opened, the first purpose-built university museum (the modern day Museum of the History of Science).
 * Ramsbury Manor in Wiltshire, England, designed by Robert Hooke, is completed (his Ragley Hall in Warwickshire is nearing completion at this time).
 * Château de Dampierre in France, designed by Jules Hardouin Mansart, is completed.
 * Église Saint-Thomas-d'Aquin (Paris), designed by Pierre Bullet, is consecrated.
 * 1684
 * The Royal Hospital Kilmainham in Dublin, Ireland, designed by William Robinson, is completed as a home for retired soldiers.
 * The Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in France, designed by Jules Hardouin Mansart, is completed.
 * The Château de Marly in the Marly-le-Roi commune is completed for Louis XIV.
 * The Canal de l'Eure with its notable aqueduct, designed by the military engineer Lieutenant Général Vauban to serve Versailles for Louis XIV, is begun; work is abandoned about 1690.
 * Middle Temple gateway, Fleet Street, London, designed by Roger North, is completed.
 * The original Kaohsiung Confucius Temple is built.
 * 1685
 * Ishak Pasha Palace in eastern Anatolia is begun.
 * 1686
 * The Het Loo Palace at Apeldoorn in the Netherlands, designed by Jacob Roman and Johan van Swieten and begun in 1684, is completed; the garden is designed by Claude Desgotz.
 * Kinross House in Scotland, designed by Sir William Bruce for himself, is begun.
 * 1687
 * Neanderkirche in Düsseldorf (begun 1683) is completed.
 * The rebuilding of Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, England, begins under William Talman.
 * The Parthenon in Athens is extensively damaged in the Morean War.
 * 1688
 * Belton House in Lincolnshire, England, perhaps designed by William Winde, is completed.
 * Friends meeting house at Jordans, Buckinghamshire, England.
 * 1689
 * Windsor Guildhall in Berkshire, England, designed by Sir Thomas Fitz (or Fiddes), is completed by Christopher Wren.
 * Swallowfield Park, near Reading, Berkshire, England, is designed by William Talman.
 * Bieliński Palace in Otwock Wielki, Poland, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.
 * Lubomirski bathing pavilion at Łazienki Palace, Warsaw, Poland, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.

Events

 * 1682: October 27 – The city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is founded by William Penn, laid out on a grid pattern.
 * 1689: May – William Talman appointed Comptroller of the King's Works in England.

Births

 * 1682
 * William Benson, English amateur architect and politician (died 1754)
 * December 23 – James Gibbs, Scottish-born architect (died 1754)
 * 1683 – Thomas Ripley, English architect (died 1758)
 * c. 1685 – William Kent, English architect and designer (died 1745)
 * 1686
 * September 29 – Cosmas Damian Asam, German Baroque architect and painter (died 1739)
 * Giacomo Leoni, Venetian-born architect (died 1746)
 * 1687: January 27? – Balthasar Neumann, German architect (died 1753)
 * 1689: October – William Adam, Scottish architect (died 1748)

Deaths

 * 1680: November 28 – Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Italian sculptor and architect (born 1598)
 * 1682: February 18 – Baldassare Longhena, Venetian Baroque architect (born 1598)
 * 1684
 * February 20 – Roger Pratt, English gentleman architect (born 1620)
 * February 21 – Hugh May, English architect (born 1620)
 * 1688: October 9 – Claude Perrault, French architect (born 1613)