Career
Later he took up an architectural apprenticeship in Germany. He first opened his own office in Stockholm in 1911, and through his association with Gunnar Asplund became involved with the design of cemetery. Together they made a winning entry for the Stockholm South (Woodland) Cemetery competition of 1914-1915.
This project was implemented initially by both architects, however, the latter stages were done by Asplund alone.
He and Asplund were appointed as the main architects for the Stockholm International Exhibition (1930) but afterwards Lewerentz became disillusioned, Lewerentz turned away from architecture for many years, and from 1940 he ran a factory producing windows and other architectural fittings of his own design. The foyer is considered of particular beauty, with its open surfaces and beautiful marble staircases and it is adorned with a number of works of art by artists such as Carl Milles and Isaac Grünewald.
He was awarded the Prince Eugen Medalfor architecture in 1950. In the last decade of his life he designed two churches, Saint Mark"s, Björkhagen, Stockholm (1956) and Saint Peter"s, Klippan (1963), that revived his career in architecture.
He continued to work at competition proposals and furniture designs until shortly before his death.
Klippan is a small town in western Sweden, Street Peters sits in a suburban setting on the periphery of the town. The orientation of the Church is correct, with the altar standing opposite the west doors. This was the religious equivalent of the search for the essential and the primitive, strongly evident in both of Lewerentz"s later churches.
These characteristics are expressed beautifully in the detailing of the buildings, the choice of materials, the quality of light and the spatial articulation.