Frederick Romberg

Frederick Romberg
Frederick Romberg in 1937
Born(1913-06-21)21 June 1913
Qingdao, China
Died12 November 1992(1992-11-12) (aged 79)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
NationalityGerman
OccupationArchitect
AwardsInaugural President’s prize, National Architecture 2006 - National 25 Year Award
PracticeGrounds Romberg and Boyd (Gromboyd), later Romberg and Boyd
BuildingsStanhill Flats, Newburn Flats, ETA Foods Factory, MacFarland Library, Ormond College, ICI Staff Recreation Centre, Holy Trinity Lutheran Church

Frederick Romberg, (Friedrich Sigismund Hermann Romberg), (21 June 1913, in Qingdao – 12 November 1992, in Melbourne), was a Swiss-trained architect who migrated to Australia in 1938, and became a leading figure in the development of Modernism in his adopted city.

Romberg was best known as the "middle term" in the architectural partnership of ‘Gromboyd‘ - Grounds, Romberg and Boyd (1953-1962), as well as for some landmark apartment buildings in 1940s Melbourne. He brought an awareness of great European academic tradition, and the Modernist architecture of Switzerland and Germany, re-formed into architecture appropriate to Australia. His buildings are characteristically empiricist in intention and form, using local materials within the formal framework of modernism.