Axel Anderberg

Anderberg received his education in the architectural school of the Royal Institute of Technology (1880–84), and the architecture section of the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts (1884–87), after which he spent a year traveling to Germany, France and Italy.

After having won the contest for the building he spent additional time abroad for the particular purpose of studying theatre architecture.

[3] During his early career he built several theatres, working mostly in a mix of neo-baroque and Art Nouveau, while his later work largely consisted of buildings for scientific and academic institutions in the purer neo-classicist style of the period.

Anderberg built the large new complex for the Swedish Museum of Natural History (completed 1916) at Frescati outside Stockholm, and later several other scientific institutions in the same area, including the building for the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

For Uppsala University, Anderberg built the Paleontological Museum (1929) and an extension to the Carolina Rediviva.

The Royal Swedish Opera , Stockholm