1836 in architecture

The year 1836 in architecture involved some significant events.

Buildings

 * January – Charles Barry wins the competition for the design of a new Palace of Westminster in London in Gothic Revival style.
 * January 26 – Lansdowne Bridge in Lansdowne, New South Wales, Australia, designed by David Lennox, is opened.
 * May 5 – St Ignatius Church, Preston, Lancashire, England, designed by Joseph John Scoles, is opened.
 * July 29 – The Arc de Triomphe in Paris, completed by Jean Chalgrin following the death of Louis-Étienne Héricart de Thury, is inaugurated.
 * October 4 – Rebuilt Christiania Theatre opens in Norway.
 * Fleetwood Customs House in England, designed by Decimus Burton, is completed.
 * Mexican Hothouse in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris, by Charles Rohault de Fleury, is completed; an early example of French glass and metal architecture.
 * Glynnwood Plantation is built in Glynn, near Pointe Coupee, Louisiana.
 * Inverness Castle, Scotland, designed by William Burn, is built.

Publications

 * August 4 – A. W. N. Pugin publishes his Contrasts, a treatise on the morality of Catholic Gothic architecture.

Awards

 * Grand Prix de Rome, architecture: François-Louis-Florimond Boulanger and Jean-Jacques Clerget.

Births

 * March 2 – E. R. Robson, English architect specialising in schools (died 1917)
 * March 20 – James Cubitt, English architect specialising in nonconformist chapels (died 1912)

Deaths

 * June 7 – Henry A. Baker, Irish architect (born 1753)