List of Buildings
- 1948–50: Rose Seidler House, Wahroonga (Sydney), Australia
- 1949–51: Marcus Seidler House, Turramurra (Sydney), Australia
- 1950: Meller House, Castlecrag (Sydney), Australia
- 1952: Hutter House, Turramurra (Sydney), Australia – since greatly modified such that hardly anything of Seidler's design remains.
- 1952–53: Williamson House, (also known as Igloo House), Mosman (Sydney), Australia
- 1957: Glass House, Chatswood (Sydney), Australia
- 1959: Canberra South Bowling Club, Griffith (Canberra), Australia
- 1960: Ithaca Gardens, Elizabeth Bay (Sydney), Australia
- 1961: Grimson & Rose Exhibition House, Pennant Hills (Sydney), Australia
- 1961: Blues Point Tower, McMahons Point (Sydney), Australia
- 1961: Wood House, Penrith (Sydney), Australia
- 1961–67: Australia Square Tower, Sydney, Australia
- 1962: Ski Lodge, Thredbo, Australia
- 1963: Muller House, Port Hacking (Sydney), Australia
- 1963–65: Rushcutters Bay Apartments, Rushcutters Bay (Sydney), Australia
- 1964–67: NSW Housing Commission Apartments, Roseberry (Sydney), Australia
- 1964–68: Garran Group Housing, Canberra, Australia
- 1965–66: Arlington Apartments, Edgecliff (Sydney), Australia
- 1966–67: Harry and Penelope Seidler House, Killara (Sydney), Australia
- 1969–70: Condominium Apartments, Acapulco, Mexico
- 1970–74: Edmund Barton Building (formerly Trade Group Offices), Canberra, Australia
- 1971–72: Gissing House, Wahroonga (Sydney), Australia
- 1972–75: MLC Centre, Sydney, Australia
- 1973–77: Embassy of Australia, Paris, France
- 1973–94: Harry Seidler Offices and Apartments, Milsons Point (Sydney), Australia
- 1978–80: Karalyka Centre (formerly Ringwood Cultural Centre) (many non-Seidler alterations), Ringwood (Melbourne), Australia
- 1978–82: 72 Apartments, Broadbeach (Gold Coast), Australia
- 1979–82: Hillside Housing, Kooralbyn (Gold Coast), Australia
- 1980–84: Hong Kong Club Building, Hong Kong Central
- 1981–83: Merson House, Palm Beach (Sydney), Australia
- 1982–84: Monash City Council (formerly Waverley Civic Centre), Glen Waverley (Melbourne), Australia
- 1982–88: Grosvenor Place, Sydney, Australia
- 1983–84: Hannes House, Cammeray (Sydney), Australia
- 1983–86: Riverside Centre, Brisbane, Australia
- 1984–89: 9 Castlereagh St (formerly Capita Centre), Sydney, Australia
- 1985: Garden Island Dockyard Workshop, Garden Island (Sydney), Australia
- 1985–89: 1 Spring Street (formerly Shell House), Melbourne, Australia
- 1987: Hilton Hotel, Elizabeth Street, Brisbane
- 1987–91: QV1, Perth, Australia
- 1989–91: Hamilton House, Vaucluse (Sydney), Australia
- 1990: Monash Gallery of Art (with non-Seidler additions), Wheelers Hill (Melbourne), Australia
- 1990–98: Horizon Apartments, Darlinghurst (Sydney), Australia
- 1993–98: Wohnpark Neue Donau, Vienna, Austria
- 1994–95: Meares House, Birchgrove (Sydney), Australia
- 1995–96: Gilhotra House, Hunters Hill (Sydney), Australia
- 1995–00: Grollo Tower project, Melbourne, Australia (never built)
- 1996–98: Elizabeth Street Offices, Surry Hills (Sydney), Australia
- 1996–99: Berman House, Joadja, New South Wales, Australia
- 1996–02: Hochhaus Neue Donau, Vienna, Austria
- 1999: Cove Apartments, Sydney, Australia
- 1999–05: Riparian Plaza, Brisbane, Australia
- 1999–00: ARCA Showroom, Perth, Australia
- 2001–06: Meriton Tower, Sydney, Australia
- 2003: North Apartments, Sydney, Australia
- 2001–07: Ian Thorpe Aquatic Centre, (formerly "Ultimo Aquatic Centre") Sydney, Australia
- 2004–09: Alliance Française Building, Sydney, Australia (his last commercial design)
Read more about this topic: Harry Seidler
Famous quotes containing the words list of, list and/or buildings:
“My list of things I never pictured myself saying when I pictured myself as a parent has grown over the years.”
—Polly Berrien Berends (20th century)
“A mans interest in a single bluebird is worth more than a complete but dry list of the fauna and flora of a town.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)
“Now, since our condition accommodates things to itself, and transforms them according to itself, we no longer know things in their reality; for nothing comes to us that is not altered and falsified by our Senses. When the compass, the square, and the rule are untrue, all the calculations drawn from them, all the buildings erected by their measure, are of necessity also defective and out of plumb. The uncertainty of our senses renders uncertain everything that they produce.”
—Michel de Montaigne (15331592)