The Scottish architect James Robb Scott, (1882 – 1965) designed a string of railways stations – from Bishopstone to Bromley North, Horsham to Hastings, Ramsgate to Richmond – but his Art Deco ...
The 40th anniversary of the consecration of the new Coventry cathedral was celebrated in May 2002. A twentieth century building and a ruin of medieval fabric combine to form the cathedral as it ...
Though the western fringe of Cambridge is home to a number of key twentieth-century buildings, including Churchill College and several Modernist villas, it is on the whole not an area of architectural ...
Templewood belongs to the little crop of Hertfordshire’s post-war primary schools built at the precious moment when the experiment of prefabricating buildings in series was still fresh but had gone ...
The Risk List is the Societies’ annual compilation of the top 10 most threatened twentieth and twenty-first century buildings across the UK. Our 2023-24 list includes a Bengali women’s centre in ...
Built by the Owen Luder Partnership with Rodney Gordon as project architect between 1964 and 1969, Trinity Square was far more than a car park. It was a vast complex of buildings which also included ...
Finsbury Health Centre was arguably modern architecture’s most important single achievement in England in the first half of the 20th century. This realisation of a radical humanitarian brief for a ...
The Florey Building, a residential student block (built 1968-71), was designed by James Stirling and Partners for Queen’s College, Oxford, and named in honour of Nobel laureate Sir Howard Florey, ...
The demolition of Milton Court in 2008 tore a chapter from the history of Chamberlin, Powell and Bon’s landmark post-war redevelopment of the City of London. Designed by the practice in 1959, it was ...