After studying architecture, Adomoniene worked as an interior designer and is well known in several cities of Lithuania. For her work, she received numerous awards.
Niyole Buchute worked as an architect and later as project manager at the Institute of Mining Design (Litproekt), designing buildings mostly in Vilnius. Also, she was teaching at the Vilnius Civil Engineering Institute (VISI) in 1971.
Working as an interior designer in the furniture industry, Valerija Cukermaniene designed numerous collections. She also participated in several competitions and exhibited her designs across Europe and the USSR.
Working as an architect and urban planner, Neringos Dičiuvienės was also known for her academic career and later became a professor at Vilnius Engineering and Construction Institute.
Algė Jankevičienė shortly worked as an architect and later headed the architectural history department at the Lithuanian Research Institute of Architecture and Construction. She authored numerous publications, especially focussing on sacral architecture.
Juozaitiene works as an architect, focussing on reconstruction. While working as a research associate, she also specialised in research on the development of Lithuanian industrial architecture.
Kauspediene became known for being an architect and social activist, as she was actively participating in the regaining of Lithuanian independence. Later, she specialised in the development of restaurants, cafés and pubs.
After studying architecture, history and philology, she worked as an architect and designed secondary schools, kindergartens and other public buildings in Šiauliai. Also, several parks, squares and large areas such as industrial zones or cemeteries were shaped by her planning department.
Rackauskiene started her work in the northern city of Panevėžys of Lithuania, where she was responsible for projects of residential buildings and public facilities and for interior design projects in the surroundings of the city. Her work of interior design also reached the capital Vilnius, Anyksciai, Mažeikiai and in the district of Akmenė.
Samukiene worked as a project-managing restorer at the Institute for Monument Restoration in Vilnius from 1974 to 1994 and started her own business in 1997.
Lygija Stapulionienė became famous for her interior designs, representing a simple and elegant approach. Her designs can be found in numerous official buildings as well as in private households all across Lithuania. She also worked together with Liucija Zaveckiene on some interior designs.
Zaveckiene is probably best known for working with her colleague Lygija Stapulionienė on the furniture of the Lithuanian National Library in 1961 and the interior of a bar in the Lithuanian Opera and Ballet Theatre.
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