1852 in architecture

The year 1852 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.

Events

 * February – Augustus Pugin suffers a breakdown and is admitted to a private asylum, Kensington Housea, London, days after designing the clock tower for the Palace of Westminster.
 * June – Augustus Pugin is transferred to the Royal Bethlem Hospital.
 * date unknown – Thomas M. Penson restores a house at 22 Eastgate Street, Chester, England, in black-and-white Revival style.

Buildings completed

 * January 1 – Battle railway station, East Sussex (England), designed by William Tress, is opened.
 * February 3 – The House of Commons of the United Kingdom in the Palace of Westminster, London (England) designed by Charles Barry and Augustus Pugin, is opened.
 * May 15 – Teatro Comunale Alighieri in Ravenna, designed by Tommaso and Giambattista Meduna, is opened.
 * October 14 – London King's Cross railway station, designed by Lewis Cubitt, is opened.
 * Helsinki Cathedral, Finland, designed by Carl Ludvig Engel, is completed.
 * Chapel of St Edmund's College, Ware, England, designed by Augustus Pugin in 1845, is completed.
 * Rolle Mausoleum, Bicton, Devon, England, reconstructed by Augustus Pugin, is completed.
 * Siegestor (Victory Gate) in Munich, Bavaria, designed by Friedrich von Gärtner, is completed by Eduard Mezger.
 * Åmodt bro suspension bridge, Oslo, Norway.
 * Philippi Covered Bridge, West Virginia, United States.

Awards

 * RIBA Royal Gold Medal – Leo von Klenze.
 * Grand Prix de Rome, architecture – P.R.L. Ginain.

Births

 * June 25 – Antoni Gaudí, Catalan Modernist architect (died 1926)
 * July 4 – E. S. Prior, English Arts and Crafts architect and theorist (died 1932)

Deaths

 * May 7 – James Savage, English architect (born 1779; buried in his St Luke's Church, Chelsea)
 * May 8 – Giuseppe Jappelli, Italian neoclassical architect and engineer (born 1783)
 * July 5 – Matthew Habershon, English architect (born 1789)
 * September 14 – Augustus Pugin, English architect, designer, artist and critic (born 1812; "convulsions followed by coma")