Career
His most well-known works include Saint John"s Church in Stockholm, which opened in 1890. Möller was in his time in architectural arrangement terms one of the foremost exponents among Swedish architects. The years 1879-1881, he made a study trip to Germany, France, England, Italy and Austria and was in the winter of 1879-1880 in Paris, as a student at the École des Beaux-Arts (Atelier Guadet).
He lived then in Stockholm, but made several trips abroad, especially to Paris.
In 1881 he became architect in the Office of the Superintendent (Överintendentsämbetet), a government agency in charge of public buildings, in 1903 Chief Curator, in 1904 Superintendent and 1918-1924 General Director of the Board of Public (Byggnadsstyrelsen), the successor agency of the Office of the Superintendent. In addition to his civil service career, Möller performed several assignments.
He took part in the 1914 Baltic Exhibition in Malmö, San Francisco Exhibition in 1915, and the 1925 Internal Art Industrial Exhibition in Paris. A bronze copy of the statue of Saint George and the Dragon was built on Möller"s initiative and erected in 1912 in a street of Stockholm"s Old Town.
Möller"s most treasured works are in pure Gothic style with splendid terrace construction like the neo-Gothic Church of Saint John, which was founded in 1884 and inaugurated the 1890.
In Stockholm, he led in 1891 the repair work on Katarina Church and in 1893 on Saint James"s Church. All together he created or restored about 40 churches in Sweden as well as several schools buildings. Gladsax church (1883, rebuilding of the tower)
Landala chapel (1885)
Ignaberga new church (1885–1887)
Orlunda church (1888-1889)
Saint John"s Church, Stockholm (1890)
Johannes Elementary School, Stockholm (1890)
Tegneby church (1891)
Eslövs church (1891)
Gustaf Adolf church (1892)
Stockholms Education Centre (1893)
Villa Lusthusporten, Djurgården in Stockholm
Söderala church (1899)
Regional Archives in Lund (1903)
Saint Stephen"s Church, Stockholm (1904).