Eugene (Evžen) Rosenberg (24 February 1907, in Topoľčany – 21 November 1990, in London)[1] was a Slovak modernist architect.
[3] In between his studies in 1929 he worked with Le Corbusier in Paris and Josef Havlíček and Karel Honzík in Prague.
[5] In 1940 Rosenberg was interned and sent to Australia, kept first in Hay Gaol, in New South Wales, and then in Camp Tatura, Victoria returning to London in 1942.
Mardall[7] and they were responsible for a number of innovative architectural projects such as Gatwick Airport, the John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford and the Manchester Magistrates Court.
[8] Rosenberg spent several years following his retirement working on a book that he hoped would inspire alliances between artists and architects.