1770 in architecture
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Buildings and structures 
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The year 1770 in architecture involved some significant events.
Buildings

Palace of Inquisition, Cartagena
- Radcliffe Infirmary in Oxford, England, designed by Stiff Leadbetter and John Sanderson, completed
 - Shire Hall, Nottingham, England, designed by James Gandon and Joseph Pickford, completed
 - New National Mint of Bolivia in Potosí completed
 - Palace of Inquisition in Cartagena, Viceroyalty of New Granada, completed about this date
 - Liria Palace in Madrid, designed by Ventura Rodríguez, built about this date
 - Church of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, probably designed by Manuel Alves Setúbal, consecrated
 - Church of Santissimo Nome di Maria e degli Angeli Custodi, Genoa, begun in 1712, completed about this date
 - Church of La Magdalena, Getafe, Spain, designed by Alonso de Covarrubias and Juan Gómez de Mora and begun in the 16th century, completed
 - Wooden Saint Parascheva Church, Desești, Romania, built
 - New Théâtre du Palais-Royal (rue Saint-Honoré), Paris, designed by Pierre-Louis Moreau-Desproux, opened
 - New L'Opéra of the Palace of Versailles, France, designed by Ange-Jacques Gabriel, opened
 - College Edifice, Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island, designed by Robert Smith of Philadelphia, built
 - Somerset House, Park Lane, London, designed and built by John Phillips, completed
 - Zois Mansion in Ljubljana, Slovenia, completed
 -  Summer residences in the Frederiksberg district of Copenhagen, Denmark, built about this date include
- Rolighed
 - Store Godthåb, probably designed by Johan Christian Conradi
 
 - Temple of Friendship in Sanssouci Park, Potsdam, Prussia, designed by Carl von Gontard, completed
 
Births
- 1765/1770 - Fryderyk Bauman, Polish architect and sculptor-decorator (died 1845)
 - Approximate date - Daniel Robertson, American-born British architect and garden designer (died 1849)
 
Deaths
- March 27 - José Ramírez de Arellano, Spanish baroque architect and sculptor (born 1705)
 - John Bastard, English architect working in Blandford Forum (born c.1688)
 - George Tully, English architect working in Bristol
 
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