Tiit Kaljundi (4 April 1946 – 1 February 2008) was an Estonian architect and a member of the Tallinn School.[1] He became well known in the later part of the 1970s as a part of a new movement of Estonian architects that was led by Leonhard Lapin and Vilen Künnapu. The majority of the architects in this movement were graduates from the State Art Institute in the early 1970s. This group included Kaljundi, Avo-Himm Looveer, Ain Padrik, Jüri Okas, and Ignar Fjuk, as well as Veljo Kaasik and Toomas Rein from an older generation of architects. After the 1983 exhibition in the Tallinn Art Salon, they became known as the “Tallinn Ten" or the "Tallinn School," a broader term to describe the group used by the Finnish architect Markku Komonen.[2]
^ajaleht Sakala, nr.25, 6 veebruar 2008, lk 11
^Mart Kalm Eesti 20. sajandi arhitektuur. Lk 315, 414
TiitKaljundi (4 April 1946 – 1 February 2008) was an Estonian architect and a member of the Tallinn School. He became well known in the later part of...
politician TiitKaljundi (1946–2008), architect Tiit Kändler (born 1948), humorist and science journalist Tiit Kuningas (born 1949), sports journalist Tiit Kuusik...
architects and artists called the Tallinn School, which was grouped from TiitKaljundi, Vilen Künnapu, Leonhard Lapin, Avo-Himm Looveer and Ülevi Eljand. During...
recognized as an enfant terrible. Other group members were Vilen Künnapu, TiitKaljundi, Avo-Himm Looveer, Ain Padrik, Jüri Okas, Jaan Ollik and Ignar Fjuk...
Oma Keel (in Estonian). 14: 11. Retrieved 21 January 2020. Tamm, Marek; Kaljundi, Linda; Jensen, Carsten Selch (2016). Crusading and Chronicle Writing on...