List of British architects
Encyclopedia
This List of British architects includes notable architect
Architect
An architect is a person trained in the planning, design and oversight of the construction of buildings. To practice architecture means to offer or render services in connection with the design and construction of a building, or group of buildings and the space within the site surrounding the...

s, civil engineer
Civil engineer
A civil engineer is a person who practices civil engineering; the application of planning, designing, constructing, maintaining, and operating infrastructures while protecting the public and environmental health, as well as improving existing infrastructures that have been neglected.Originally, a...

s, and earlier stonemasons, from the United Kingdom
United Kingdom
The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern IrelandIn the United Kingdom and Dependencies, other languages have been officially recognised as legitimate autochthonous languages under the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages...

 and its predecessor states.

Mediaeval stonemasons

  • Richard Cementarius
    Richard Cementarius
    Richard Cementarius was a 13th century Scottish architect and became the first Provost of Aberdeen in 1272. He held the title of Kings Master Mason to King Alexander III of Scotland....

     (flourished 1264–1290)
  • Elias of Dereham
    Elias of Dereham
    Elias of Dereham was a master stonemason designer, closely associated with Bishop Jocelin of Wells.Elias became a Canon of Salisbury, and oversaw the construction of Salisbury Cathedral. He was also responsible for building work at Clarendon Palace.The chapter house at Salisbury Cathedral displays...

     (flourished 1188–1245)
  • Gundulf of Rochester
    Gundulf of Rochester
    Gundulf was a Norman monk who came to England following the Conquest. He was appointed Bishop of Rochester and Prior of the Cathedral Priory there; built castles including Rochester, Colchester and the White Tower of the Tower of London and the Priory and Cathedral Church of...

     (died 1108)
  • Hugh Herland
    Hugh Herland
    Hugh Herland was a 14th century medieval English carpenter. He was the chief carpenter to King Richard II.One of his best known pieces is the hammer-beam roof at Westminster Hall, regarded as one of the greatest carpentry achievements of the time...

     (c. 1330–1411)
  • Reginald of Ely (flourished 1438–1471)
  • Robert Janyns
    Robert Janyns
    Robert Janyns was an English gothic architect, not to be confused with Robert Janyns, Jr.. He worked on All Souls College, the chapel of Merton College and the Divinity School, Oxford.-References:...

     (flourished 1438 - 1464)
  • William Orchard
    William Orchard (architect)
    William Orchard was an English gothic architect, responsible for the elaborate pendant vaults of the Divinity School, Oxford and the chancel of Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. He worked on the cloister and designed the Great Tower of Magdalen College, Oxford. He also designed the parish church of...

     (flourished 1468–1504)
  • William Ramsey
    William Ramsey (architect)
    William Ramsey was an English Gothic architect, descended from the De Ramsey family of master masons whose work can be found at Ramsey Abbey, Norwich Cathedral, Ely Cathedral, and possibly also in Paris, according to John Harvey...

     (flourished 1330–1411)
  • Henry de Reyns (flourished 1243–1253)
  • James of St. George
    James of St. George
    Master James of Saint George , also known as Jacques de Saint-Georges d'Espéranche, was an architect from Savoy responsible for designing many of Edward I's castles, including Conwy, Harlech and Caernarfon and Beaumaris in Anglesey .Early records seem to indicate that his father, Master John, was...

     (c. 1230–1309)
  • Alan of Walsingham
    Alan of Walsingham
    Alan of Walsingham , also known as Alan de Walsingham, was an English architect, first heard of in 1314 as a junior monk at Ely, distinguished by his skill in goldsmith's work, and for his acquaintance with the principles of mechanics....

     (died c. 1364)
  • William of Sens
    William of Sens
    William of Sens was a 12th century French architect, supposed to have been born at Sens, France.He is referred to in September 1174 as having been the architect who undertook the task of rebuilding the choir of Canterbury cathedral, originally erected by Conrad, the prior of the monastery, and...

     (flourished 1174–1184)
  • William the Englishman
    William the Englishman
    William the Englishman was an English architect and stonemason. He completed the work done on Canterbury Cathedral in England by the French architect William of Sens, after the latter was badly injured in a fall from scaffolding on the cathedral.He is commemorated on the Albert Memorial in London...

     (flourished 1174–1214)
  • William Wynford
    William Wynford
    William Wynford was one of the most successful English master masons of the 14th century, using the new Perpendicular Gothic style. He is first mentioned in 1360 when at work at Windsor Castle as warden of masons' work...

     (flourished 1360–1405)
  • Henry Yevele
    Henry Yevele
    Henry Yevele was the most prolific and successful master mason active in late medieval England. The first document relating to him is dated 3 December 1353, when he purchased the freedom of London...

     (c. 1320–1400)

Renaissance, Tudor and Jacobean architects and stonemasons

16th and early 17th century
  • John Abel
    John Abel
    John Abel was an English carpenter and mason, granted the title of 'King's Carpenter', who was responsible for several notable structures in the ornamented Half-timbered construction typical of the West Midlands...

     (c. 1578-1675)
  • Robert Adams
    Robert Adams (architect)
    Robert Adams was a 16th century English architect, engraver and surveyor of buildings to Queen Elizabeth.None of Robert Adams' architectural works are known to have survived, but some of his plans and engravings are still extant, such as a large 1588 plan of Middleburgh and, from the same year, a...

     (1540–1595)
  • William Arnold
    William Arnold (architect)
    William Arnold was an important master mason in Somerset, England.Little is known about him, but he is known to have been living in Charlton Musgrove near Wincanton in 1595 where he was church warden. His first known commission was for the design of Montacute House in c1598...

     (fl. 1595–1637)
  • Simon Basil
    Simon Basil
    Simon Basil was a surveyor, perhaps an architect, who held the post of Surveyor of the King's Works, 1606-15.His first appearance, in 1590, was in drawing a plan of Ostend, a military objective at the time, for the previous Surveyor, Robert Adams...

     (fl. 1590 — 1615)
  • Bernard Janssens (fl. 1603–1620)
  • Robert Janyns, Jr.
    Robert Janyns, Jr.
    Robert Janyns was an English gothic architect, who was likely responsible for part of the design of the Henry VII Lady Chapel at Westminster Abbey. He should not be confused with the other Robert Janyns. He also worked at Windsor Castle, Burford church, and Richmond Palace.-References:...

     (fl. 1499 - 1506)
  • Robert Lyminge
    Robert Lyminge
    Robert Lyminge his surname is also spelt Lemyinge & Liminge, was an English carpenter and architect, his earliest record of employment is dated 1607 at the almshouses at Theobalds in Hertfordshire....

     (fl. 1607–1628)
  • John Mylne (d.1621)
    John Mylne (d.1621)
    John Mylne was a Scottish master mason, the first of three successive generations of the name to serve as Master Mason to the Crown of Scotland. He was born in Dundee into a family of master builders. His great-grandfather, also John , had been Master Mason to both James III and James IV. He was...

  • John Mylne (d.1657)
    John Mylne (d.1657)
    John Mylne of Perth was a Scottish master mason who served as Master Mason to the Crown of Scotland. He was born in Perth, the son of John Mylne, also a master mason, and Helen Kenneries....

  • John Mylne (1611-1667)
    John Mylne (1611-1667)
    John Mylne , sometimes known as "John Mylne junior", or "the Younger", was a Scottish master mason and architect, who served as Master Mason to the Crown of Scotland. Born in Perth, he was the son of John Mylne, master mason, and Isobel Wilson.Practising as a stonemason, he also took on the role of...

  • Henry Redman (fl. 1495–1528)
  • John Smythson
    John Smythson
    John Smythson son of the great Robert Smythson, one of England's first true architects & resposable for the design of Bolsover Castle the crowning glory of his work, which began with the construction of the Keep, or Little Castle in 1612...

     (fl. 1588–1634)
  • Robert Smythson
    Robert Smythson
    Robert Smythson was an English architect. Smythson designed a number of notable houses during the Elizabethan era. Little is known about his birth and upbringing—his first mention in historical records comes in 1556, when he was stonemason for the house at Longleat, built by Sir John Thynne...

     (1535–1614)
  • John Thorpe
    John Thorpe
    John Thorpe or Thorp was an English architect. Little is known of his life, and his work is dubiously inferred, rather than accurately known, from a folio of drawings in the Sir John Soane's Museum, to which Horace Walpole called attention, in 1780, in his Anecdotes of Painting; but how far these...

     (c. 1565–1655)
  • Robert Vertue
    Robert Vertue
    Robert Vertue was an English architect and master mason.He worked as a mason on the nave of Westminster Abbey between 1475 and 1490, and then as the master mason for Henry VII's riverside north range of Greenwich Palace, built in 1500–04 and a work at the Tower of London.Along with his brother...

     (died 1506)
  • William Vertue
    William Vertue
    William Vertue was an English architect specialising in Fan vault ceilings.Along with his brother Robert he was involved in the construction of the Tower of London , Bath Abbey, the Vertue brothers are reported as telling Bishop Oliver King the patron of the work that the vaulting "Ther shal be...

     (died 1527)
  • William Wallace
    William Wallace (mason)
    William Wallace was a Scottish master mason and architect. He served as King's Master Mason under James VI.From 1615, Wallace is known to have been the leading mason working on the King's Lodgings at Edinburgh Castle. On 18 April 1617 he was appointed King's Master Mason, holding this post until...

     (died 1631)
  • John Wastell
    John Wastell
    John Wastell was an English gothic architect responsible for Manchester Cathedral, parts of King's College Chapel, Cambridge, the crossing tower of Canterbury Cathedral, and the fan vaulted section of Peterborough Cathedral. He also worked on Bury St Edmunds Abbey....

     (c. 1485–1515)

Palladian and English baroque architects

Early 17th century to mid–18th century.
A - I
  • William Adam (1689–1748)
  • Henry Aldrich
    Henry Aldrich
    Henry Aldrich was an English theologian and philosopher.-Life:Aldrich was educated at Westminster School under Dr Richard Busby. In 1662, he entered Christ Church, Oxford, and in 1689 was made Dean in succession to the Roman Catholic John Massey, who had fled to the Continent. In 1692, he...

     (1647–1710)
  • Thomas Archer
    Thomas Archer
    Thomas Archer was an English Baroque architect, whose work is somewhat overshadowed by that of his contemporaries Sir John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor. Archer was born at Umberslade Hall in Tanworth-in-Arden in Warwickshire, the youngest son of Thomas Archer, a country gentleman, Parliamentary...

     (1668–1743)
  • John Bastard
    Bastard brothers
    John and William Bastard were British surveyor-architects, and civic dignitaries of the town of Blandford Forum in Dorset. John and William generally worked together and are known as the "Bastard brothers"...

     (c.1668–1770)
  • William Bastard
    Bastard brothers
    John and William Bastard were British surveyor-architects, and civic dignitaries of the town of Blandford Forum in Dorset. John and William generally worked together and are known as the "Bastard brothers"...

     (c.1689–1766)
  • Henry Bell
    Henry Bell (architect)
    Henry Bell was an architect from the 17th century, a contemporary of Christopher Wren. The son of a wealthy merchant family, he designed many buildings in West Norfolk including the Custom House in King's Lynn and All Saints Church in North Runcton.He served twice as Mayor of King's Lynn, he was...

     (died 1711)
  • Jean (or Johann von) Bodt (1670–1745)
  • Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington
    Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington
    Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington and 4th Earl of Cork PC , born in Yorkshire, England, was the son of Charles Boyle, 2nd Earl of Burlington and 3rd Earl of Cork...

     (1694–1753)
  • Sir William Bruce
    William Bruce (architect)
    Sir William Bruce of Kinross, 1st Baronet was a Scottish gentleman-architect, "the effective founder of classical architecture in Scotland," as Howard Colvin observes...

     (c. 1630–1710)
  • Colen Campbell
    Colen Campbell
    Colen Campbell was a pioneering Scottish architect who spent most of his career in England, and is credited as a founder of the Georgian style...

     (1676–1729)
  • Thomas Cartwright
    Thomas Cartwright (architect)
    Thomas Cartwright was a 17th century English architect. Cartwright was the architect employed by Sir Robert Clayton, president of the St Thomas' Hospital, to rebuild and the hospital and nearby St Thomas Church on the south bank of the River Thames opposite the Houses of Parliament in London...

     (c. 1653–1703)
  • Richard Cassels
    Richard Cassels
    Richard Cassels , who anglicised his name to Richard Castle, ranks with Edward Lovett Pearce as one of the greatest architects working in Ireland in the 18th century. Cassels was born in 1690 in Kassel, Germany. Although German, his family were of French origin, descended from the...

     (1690–1751)
  • Isaac de Caus
    Isaac de Caus
    Isaac de Caus was a French landscaper, and architect. He arrived in England in 1612 to carry on the work that his brother Salomon de Caus had left behind. He is noted for his work at Wilton House, and Lincoln's Inn....

     (1590–1648)
  • George Clarke
    George Clarke
    George Clarke , the son of Sir William Clarke, enrolled at Brasenose College, Oxford in 1676. He was elected a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford in 1680. He became Judge Advocate to the Army and was William III of England's Secretary at War from 1690 to 1704...

     (1661–1736)
  • William Etty
    William Etty (architect)
    William Etty was an English architect and craftsman, best known for designing Holy Trinity Church, Leeds and Holy Trinity Church, Sunderland.-Life and work:...

     (c1675–1734)
  • Henry Flitcroft
    Henry Flitcroft
    Henry Flitcroft was a major English architect in the second generation of Palladianism. He came from a simple background: his father was a labourer in the gardens at Hampton Court and he began as a joiner by trade. Working as a carpenter at Burlington House, he fell from a scaffold and broke his leg...

     (1697–1769)
  • Sir Balthazar Gerbier
    Balthazar Gerbier
    Sir Balthazar Gerbier , was an Anglo-Dutch courtier, diplomat, art advisor, miniaturist and architectural designer, in his own words fluent in "several languages" with "a good hand in writing, skill in sciences as mathematics, architecture, drawing, painting, contriving of scenes, masques, shows...

     (1592–1663)
  • James Gibbs
    James Gibbs
    James Gibbs was one of Britain's most influential architects. Born in Scotland, he trained as an architect in Rome, and practised mainly in England...

     (1682–1754)
  • Sir Bernard de Gomme
    Bernard de Gomme
    Sir Bernard de Gomme was a Dutch military engineer. By some he is considered the most important figure in 17th century English military engineering.-Early life:...

     (1620–1685)
  • Nicholas Hawksmoor
    Nicholas Hawksmoor
    Nicholas Hawksmoor was a British architect born in Nottinghamshire, probably in East Drayton.-Life:Hawksmoor was born in Nottinghamshire in 1661, into a yeoman farming family, almost certainly in East Drayton, Nottinghamshire. On his death he was to leave property at nearby Ragnall, Dunham and a...

     (c. 1661–1736)
  • Samuel Hauduroy (flourished 1692–1712)
  • Robert Hooke
    Robert Hooke
    Robert Hooke FRS was an English natural philosopher, architect and polymath.His adult life comprised three distinct periods: as a scientific inquirer lacking money; achieving great wealth and standing through his reputation for hard work and scrupulous honesty following the great fire of 1666, but...

     (1635–1703)
  • William Hurlbutt (flourished 1670–1684)
J - Z
  • John James (1673–1746)
  • Edward Jerman (c.1605–1668)
  • Inigo Jones
    Inigo Jones
    Inigo Jones is the first significant British architect of the modern period, and the first to bring Italianate Renaissance architecture to England...

     (1573–1652)
  • Christopher Kempster
    Christopher Kempster
    Christopher Kempster was an English master stonemason and architect who trained with Sir Christopher Wren, working on St Paul's Cathedral.Kempster was from Burford in Oxfordshire, England....

     (1627–1715)
  • William Kent
    William Kent
    William Kent , born in Bridlington, Yorkshire, was an eminent English architect, landscape architect and furniture designer of the early 18th century.He was baptised as William Cant.-Education:...

     (c. 1685–1748)
  • Giacomo Leoni
    Giacomo Leoni
    Giacomo Leoni , also known as James Leoni, was an Italian architect, born in Venice. He was a devotee of the work of Florentine Renaissance architect Leon Battista Alberti, who had also been an inspiration for Andrea Palladio. Leoni thus served as a prominent exponent of Palladianism in English...

     (1686–1746)
  • Hugh May
    Hugh May
    Hugh May was an English architect in the period after the Restoration of King Charles II. He worked in the era which fell between the first introduction of Palladianism into England by Inigo Jones, and the full flowering of English Baroque under John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor. His own work...

     (1621–1684)
  • Robert Mylne (1633–1710)
  • Sir Edward Lovett Pearce
    Edward Lovett Pearce
    Sir Edward Lovett Pearce was an Irish architect, and the chief exponent of palladianism in Ireland. He is thought to have initially studied as an architect under his father's first cousin, Sir John Vanbrugh. He is best known for the Irish Houses of Parliament in Dublin, and his work on Castletown...

     (1699–1733)
  • Sir Roger Pratt (1620–1684)
  • Francis Smith (1672–1738)
  • James Smith
    James Smith (architect)
    James Smith was a Scottish architect, who pioneered the Palladian style in Scotland. He was described by Colen Campbell, in his Vitruvius Britannicus , as "the most experienced architect of that kingdom".-Biography:...

     (c. 1645–1731)
  • Nicholas Stone
    Nicholas Stone
    Nicholas Stone was an English sculptor and architect. In 1619 he was appointed master-mason to James I, and in 1626 to Charles I....

     (1586–1647)
  • William Talman
    William Talman (architect)
    William Talman was an English architect and landscape designer. A pupil of Sir Christopher Wren, in 1678 he and Thomas Apprice gained the office of King's Waiter in the Port of London...

     (1650–1719)
  • Sir John Vanbrugh
    John Vanbrugh
    Sir John Vanbrugh  – 26 March 1726) was an English architect and dramatist, perhaps best known as the designer of Blenheim Palace and Castle Howard. He wrote two argumentative and outspoken Restoration comedies, The Relapse and The Provoked Wife , which have become enduring stage favourites...

     (1664–1726)
  • William Wakefield (died 1730)
  • John Webb (1611–1672)
  • Thomas White (c1674–1748)
  • Lady Elizabeth Wilbraham (1632–1705)
  • William Winde
    William Winde
    Captain William Winde was an English gentleman architect, whose Royalist military career, resulting in fortifications and topographical surveys but lack of preferment, and his later career, following the Glorious Revolution, as designer or simply "conductor" of the works of country houses, has...

     (c. 1645–1722)
  • Sir Christopher Wren
    Christopher Wren
    Sir Christopher Wren FRS is one of the most highly acclaimed English architects in history.He used to be accorded responsibility for rebuilding 51 churches in the City of London after the Great Fire in 1666, including his masterpiece, St. Paul's Cathedral, on Ludgate Hill, completed in 1710...

     (1632–1723)

  • Georgian architects

    Mid–18th century to 1837.
    A - L
    • James Adam (1732–1794)
    • John Adam
      John Adam (architect)
      John Adam was a Scottish architect. Born in Linktown of Abbotshall, now part of Kirkcaldy, Fife, he was the eldest son of architect and entrepreneur William Adam. His younger brothers Robert and James Adam also became architects.The Adam family moved to Edinburgh in 1728, as William Adam's career...

       (1721–1792)
    • Robert Adam
      Robert Adam
      Robert Adam was a Scottish neoclassical architect, interior designer and furniture designer. He was the son of William Adam , Scotland's foremost architect of the time, and trained under him...

       (1728–1792)
    • Thomas Atkinson
      Thomas Atkinson (architect)
      Thomas Atkinson was an English architect, best remembered for remodelling Bishopthorpe Palace in the Gothic Revival style.- Life :...

       (1799–1861)
    • William Atkinson
      William Atkinson (architect)
      William Atkinson was an English architect best known for his designs for country houses in the Gothic style. He undertook almost fifty commissions, broadly distributed in the north of England and the Scottish lowlands, London and the surrounding counties, with occasional excursions to...

       (c. 1774–1839)
    • Thomas Baldwin
      Thomas Baldwin (architect)
      Thomas Baldwin was an English surveyor and architect in Bath.He did not originally hail from Bath but was first recorded in the city in 1774, where he was initially a clerk to plumber, glazier, and politician Thomas Warr Attwood. By 1775, he was appointed as the Bath City Architect after...

       (c. 1750–1820)
    • Francis Octavius Bedford
      Francis Octavius Bedford
      -Life:In 1812-13 Francis Bedford made a tour of classical antiquities in Greece, Turkey, Italy and Sicily on behalf of the Society of Dilettanti, in the company of Sir William Gell, Keppel Craven and John Peter Gandy...

       (1784–1858)
    • Ignatius Bonomi
      Ignatius Bonomi
      Ignatius Bonomi was an English architect and surveyor, with Italian origins by his father, strongly associated with Durham in north-east England....

       (1787–1870)
    • Joseph Bonomi the Elder
      Joseph Bonomi the Elder
      Joseph Bonomi the Elder was an Italian architect and draughtsman notable for his activity in England.Born in Rome, he made his early reputation there, then moved to London in 1767....

       (1739–1808)
    • Thomas Bradley (1758–1818)
    • Matthew Brettingham
      Matthew Brettingham
      Matthew Brettingham , sometimes called Matthew Brettingham the Elder, was an 18th-century Englishman who rose from humble origins to supervise the construction of Holkham Hall, and eventually became one of the country's better-known architects of his generation...

       (1699–1769)
    • James Bridges
      James Bridges (architect)
      James Bridges was an architect and civil engineer working in Bristol between 1757 and 1763. He was the son of Henry Bridges, an Essex carpenter and clockmaker and famous for his Microcosm...

       (flourished 1757–1763)
    • James Brindley
      James Brindley
      James Brindley was an English engineer. He was born in Tunstead, Derbyshire, and lived much of his life in Leek, Staffordshire, becoming one of the most notable engineers of the 18th century.-Early life:...

       (1716–1772)
    • Lancelot "Capability" Brown
      Capability Brown
      Lancelot Brown , more commonly known as Capability Brown, was an English landscape architect. He is remembered as "the last of the great English eighteenth-century artists to be accorded his due", and "England's greatest gardener". He designed over 170 parks, many of which still endure...

       (1716–1783)
    • Decimus Burton
      Decimus Burton
      Decimus Burton was a prolific English architect and garden designer, He is particularly associated with projects in the classical style in London parks, including buildings at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew and London Zoo, and with the layout and architecture of the seaside towns of Fleetwood and...

       (1800–1881)
    • Charles Busby
      Charles Busby
      Charles Augustin Busby was an English architect.He created many buildings in and around Brighton such as Brunswick Square and St Margarets Church. His style usually included Romanesque style pillars to his buildings....

       (1788–1834)
    • Patrick Byrne
      Patrick Byrne (architect)
      Patrick Byrne was an Irish Architect who built many Catholic churches in Dublin. He also served as a vice president of the Royal Institute of the Architects of Ireland.-History:...

       (1783–1864)
    • John Carr (1723–1807)
    • Sir William Chambers
      William Chambers (architect)
      Sir William Chambers was a Scottish architect, born in Gothenburg, Sweden, where his father was a merchant. Between 1740 and 1749 he was employed by the Swedish East India Company making several voyages to China where he studied Chinese architecture and decoration.Returning to Europe, he studied...

       (1723–1796)
    • Samuel Pepys Cockerell
      Samuel Pepys Cockerell
      Samuel Pepys Cockerell was an English architect. He was the son of John Cockerell, of Bishop's Hull, Somerset, and the brother of Sir Charles Cockerell, 1st Baronet, for whom he designed the house he is best known for, Sezincote House, Gloucestershire, where the uniquely Orientalizing features...

       (1754–1827)
    • Lewis Nockalls Cottingham
      Lewis Nockalls Cottingham
      Lewis Nockalls Cottingham was a British architect who pioneered the study of Medieval Gothic architecture. He was a restorer and conservator of existing buildings...

       (1787–1847)
    • Thomas Cooley
      Thomas Cooley (architect)
      Thomas Cooley was an English architect who came to Dublin from London after winning a competition for the design of Dublin's Royal Exchange in 1768. He built several public buildings in Dublin in the neoclassical style...

       (1740–1784)
    • James Craig
      James Craig (architect)
      James Craig was a Scottish architect. His brief career was concentrated almost entirely in Edinburgh, and he is remembered primarily for his layout of the first Edinburgh New Town.-Date of birth:...

       (1744–1795)
    • George Dance the Elder
      George Dance the Elder
      George Dance the Elder was an English architect of the 18th century. He served as the City of London surveyor and architect from 1735 until his death....

       (1695–1768)
    • George Dance the Younger
      George Dance the Younger
      George Dance the Younger was an English architect and surveyor. The fifth and youngest son of George Dance the Elder, he came from a distinguished family of architects, artists and dramatists...

       (1741–1825)
    • John Donowell
      John Donowell
      John Donowell was a little known, 18th century British architect and engraver, most notable for his architectural work at West Wycombe Park in Buckinghamshire, where he appears to have been influenced by the works of Colen Campbell...

       (flourished 1770s & 1780s)
    • Charles Dyer
      Charles Dyer
      Charles Dyer was an architect based in London who designed many buildings in and around Bristol.-Some buildings of Charles Dyer:* St Pauls' Church, Bedminster * Engineers House, Bristol 1831...

       (1794–1848)
    • Archibald Elliot
      Archibald Elliot
      Archibald Elliot was a Scottish architect.Archibald Elliot ran an architecture practice in London and Edinburgh with his brother James Elliot. Following James' death in 1810, Archibald ran the company on his own...

       (1760–1823)
    • James Essex
      James Essex
      -Professional life:Essex was the son of a builder who had fitted the sash windows and wainscot in the Senate House , under James Gibbs; and also worked on the hall of Queens' College, Cambridge . He died in February 1749....

       (c. 1722–1784)
    • John Eveleigh
      John Eveleigh
      John Eveleigh was an English surveyor and architect in Bath.He began his practice in Bath in the 1780s, but went bankrupt after the failure of the Bath City Bank and moved to Plymouth.-List of works:* Camden Crescent, Bath...

       (flourished 1756-1800)
    • John Forbes
      John Forbes (architect)
      John B. Forbes was an architect in Cheltenham.He designed the Pittville Pump Room for Joseph Pitt and St Paul's Church . In 1835 he was convicted of forgery, having attempted to get out of financial difficulties by fraud: a sentence of transportation was commuted to a short prison term, but his...

       (flourished 1825–1835)
    • John Foster senior
      John Foster, Sr.
      John Foster Snr an English architect, father of John Foster Jnr. Senior Surveyor to the Corporation of Liverpool succeeding Henry Berry. In 1824 he was succeeded as Senior Surveyor by his son while Jesse Hartley replaced him as dock engineer at Liverpool Dock Trustees.During his time as dock...

       (1758–1827)
    • John Foster junior
      John Foster (architect)
      John Foster, Junior was an English architect.-Biography:Foster studied under Jeffry Wyatt in London and in 1809 travelled in the eastern Mediterranean. During 1810-11 he accompanied C. R. Cockerell and the German archaeologists Haller and Linckh in their excavation of the temples at Aegina and...

       (1787–1846)
    • John Foulston
      John Foulston
      John Foulston was an English architect. He was a pupil of Thomas Hardwick and set up a practice in London in 1796. In 1810 he won a competition to design the Royal Hotel and Theatre group of buildings in Plymouth, Devon, and after relocating he remained the leading architect for twenty-five...

       (1772–1841)
    • James Gandon
      James Gandon
      James Gandon is today recognised as one of the leading architects to have worked in Ireland in the late 18th century and early 19th century. His better known works include The Custom House, the Four Courts, King's Inns in Dublin and Emo Court in Co...

       (1743–1823)
    • Henry Goodridge
      Henry Goodridge
      Henry Edmund Goodridge was an architect whose work started in the 1820s.-Works:Goodridge's neoclassical buildings in Bath include:* Cleveland Bridge;* one of the earliest shopping arcades...

       (1797–1864)
    • James Gillespie Graham
      James Gillespie Graham
      James Gillespie Graham was a Scottish architect, born in Dunblane. He is most notable for his work in the Scottish baronial style, as at Ayton Castle, and he worked in the Gothic Revival style, in which he was heavily influenced by the work of Augustus Pugin...

       (1776–1855)
    • Richard Grainger
      Richard Grainger
      Richard Grainger was a builder in Newcastle upon Tyne. He worked together with the architects John Dobson and Thomas Oliver, and with the town clerk, John Clayton, to redevelop the centre of Newcastle in the 19th century...

       (1797–1861)
    • Benjamin Green (1811–1858)
    • John Green (1787–1852)
    • George Gwilt
      George Gwilt
      George Gwilt , also sometimes known as George Gwilt the Elder, was an English architect of the late 18th and early 19th century, particularly associated with buildings in and around London....

       (1746–1807)
    • John Gwynn
      John Gwynn
      John Gwynn was an English architect and civil engineer of the 18th century, and one of the founder members of the Royal Academy in 1768....

       (1713–1786)
    • William Halfpenny
      William Halfpenny
      William Halfpenny was an English 18th-century architectural designer; in some of his publications he described himself as "architect and carpenter". He also wrote under the name of Michael Hoare.-Life and architectural work:...

       (flourished 1723-1755)
    • David Hamilton
      David Hamilton (architect)
      David Hamilton was a Scottish architect based in Glasgow. He has been called the "father of the profession" in Glasgow. Notable works include Hutchesons' Hall, Nelson Monument in Glasgow Green and Lennox Castle. The Royal Exchange in Queen Street is David Hamilton's best known building in Glasgow...

       (1768–1853)
    • Thomas Hamilton
      Thomas Hamilton (architect)
      Thomas Hamilton was a Scottish architect, based in Edinburgh. Born in Glasgow, his works include: the Dean Orphan Hospital, now the Dean Gallery; the Royal High School on the Calton Hill, long considered as home for the Scottish Parliament; Bedlam Theatre; the George IV Bridge, which spans the...

       (1784–1858)
    • Philip Hardwick
      Philip Hardwick
      Philip Hardwick was an eminent English architect, particularly associated with railway stations and warehouses in London and elsewhere...

       (1792–1870)
    • Thomas Hardwick
      Thomas Hardwick
      Thomas Hardwick was a British architect and a founding member of the Architect's Club in 1791.-Early life and career :Hardwick was born in Brentford, the son of a master mason turned architect also named Thomas Hardwick Thomas Hardwick (1752–1829) was a British architect and a founding...

       (1752–1829)
    • Thomas Harrison
      Thomas Harrison (architect)
      Thomas Harrison was an English architect and engineer. He built a number of bridges, including Grosvenor Bridge in Chester. He also rebuilt parts of Chester and Lancaster castles...

       (1744–1829)
    • Henry Herbert, 9th Earl of Pembroke
      Henry Herbert, 9th Earl of Pembroke
      Lt.-Gen. Henry Herbert, 9th Earl of Pembroke, 6th Earl of Montgomery PC FRS was the heir and eldest son of Thomas Herbert and his first wife Margaret...

       (1693–1750)
    • David Hiorne (died 1758)
    • William Hiorne (c1712–1776)
    • Henry Holland
      Henry Holland (architect)
      Henry Holland was an architect to the English nobility. Born in Fulham, London, his father also Henry ran a building firm and he built several of Capability Brown's buildings, although Henry would have learnt a lot from his father about the practicalities of construction it was under Brown that he...

       (1745–1806)
    • Henry Inwood (1794–1843)
    • William Inwood
      William Inwood
      William Inwood was an English architect, surveyor and writer on architecture.His father was bailiff to the Kenwood estate. He was the author of the Tables for the Purchasing of Estates, Freehold, Copyhold, or Leasehold, Annuities, &c. first published in 1811 and frequently revised and reprinted...

       (c.1771–1843)
    • Nathaniel Ireson
      Nathaniel Ireson
      Nathaniel Ireson was a potter, architect and mason from Wincanton working in Somerset, England.He rebuilt much of the centre of Wincanton following a fire in 1707....

       (1685–1769)
    • Theodore Jacobsen (died 1772)
    • Francis Johnston
      Francis Johnston (architect)
      See Francis Johnson for English architect of similar name.Francis Johnston was an Irish architect, best known for building the General Post Office on O’Connell Street, Dublin.-Life:...

       (1760–1829)
    • John Johnson
      John Johnson (architect)
      John Johnson was an English architect and Surveyor to the County of Essex. He is best known for designing the Shire Hall, Chelmsford.-Life:...

       (1732–1814)
    • Anthony Keck (1726–1797)
    • Henry Keene
      Henry Keene
      Henry Keene was an English architect, notable for designing buildings in the Gothic Revival and Neoclassical style.- Life and work :...

       (1726–1776)
    • George Meikle Kemp
      George Meikle Kemp
      George Meikle Kemp was a Scottish carpenter/joiner, draughtsman, and self-taught architect. He is best known as the designer of the Scott Monument in central Edinburgh.-Biography:...

       (1795–1844)
    • Richard Payne Knight
      Richard Payne Knight
      Richard Payne Knight was a classical scholar and connoisseur best known for his theories of picturesque beauty and for his interest in ancient phallic imagery.-Biography:...

       (1750–1824)
    • David Laing
      David Laing (19th century architect)
      David Laing was a British architect principally known as the architect of the New Custom House in London, which was completed in 1817 and collapsed in 1825. Assisted by a young William Tite, he also rebuilt the church of St Dunstan-in-the-East between 1817 and 1821.-Life:David Laing was born in...

       (1774–1856)
    • Richard Lane
      Richard Lane (architect)
      Richard Lane was a distinguished English architect of the early and mid 19th century. Born in London and based in Manchester, he was known in great part for his restrained and austere Greek-inspired classicism. He also designed a few buildings – mainly churches – in the Gothic style...

       (1795–1880)
    • Thomas Lee
      Thomas Lee (Jnr)
      Thomas Lee , the son of Thomas Lee of Barnstaple, Devon, was an English architect. He was educated at Barnstaple Grammar School and left to train briefly in 1810 at Sir John Soane's office, where his father no doubt placed him, but left for the office of David Laing...

       (1794–1834)
    • Thomas Leverton (1743–1824)
    M - Z
    • Charles Harcourt Masters
      Charles Harcourt Masters
      Charles Harcourt Masters was an English surveyor and architect in Bath.He made a set of maps of Bath turnpike roads in 1786. In 1789 made a scale model of Bath which he displayed at his home, 21 Old Orchard Street, and later in London: the plans were published in 1794...

       (born 1759)
    • Sanderson Miller
      Sanderson Miller
      Sanderson Miller was a pioneer of Gothic revival architecture, and a landscape designer who often added follies or other Picturesque garden buildings and features to the grounds of an estate....

       (1716–1780)
    • Roger Morris (1695–1749)
    • Richard Morrison (1767–1849)
    • William Vitruvius Morrison
      William Vitruvius Morrison
      William Vitruvius Morrison was an Irish architect, son and collaborator of Sir Richard Morrison.-Life:He was born at Clonmel, County Tipperary, second son of Sir Richard Morrison . His middle name derives from the first century B.C. Roman architect Marcus Vitruvius Pollio...

       (1794–1838)
    • Robert Mylne
      Robert Mylne
      Robert Mylne was a Scottish architect and civil engineer, particularly remembered for his design for Blackfriars Bridge in London. Born and raised in Edinburgh, he travelled to Europe as a young man, studying architecture in Rome under Piranesi...

       (1734–1811)
    • William Mylne
      William Mylne
      William Mylne was a Scottish architect and engineer. He is best known as the builder of the North Bridge, which links the Old and New Towns of Edinburgh, Scotland. He was the younger brother of Robert Mylne, architect and designer of Blackfriars Bridge in London.-Early life:William was descended...

       (1734–1790)
    • John Nash
      John Nash (architect)
      John Nash was a British architect responsible for much of the layout of Regency London.-Biography:Born in Lambeth, London, the son of a Welsh millwright, Nash trained with the architect Sir Robert Taylor. He established his own practice in 1777, but his career was initially unsuccessful and...

       (1752–1835)
    • James Paine (1717–1789)
    • John Palmer
      John Palmer (Bath architect)
      John Palmer was an English architect who worked on some of the notable buildings in the city of Bath in England...

       (c. 1738–1817)
    • George Papworth
      George Papworth
      George Papworth was an English architect who practised mainly in Ireland during the nineteenth century.-Early life and career:Papworth was born in London in 1781 and was the third son of the English stuccoist John Papworth...

       (c. 1738–1817)
    • John Buonarotti Papworth
      John Buonarotti Papworth
      John Buonarotti Papworth was a prolific architect, artist and a founder member of the Royal Institute of British Architects....

       (1795–1847)
    • Thomas Paty
      Thomas Paty
      Thomas Paty was a British surveyor, architect and mason working mainly in Bristol. He worked with his sons John Paty and William Paty.-List of works:* Bristol Bridge , with James Bridges...

       (c. 1713–1789)
    • William Paty
      William Paty
      William Paty was a British surveyor, architect and mason working mainly in Bristol. He was appointed City Surveyor in 1788...

       (1758–1800)
    • Joseph Pickford
      Joseph Pickford
      Joseph Pickford was an English architect, one of the leading provincial architects in the reign of George III.-Biography:Pickford was born in Warwickshire in 1734 but he moved as child to London when his father died. Pickford's initial training was undertaken under the stonemason and sculptor...

       (1699 – 1733)
    • John Pinch the elder (1770–1827)
    • John Pinch the younger
      John Pinch the younger
      John Pinch the younger was an architect, working mainly in the city of Bath, England, and surveyor to the Pulteney and Darlington estate...

       (1796–1849)
    • William Henry Playfair
      William Henry Playfair
      William Henry Playfair FRSE was one of the greatest Scottish architects of the 19th century, designer of many of Edinburgh's neo-classical landmarks in the New Town....

       (1790–1857)
    • William Porden
      William Porden
      William Porden was a versatile English architect. Born in Kingston upon Hull, he trained under James Wyatt and Samuel Pepys Cockerell....

       (c.1755–1822)
    • Thomas Pritchard (1723–1777)
    • James Pigott Pritchett
      James Pigott Pritchett
      James Pigott Pritchett was an architect of London and York whose practice stretched from Lincolnshire to the Scottish borders.-Personal life:...

       (1789–1868)
    • John Rennie the Elder (1761–1821)
    • Sir John Rennie (1794–1874)
    • Thomas Rickman
      Thomas Rickman
      Thomas Rickman , was an English architect who was a major figure in the Gothic Revival.He was born at Maidenhead, Berkshire, into a large Quaker family, and avoided the medical career envisaged for him by his father, a grocer and druggist; he went into business for himself and married his first...

       (1776–1841)
    • Nicholas Revett
      Nicholas Revett
      Nicholas Revett was a Suffolk gentleman and amateur architect and artist.He is best known for his famous work with James Stuart documenting the ruins of ancient Athens. Its illustrations compose 5 folio volumes and include 368 etched and engraved plates, plans and maps drawn at scale...

       (1720–1804)
    • Thomas Ripley
      Thomas Ripley (architect)
      -Career:He first kept a coffee house in Wood Street, off Cheapside, London and in 1705 was admitted to the Carpenter's Company. An ex-carpenter, he rose by degrees to become an architect and Surveyor in the royal Office of Works...

       (1683–1758)
    • John Sanders
      John Sanders (architect)
      John Sanders was an architect and the first pupil of Sir John Soane. Sanders was born on 12 April, 1768, the son of Thomas Sanders, a tallow-chandler of the parish of St Dunstan-in-the-East, London...

       (1768–1828)
    • Francis Sandys (flourished 1796–1814)
    • George Saunders (1762–1839)
    • Michael Searles
      Michael Searles
      Regency architect Michael Searles was famous as an English commercial architect of large houses, particularly in London. His most notable achievement is perhaps The Paragon in Blackheath....

       (1750–1813)
    • John Shaw Sr.
      John Shaw Sr.
      John Shaw, Senior, was an architect related to the Shaw and Hardwick family and one of the first architects to draw up plans for semi-detached housing in London....

       (1776–1832)
    • Archibald Simpson
      Archibald Simpson
      Archibald Simpson was one of the major architects of Aberdeen, .Simpson's buildings have contributed significantly to the architecture of Aberdeen. His first commission was for St...

       (1790–1847)
    • John Smeaton
      John Smeaton
      John Smeaton, FRS, was an English civil engineer responsible for the design of bridges, canals, harbours and lighthouses. He was also a capable mechanical engineer and an eminent physicist...

       (1724–1792)
    • Sir Robert Smirke
      Robert Smirke (architect)
      Sir Robert Smirke was an English architect, one of the leaders of Greek Revival architecture his best known building in that style is the British Museum, though he also designed using other architectural styles...

       (1781–1867)
    • Sir John Soane
      John Soane
      Sir John Soane, RA was an English architect who specialised in the Neo-Classical style. His architectural works are distinguished by their clean lines, massing of simple form, decisive detailing, careful proportions and skilful use of light sources...

       (1753–1837)
    • George Steuart (1730–1806)
    • James "Athenian" Stuart
      James Stuart (1713-1788)
      James "Athenian" Stuart was an English archaeologist, architect and artist best known for his central role in pioneering Neoclassicism.-Early life:...

       (1713–1788)
    • Sir Robert Taylor
      Robert Taylor (architect)
      Sir Robert Taylor was a notable English architect of the mid-late 18th century.Born at Woodford, Essex, Taylor followed in his father's footsteps and started working as a stonemason and sculptor, spending time as a pupil of Sir Henry Cheere...

       (1714–1788)
    • Thomas Telford
      Thomas Telford
      Thomas Telford FRS, FRSE was a Scottish civil engineer, architect and stonemason, and a noted road, bridge and canal builder.-Early career:...

       (1757–1834)
    • James Thornhill
      James Thornhill
      Sir James Thornhill was an English painter of historical subjects, in the Italian baroque tradition.-Life:...

       (c. 1676–1734)
    • James Trubshaw
      James Trubshaw
      James Trubshaw was an English builder, architect and civil engineer. His civil engineering works include the construction of the Grosvenor Bridge in Chester, Cheshire, then the longest stone span...

       (1777–1853)
    • John Vardy
      John Vardy
      John Vardy was an English architect attached to the Royal Office of Works from 1736. He was a close follower of the neo-Palladian architect William Kent....

       (flourished 1736–1765)
    • Isaac Ware
      Isaac Ware
      Isaac Ware was an English architect and translator of Italian Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio.He was apprenticed to Thomas Ripley, 1 August 1721, and followed him in positions in the Office of Works, but his mentor in design was Lord Burlington.Ware was a member of the St...

       (1704–1766)
    • Samuel Ware (1781–1860)
    • Amon Wilds
      Amon Wilds
      Amon Wilds was an English architect and builder. He formed an architectural partnership with his son Amon Henry WildsIn this article, Amon Wilds is referred to as Wilds senior and his son Amon Henry Wilds as Wilds junior. in 1806 and started working in the fashionable and growing seaside resort...

       (1762–1833)
    • Amon Henry Wilds
      Amon Henry Wilds
      Amon Henry Wilds was an English architect. He was part of a team of three architects and builders who—working together or independently at different times—were almost solely responsible for a surge in residential construction and development in early 19th-century Brighton, which until then had...

       (1784 or 1790–1857)
    • William Wilkins
      William Wilkins (architect)
      William Wilkins RA was an English architect, classical scholar and archaeologist. He designed the National Gallery and University College in London, and buildings for several Cambridge colleges.-Life:...

       (1778–1839)
    • John Wood, the Elder
      John Wood, the Elder
      John Wood, the Elder, , was an English architect. Born in Twerton England, a village near Bath, now a suburb, he went to school in Bath. He came back to Bath after working in Yorkshire, and it is believed, in London, in his early 20s...

       (1704–1754)
    • John Wood, the Younger
      John Wood, the Younger
      John Wood, the Younger was an English architect, working principally in the city of Bath, Somerset. He began his work as an assistant for his father, the architect John Wood, the Elder...

       (1728–1782)
    • Benjamin Dean Wyatt
      Benjamin Dean Wyatt
      Benjamin Dean Wyatt was an English architect. He was the son and pupil of the architect James Wyatt, and the brother of Matthew Cotes Wyatt....

       (1775–1852)
    • James Wyatt
      James Wyatt
      James Wyatt RA , was an English architect, a rival of Robert Adam in the neoclassical style, who far outdid Adam in his work in the neo-Gothic style.-Early classical career:...

       (1746–1813)
    • Lewis Wyatt
      Lewis Wyatt
      Lewis William Wyatt was a British architect, a nephew of both Samuel and James Wyatt of the Wyatt family of architects, who articled with each of his uncles and began practice on his own about 1805....

       (1777–1853)
    • Philip Wyatt
      Philip Wyatt
      Philip William Wyatt was an English architect, the youngest son of the architect James Wyatt nephew of Samuel Wyatt, cousin to Sir Jeffry Wyattville....

       (died 1835)
    • Samuel Wyatt
      Samuel Wyatt
      Samuel Wyatt was an English architect and engineer. A member of the Wyatt family, which included several notable 18th and 19th century English architects, his work was primarily in a neoclassical style.-Career:...

       (1737–1807)
    • Sir Jeffry Wyattville
      Jeffry Wyattville
      Sir Jeffry Wyattville was an English architect and garden designer. His original surname was Wyatt, and his name is sometimes also written as Jeffrey and his surname as Wyatville; he changed his name in 1824.He was trained by his uncles Samuel Wyatt and James Wyatt, who were both leading architects...

       (1766–1840)

    Victorian architects

    The reign of Queen Victoria, from 1837–1901.
    A - K
    • E.J. Milner Allen (c. 1860–1912)
    • Thomas Allom
      Thomas Allom
      Thomas Allom was an English architect, artist, and topographical illustrator. He was a founding member of what became the Royal Institute of British Architects . He designed many buildings in London, including the Church of St Peter's and parts of the elegant Ladbroke Estate in Notting Hill...

       (1804–1872)
    • Robert Rowand Anderson
      Robert Rowand Anderson
      Sir Robert Rowand Anderson RSA was a Scottish Victorian architect. Anderson trained in the office of George Gilbert Scott in London before setting up his own practice in Edinburgh in 1860. During the 1860s his main work was small churches in the 'First Pointed' style that is characteristic of...

       (1834–1921)
    • Hubert Austin
      Hubert Austin
      Hubert James Austin was an English architect who practiced in Lancaster. With his partners he designed many churches and other buildings, mainly in the northwest of England.-Early life and career:...

       (1845–1915)
    • Sir Benjamin Baker (1840–1907)
    • Sir Charles Barry
      Charles Barry
      Sir Charles Barry FRS was an English architect, best known for his role in the rebuilding of the Palace of Westminster in London during the mid-19th century, but also responsible for numerous other buildings and gardens.- Background and training :Born on 23 May 1795 in Bridge Street, Westminster...

       (1795–1860)
    • Charles Barry, Jr.
      Charles Barry, Jr.
      Charles Barry, Jr. was an English architect of the mid-late 19th century, and eldest son of Sir Charles Barry. Like his younger brother and fellow architect Edward Middleton Barry, Charles Jr. designed numerous buildings in London. He is particularly associated with works in the south London...

       (1823–1900)
    • Edward Middleton Barry
      Edward Middleton Barry
      Edward Middleton Barry was an English architect of the 19th century.-Biography:Edward Barry was the third son of Sir Charles Barry, born in his father's house, 27 Foley Place, London. In infancy he was delicate, and was placed under the care of a confidential servant at Blackheath...

       (1830–1880)
    • George Basevi
      George Basevi
      Elias George Basevi FRS was an English architect. He was the favourite pupil of Sir John Soane.-Life:Basevi was the youngest son of a City of London merchant, also named George Basevi...

       (1794–1845)
    • Sir Joseph Bazalgette
      Joseph Bazalgette
      Sir Joseph William Bazalgette, CB was an English civil engineer of the 19th century. As chief engineer of London's Metropolitan Board of Works his major achievement was the creation of a sewer network for central London which was instrumental in relieving the city from cholera epidemics, while...

       (1819–1891)
    • W. Hamilton Beattie (1842–1898)
    • John Francis Bentley
      John Francis Bentley
      John Francis Bentley was an English ecclesiastical architect whose most famous work is the Westminster Cathedral in London, England, built in a style heavily influenced by Byzantine architecture....

       (1839–1902)
    • Eugenius Birch
      Eugenius Birch
      Eugenius Birch was a 19th Century English naval architect, engineer and noted pier builder.-Biography:Both Eugenius and his brother were born in Gloucester Terrace, Shoreditch, to grain dealer John and wife Susanne...

       (1818–1884)
    • Sir Arthur Blomfield
      Arthur Blomfield
      Sir Arthur William Blomfield was an English architect.-Background:The fourth son of Charles James Blomfield, an Anglican Bishop of London helpfully began a programme of new church construction in the capital. Born in Fulham Palace, Arthur Blomfield was educated at Rugby and Trinity College,...

       (1829–1899)
    • Edward Blore
      Edward Blore
      Edward Blore was a 19th century British landscape and architectural artist, architect and antiquary. He was born in Edinburgh, Scotland ....

       (1787–1879)
    • George Frederick Bodley
      George Frederick Bodley
      George Frederick Bodley was an English architect working in the Gothic revival style.-Personal life:Bodley was the youngest son of William Hulme Bodley, M.D. of Edinburgh, physician at Hull Royal Infirmary, Kingston upon Hull, who in 1838 retired to his wife's home town, Brighton, Sussex, England....

       (1827–1907)
    • Cuthbert Brodrick
      Cuthbert Brodrick
      Cuthbert Brodrick FRIBA was a British architect, whose most famous building is Leeds Town Hall.- Early life :...

       (1821–1905)
    • Isambard Kingdom Brunel
      Isambard Kingdom Brunel
      Isambard Kingdom Brunel, FRS , was a British civil engineer who built bridges and dockyards including the construction of the first major British railway, the Great Western Railway; a series of steamships, including the first propeller-driven transatlantic steamship; and numerous important bridges...

       (1806–1859)
    • David Bryce
      David Bryce
      David Bryce FRSE FRIBA RSA was a Scottish architect. Born in Edinburgh, he was educated at the Royal High School and joined the office of architect William Burn in 1825, aged 22. By 1841, Bryce had risen to be Burn's partner...

       (1803–1876)
    • John McKean Brydon (1840–1901)
    • Benjamin Bucknall
      Benjamin Bucknall
      thumb|240px|right|Woodchester Mansion, GloucestershireBenjamin Bucknall was an English architect of the Gothic Revival in Southwest England and South Wales, and then of neo-Moorish architecture in Algeria...

       (1833–1895)
    • John Bunstone Bunning (1802–1863)
    • William Burges
      William Burges (architect)
      William Burges was an English architect and designer. Amongst the greatest of the Victorian art-architects, Burges sought in his work an escape from 19th century industrialisation and a return to the values, architectural and social, of an imagined mediaeval England...

       (1827–1881)
    • William Burn
      William Burn
      William Burn was a Scottish architect, pioneer of the Scottish Baronial style.He was born in Edinburgh, the son of architect Robert Burn, and educated at the Royal High School. After training with the architect of the British Museum, Sir Robert Smirke, he returned to Edinburgh in 1812...

       (1789–1870)
    • William Butterfield
      William Butterfield
      William Butterfield was a Gothic Revival architect and associated with the Oxford Movement . He is noted for his use of polychromy-Biography:...

       (1814–1900)
    • Robert Casement
    • Chevalier Casentini
    • Basil Champneys
      Basil Champneys
      Basil Champneys was an architect and author whose more notable buildings include Newnham College, Cambridge, Manchester's John Rylands Library, Mansfield College, Oxford and Oriel College, Oxford's Rhodes Building.- Life :...

       (1842–1935)
    • Thomas Edward Collcutt
      Thomas Edward Collcutt
      Thomas Edward Collcutt was an English architect in the Victorian era who designed several important buildings in London.-Biography:...

       (1840–1924)
    • Richard Cromwell Carpenter
      Richard Cromwell Carpenter
      Richard Cromwell Carpenter was an English architect. He is chiefly remembered as an ecclesiastical and tractarian architect working in the Gothic style.-Family:...

       (1812–1855)
    • John Henry Chamberlain
      John Henry Chamberlain
      John Henry Chamberlain , generally known professionally as J H Chamberlain, was a nineteenth century English architect....

       (1831–1883)
    • Ewan Christian
      Ewan Christian
      Ewan Christian was a British architect. He is most notable for the restoration of Carlisle Cathedral, the alterations to Christ Church, Spitalfields in 1866, and the extension to the National Gallery that created the National Portrait Gallery. He was architect to the Ecclesiastical Commissioners...

       (1814–1895)
    • Charles Robert Cockerell
      Charles Robert Cockerell
      Charles Robert Cockerell was an English architect, archaeologist, and writer.-Life:Charles Robert Cockerell was educated at Westminster School from 1802. From the age of sixteen, he trained in the architectural practice of his father, Samuel Pepys Cockerell...

       (1788–1863)
    • Henry Conybeare
      Henry Conybeare
      Henry Conybeare was an English civil engineer and Gothic revival architect who designed two notable churches and greatly improved the supply of drinking water to Mumbai.-Early life in England and work in India:...

       (1823-c.1884)
    • William Henry Crossland
      William Henry Crossland
      William Henry Crossland was a nineteenth century architect and a pupil of George Gilbert Scott.-Principal works:Crossland's three most important commissions were:...

       (c. 1834–1909)
    • John Sydney Crossley (1812–)
    • Thomas Cubitt
      Thomas Cubitt
      Thomas Cubitt , born Buxton, Norfolk, was the leading master builder in London in the second quarter of the 19th century, and also carried out several projects in other parts of England.-Background:...

       (1788–1855)
    • Lewis Cubitt
      Lewis Cubitt
      Lewis Cubitt was born on 29 September 1799 and died on 9 June 1883. He married Sophia Kendall on 23 January 1830.He was the younger brother of Thomas Cubitt, the leading master builder in London in the second quarter of the 19th century, and he designed many of the housing developments constructed...

       (1799–1883)
    • Henry Currey (1820–1900)
    • Samuel Daukes
      Samuel Daukes
      Samuel Whitfield Daukes was an English architect. He was born in London in 1811, the son of Samuel Whitfield Daukes, a businessman with coal mining and brewery interests, who bought Diglis House, Worcester in 1827. He was articled about 1827 to James Pigott Pritchett of York, and had set himself...

       (1811–1880)
    • Sir Thomas Deane
      Thomas Deane
      Sir Thomas Deane was an Irish architect. He was the father of Sir Thomas Newenham Deane, and grandfather of Sir Thomas Manly Deane, who were also architects.-Life:...

       (1792–1871)
    • Gabriel-Hippolyte Destailleur
      Gabriel-Hippolyte Destailleur
      Gabriel-Hippolyte Alexandre Destailleur was a renowned Neo-Renaissance French architect noted for his designs and restoration work for great châteaux in France and in England....

       (1822–1893)
    • George Devey
      George Devey
      George Devey was a British architect, born in London, the second son of Frederick and Ann Devey. Devey was educated in London, after leaving school he initially studied art, with an ambition to become a professional artist...

       (1820–1886)
    • John Dobson
      John Dobson (architect)
      John Dobson was a 19th-century English architect in the neoclassical tradition. He became the most noted architect in the North of England. Churches and houses by him dot the North East - Nunnykirk Hall, Meldon Park, Mitford Hall, Lilburn Tower, St John the Baptist Church in Otterburn,...

       (1787–1865)
    • Thomas Leverton Donaldson
      Thomas Leverton Donaldson
      Thomas Leverton Donaldson was an English architect.He was born in Bloomsbury Square, London, the eldest son of architect, James Donaldson...

       (1795–1885)
    • William Donthorne
      William Donthorne
      William John Donthorne was a notable English architect of the early 19th century and one of the founders of what became the Royal Institute of British Architects .Donthorn was born in Norfolk and was a pupil of Sir Jeffry Wyattville...

       (1799–1859)
    • John Douglas
      John Douglas (architect)
      John Douglas was an English architect who designed about 500 buildings in Cheshire, North Wales, and northwest England, in particular in the estate of Eaton Hall. He was trained in Lancaster and practised throughout his career from an office in Chester, Cheshire...

       (1830–1911)
    • Sir Thomas Drew
    • Sir Edmund Du Cane (1830–1903)
    • Thomas Duff
      Thomas Duff
      Thomas John Duff was an Irish architect from the town of Newry, County Down. Duff was the principal architect of a number of Roman Catholic churches and cathedrals in the northeast of Ireland....

       (1792–1848)
    • Robert Rippon Duke
      Robert Rippon Duke
      Robert Rippon Duke was a famous architect who designed the Octagon and remodeled the Devonshire Hospital in Buxton, Derbyshire. The Octagon was first opened to the public in 1876...

       (1817–1909)
    • Peter Ellis
      Peter Ellis (architect)
      Peter Ellis was a Liverpudlian architect. He lived for a time at 40 Falkner Square, on which an English Heritage Blue Plaque is now sited....

       (1804–1888)
    • Harvey Lonsdale Elmes
      Harvey Lonsdale Elmes
      Harvey Lonsdale Elmes , the son of James Elmes, was born in Chichester, England. He was a distinguished architect....

       (1813–1847)
    • Benjamin Ferrey
      Benjamin Ferrey
      Benjamin Ferrey, F.S.A., F.R.I.B.A. was an English architect who worked mostly in the Gothic Revival.-Family:Benjamin Ferrey was the youngest son of Benjamin Ferrey Snr, a draper who became Mayor of Christchurch. He was educated at Wimborne Grammar School....

       (1810–1880)
    • Captain Francis Fowke
      Francis Fowke
      Francis Fowke RE was a British engineer and architect, and a Captain in the Corps of Royal Engineers. Most of his architectural work was executed in the Renaissance style, although he made use of relatively new technologies to create iron framed buildings, with large open galleries and...

       (1823–1865)
    • Charles Fowler
      Charles Fowler
      Charles Fowler , English architect, was born at Cullompton, Devon.After serving an apprenticeship of seven years with John Powning of Exeter, he went to London in 1814, and entered the office of David Laing, where he remained until he commenced practice for himself...

       (1792–1867)
    • James Fowler
      James Fowler (architect)
      James Fowler JP, FRIBA, known as “Fowler of Louth”, was an English ecclesiastical architect of the Victorian Age chiefly associated with the restoration and renovation of churches....

       (1828–1892)
    • Sir John Fowler (1817–1898)
    • William Frame (1848–1906)
    • John Gibson
      John Gibson (architect)
      John Gibson was an English architect born in Warwickshire.Gibson was an assistant to Sir Charles Barry and assisted him in the drawings of the Houses of Parliament....

       (1814–1892)
    • Edward William Godwin
      Edward William Godwin
      Edward William Godwin was a progressive English architect-designer, who began his career working in the strongly polychromatic "Ruskinian Gothic" style of mid-Victorian Britain, inspired by The Stones of Venice, then moved on to provide designs in the "Anglo-Japanese taste" of the Aesthetic...

       (1833–1886)
    • Herbert Gribble (1847–1894)
    • Joseph Hansom
      Joseph Hansom
      Joseph Aloysius Hansom was a prolific English architect working principally in the Gothic Revival style, who invented the Hansom cab and was one of the founders of the eminent architectural journal, The Builder, in 1843....

       (1803–1882)
    • Philip Charles Hardwick
      Philip Charles Hardwick
      -Life:Philip Charles Hardwick was a notable English architect of the 19th century who was once described as "a careful and industrious student of mediaeval art"...

       (1822–1892)
    • Jesse Hartley
      Jesse Hartley
      Jesse Hartley was Civil Engineer and Superintendent of the Concerns of the Dock Estate in Liverpool, England between 1824 and 1860.-Hartley's career:...

       (1780–1860)
    • Henry Hare
      Henry Hare
      Henry Thomas Hare was an Edwardian English architect, born in Scarborough, Yorkshire, who was responsible for a trail of municipal buildings around Britain....

       (1861–1921)
    • James Harrison
      James Harrison (architect)
      James Harrison was an English architect who worked mainly in Chester, Cheshire. His works were mainly on churches — building new churches, rebuilding old churches, and making amendments and alterations to existing churches....

       (1814–1866)
    • Edward Haycock (1790–1870)
    • John Hayward
      John Hayward (architect)
      John Hayward was a Gothic Revival architect based in Exeter, Devon, who gained the reputation as “the senior architect in the west of England”.-Biography:...

       (1808–1891)
    • James Hibbert (1833–1903)
    • William Hill (1827or8–1889)
    • Thomas Hopper (1776–1856)
    • George Gordon Hoskins
      George Gordon Hoskins
      George Gordon Hoskins FRIBA , was an English architect responsible for the design of several public buildings in the North East of England...

       (1837–1911)
    • A. J. Humbert
      A. J. Humbert
      Albert Jenkins Humbert was an architect particularly favoured by Prince Albert.Amongst the buildings he is particularly associated with are Sandringham House and St. Mildred's Church, Whippingham and both the Duchess of Kent's Mausoleum and the Royal Mausoleum at Frogmore, within the Home Park of...

       (1822–1877)
    • Sir Thomas Graham Jackson
      Thomas Graham Jackson
      Sir Thomas Graham Jackson, 1st Baronet RA was one of the most distinguished English architects of his generation...

       (1835–1924)
    • Sir Horace Jones (1819–1887)
    • Sampson Kempthorne
      Sampson Kempthorne
      Sampson Kempthorne was a workhouse architect. He began practising in Carlton Chambers on Regent Street in London. His father was a friend of the Poor Law Commissioner Thomas Frankland Lewis, which may have helped him to get the commission to build workhouses.Kempthorne came up with two designs –...

      (1809–1873)
    • John Kibble (1819–1894)
    • Charles George Hood Kinnear (1830–1894)
    • Edmund Kirby
      Edmund Kirby
      Edmund Kirby was an English architect. He was born in Liverpool, educated at Sedgeley Park School and Oscott College. He was articled to E. W. Pugin, then worked for Hardman & Co., and for John Douglas in Chester. By 1863 he was practising in Birkenhead and by 1866 his office was in Derby...

       (1838–1920)
    • Sir James Knowles (1831–1908)
    L - Z
  • Edward Buckton Lamb
    Edward Buckton Lamb
    Edward Buckton Lamb was a British architect who exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1824. Lamb was labelled a 'Rogue Gothic Revivalist', and for breaking with convention, his designs were roundly criticised, especially by The Ecclesiologist....

     (1806–1869)
  • Sir Charles Lanyon
    Charles Lanyon
    Sir Charles Lanyon DL, JP was an English architect of the 19th century. His work is most closely associated with Belfast, Northern Ireland.-Biography:Lanyon was born in Eastbourne, Sussex in 1813...

     (1813–1889)
  • George Anderson Lawton
  • John Leeming (1849–1931)
  • Joseph Leeming (1850–1929)
  • William Leiper
    William Leiper
    William Leiper FRIBA RSA was a British architect notable particularly for his work in the west central Lowlands of Scotland.-Career:...

     (1839–1916)
  • Henry Francis Lockwood
    Henry Francis Lockwood
    Henry Francis Lockwood was an influential architect, born at Doncaster on 18 September 1811. His father and grandfather were mayors of Doncaster. He married Emma Day whose great uncle, Charles Day , made a fortune through the Day and Martin company...

     (1811–1878)
  • Thomas Meakin Lockwood
    Thomas Lockwood
    Thomas Meakin Lockwood was an English architect whose main works are in Chester, Cheshire, England. Lockwood, together with Thomas Penson and John Douglas, were the architects mainly responsible for the black-and-white revival buildings in the city centre. Lockwood designed a number of buildings...

     (1830–1900)
  • William Henry Lynn
    William Henry Lynn
    William Henry Lynn was an Irish-born architect with a practice in Belfast and the north of England. He is noted for his Ruskinian Venetian Gothic public buildings, which include Chester Town Hall and Barrow-in-Furness Town Hall .In 1846 Lynn was articled to Sir Charles Lanyon in Belfast; under...

     (1829–1915)
  • MacGibbon and Ross
    MacGibbon and Ross
    David MacGibbon and Thomas Ross were Scottish architects. Their practice, MacGibbon and Ross was established in 1872 and continued until 1914...

    , founded 1872, dissolved 1914
  • Alexander Marshall Mackenzie
    Alexander Marshall Mackenzie
    Alexander Marshall Mackenzie was a Scottish architect responsible for prestigious projects including the Isle of Man Banking Company in Douglas, and Australia House and the Waldorf Hotel in London....

     (1847–1933)
  • Frank Matcham
    Frank Matcham
    Frank Matcham was a famous English theatrical architect. He is buried in Highgate Cemetery.-Early career:...

     (1854–1920)
  • William Mawson (1828–1889)
  • J. J. McCarthy (1817–1882)
  • Fr. Jeremiah McAuley
  • John Stuart McCaig
    McCaig's Tower
    McCaig's Tower is a prominent folly on the hillside overlooking Oban in Argyll, Scotland. It is built of Bonawe granite taken from the quarries across Airds Bay, on Loch Etive, from Muckairn, with a circumference of about 200 metres with two-tiers of 94 lancet arches .The structure was...

     (11 Jul 1823–29 Jun 1902)
  • Edward William Mountford
    Edward William Mountford
    Edward William Mountford was an English architect, noted for his Edwardian Baroque style, who designed the Old Bailey.-Life:...

     (1855–1908)
  • William Chadwell Mylne
    William Chadwell Mylne
    William Chadwell Mylne, FRS was a British engineer and architect.He was descended from a Scottish family of masons and architects, and was the second son of Robert Mylne , surveyor to the New River Company, and builder of the first Blackfriars Bridge in London.Initially, William's elder brother...

     (1781–1863)
  • William Eden Nesfield
    William Eden Nesfield
    William Eden Nesfield was an English architect, designer and painter.W. E. Nesfield was the eldest son of the landscape architect and painter William Andrews Nesfield. He was educated at Eton and then articled to the architect William Burn in 1850, transferring after two years to his uncle by...

     (1835–1888)
  • William Nicholson
  • John O’Neill
  • Edward Ould
    Edward Ould
    Edward Augustus Lyle Ould was an English architect.Ould was a son of the rector of Tattenhall, Cheshire. He became a pupil of the Chester architect John Douglas and in 1886 he joined in partnership with the Liverpool architect G. E. Grayson. His early work was influenced by Douglas,...

     (1852–1909)
  • William Owen (1852–1909)
  • Edward Graham Paley
    Edward Graham Paley
    Edward Graham Paley, usually known as E. G. Paley, , was an English architect who practised in Lancaster, Lancashire, in the second half of the 19th century.-Education and career:...

     (1823–1895)
  • Sir Joseph Paxton
    Joseph Paxton
    Sir Joseph Paxton was an English gardener and architect, best known for designing The Crystal Palace.-Early life:...

     (1803–1865)
  • William Peachey (flourished 1867–1876)
  • John Loughborough Pearson
    John Loughborough Pearson
    John Loughborough Pearson was a Gothic Revival architect renowned for his work on churches and cathedrals. Pearson revived and practised largely the art of vaulting, and acquired in it a proficiency unrivalled in his generation.-Early life and education:Pearson was born in Brussels, Belgium on 5...

     (1817–1897)
  • John Dick Peddie
    John Dick Peddie
    John Dick Peddie was a Scottish architect, businessman and a Liberal Party politician.-Biography:John Dick Peddie and his twin brother William were the second and third sons of James Peddie WS and Margaret Dick...

     (1824–1891)
  • Sir James Pennethorne
    James Pennethorne
    Sir James Pennethorne was a notable 19th century English architect and planner, particularly associated with buildings and parks in central London.-Life:...

     (1801–1871)
  • Charles John Phipps (1835–1897)
  • Thomas Prosser (died 1842)
  • Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812–1852)
  • Edward Welby Pugin
    E. W. Pugin
    Edward Welby Pugin was the eldest son of Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin and Louisa Barton. His father, A. W. N. Pugin, was a famous architect and designer of Neo-Gothic architecture, and after his death in 1852 Edward took up his successful practice...

     (1834–1875)
  • William Railton
    William Railton
    William Railton was an English architect, best known as the designer of Nelson's Column. He was based in London with offices at 12 Regent Street for much of his career.He was a pupil of the London architect and surveyor William Inwood....

     (c. 1801–1877)
  • David Rhind
    David Rhind
    David Rhind was a Scottish architect, born in Edinburgh in 1808 to parents John Rhind and his wife Marion Anderson. David Rhind was married twice, to Emily Shoubridge in 1840, then Mary Jane Sackville-Pearson in 1845...

     (1808–1883)
  • Henry Roberts
    Henry Roberts (architect)
    Henry Roberts was a British architect best known for Fishmongers' Hall in London and for his work on model dwellings for workers.-Biography:...

     (1803–1876)
  • John Thomas Rochead
    John Thomas Rochead
    John Thomas Rochead was a British architect.He was born and raised in Edinburgh, and worked for a number of years as an apprentice of David Bryce...

     (1814–1878)
  • James Piers St Aubyn
    James Piers St Aubyn
    James Piers St Aubyn , often referred to as J. P. St Aubyn, was an English architect of the Victorian era, known for his church architecture and confident restorations.-Early life:...

     (1815–1895)
  • James Salmon (1805–1888)
  • Anthony Salvin
    Anthony Salvin
    Anthony Salvin was an English architect. He gained a reputation as an expert on medieval buildings and applied this expertise to his new buildings and his restorations...

     (1799–1881)
  • Sir George Gilbert Scott
    George Gilbert Scott
    Sir George Gilbert Scott was an English architect of the Victorian Age, chiefly associated with the design, building and renovation of churches, cathedrals and workhouses...

     (1811–1878)
  • George Gilbert Scott, Jr. (1839–1897)
  • John Oldrid Scott
    John Oldrid Scott
    John Oldrid Scott was an English architect.He was the son of Sir George Gilbert Scott and Caroline née Oldrid. His brother George Gilbert Scott Junior and nephew Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, were also prominent architects. He married Mary Ann Stevens in 1868, eldest daughter of the Reverend Thomas...

     (1841–1913)
  • John Dando Sedding (1838–1891)
  • John Pollard Seddon
    John Pollard Seddon
    John Pollard Seddon was an English architect.He was a pupil of Thomas Leverton Donaldson and C.F.A. Voysey trained under him....

     (1827–1906)
  • Edmund Sharpe
    Edmund Sharpe
    Edmund Sharpe was an English architect and engineer. He started his career as an architect, initially on his own, then in partnership with Edward Paley, designing mainly churches but also some secular buildings...

     (1809–1877)
  • John Shaw Jr
    John Shaw Jr
    John Shaw Junior was an English architect of the 19th century who was complimented as a designer in the "Manner of Wren". He designed buildings in the classical Jacobean fashion and designed some of London's first semi-detached homes in the area close to Chalk Farm. Shaw retired in the early...

     (1803–1870)
  • Richard Norman Shaw
    Richard Norman Shaw
    Richard Norman Shaw RA , was an influential Scottish architect from the 1870s to the 1900s, known for his country houses and for commercial buildings.-Life:...

     (1831–1912)
  • Cornelius Sherlock (died 1888)
  • Sir John Simpson
    John William Simpson (architect)
    Sir John William Simpson KBE, FRIBA was an English architect and was President of the Royal Institute of British Architects from 1919 to 1921.- Background and early life :...

     (1858–1933)
  • Sydney Smirke
    Sydney Smirke
    Sydney Smirke, architect, was born in London, England, the younger brother of Sir Robert Smirke, also an architect. Their father, also Robert Smirke, had been a well-known 18th Century painter.Sydney Smirke's works include:...

     (1798–1877)
  • Sidney R. J. Smith
    Sidney R. J. Smith
    Sidney R. J. Smith was a Late Victorian English architect, best known for the work he undertook in the 1880s and 1890s for the philanthropist Henry Tate including the original Tate Gallery at Millbank.-Works:* Outdoor Relief Station, Norwood...

     (1858–1913)
  • William Smith
    William Smith (architect)
    William Smith was a Scottish architect. A partner in the Aberdonian firms J & W Smith , W & J Smith and W & J Smith and Kelly , and employed as Aberdeen's superintendent of works , he designed a large number of buildings in north east Scotland.Smith was a prolific designer of manses,...

     (1831–1901)
  • Charles William Stephens
  • Robert Stephenson
    Robert Stephenson
    Robert Stephenson FRS was an English civil engineer. He was the only son of George Stephenson, the famed locomotive builder and railway engineer; many of the achievements popularly credited to his father were actually the joint efforts of father and son.-Early life :He was born on the 16th of...

     (1803–1859)
  • George Edmund Street
    George Edmund Street
    George Edmund Street was an English architect, born at Woodford in Essex.- Life :Street was the third son of Thomas Street, solicitor, by his second wife, Mary Anne Millington. George went to school at Mitcham in about 1830, and later to the Camberwell collegiate school, which he left in 1839...

     (1824–1881)
  • Sir John Taylor
    John Taylor (architect)
    Sir John Taylor, KCB, FRIBA was a British architect...

     (1833–1912)
  • Samuel Sanders Teulon
    Samuel Sanders Teulon
    Samuel Sanders Teulon was a notable 19th century English Gothic Revival architect.-Family:Teulon was born in Greenwich in south-east London, the son of a cabinet-maker from a French Huguenot family. His younger brother William Milford Teulon also became an architect...

     (1812–1873)
  • Yeoville Thomason
    Yeoville Thomason
    H. R. Yeoville Thomason was an architect in Birmingham, England. He was born in Edinburgh to a Birmingham family. Thomason set up his own practice in Birmingham 1853-1854....

     (1826–1901)
  • Alexander "Greek" Thomson
    Alexander Thomson
    Alexander "Greek" Thomson was an eminent Scottish architect and architectural theorist who was a pioneer in sustainable building. Although his work was published in the architectural press of his day, it was little appreciated outwith Glasgow during his lifetime...

     (1817–1875)
  • Sir William Tite
    William Tite
    Sir William Tite, CB was an English architect who served as President of the Royal Institute of British Architects. He was particularly associated with various London buildings, with railway stations and cemetery projects....

     (1798–1873)
  • John Thomas
    John Thomas (sculptor)
    John Thomas was a British sculptor and architect, who worked on Buckingham Palace and the Palace of Westminster.John Thomas was born in Chalford, Gloucestershire....

     (1813–1862)
  • Charles Harrison Townsend
    Charles Harrison Townsend
    Charles Harrison Townsend was an English architect. He was born in Birkenhead, educated at Birkenhead School and articled to the Liverpool architect Walter Scott in 1870. He moved to London with his family in 1880 and entered partnership with the London architect Thomas Lewis Banks in 1884...

      (1851–1928)
  • Silvanus Trevail
    Silvanus Trevail
    Silvanus Trevail was a British architect, and the most prominent Cornish architect of the 19th century. He was born in Luxulyan, Cornwall in October 1851. He rose to become Mayor of Truro and, nationally, President of the architects' professional body, the Society of Architects. His success...

     (1851–1903)
  • Charles Trubshaw
    Charles Trubshaw
    Charles Trubshaw was an architect specifically associated with railway buildings on the London and North Western Railway and Midland Railway lines...

     (1841–1917)
  • H. H. Vale (1833or1–1875)
  • Thomas Verity
    Thomas Verity
    Thomas Verity was an English theatre architect during the theatre building boom of 1885–1915.Verity began his career articled in the architecture department of the War Office, assisting in the erection of the South Kensington Museum...

     (1837–1891)
  • Lewis Vulliamy
    Lewis Vulliamy
    Lewis Vulliamy was an English architect belonging to the Vulliamy family of clockmakers.-Life:Lewis Vulliamy was the son of the clockmaker Benjamin Vulliamy. He was born in Pall Mall, London on 15 March 1791, and articled to Sir Robert Smirke...

     (1791–1871)
  • Edward Walters
    Edward Walters
    Edward Walters was an English architect. After superintending Sir John Rennie's military building work in Constantinople between 1832 and 1837, he returned to England to practise as an architect in the provinces...

     (1808–1872)
  • Alfred Waterhouse
    Alfred Waterhouse
    Alfred Waterhouse was a British architect, particularly associated with the Victorian Gothic Revival architecture. He is perhaps best known for his design for the Natural History Museum in London, and Manchester Town Hall, although he also built a wide variety of other buildings throughout the...

     (1830–1905)
  • Philip Webb
    Philip Webb
    Another Philip Webb — Philip Edward Webb was the architect son of leading architect Sir Aston Webb. Along with his brother, Maurice, he assisted his father towards the end of his career....

     (1831–1915)
  • William White
    William White (architect)
    William White, F.S.A. was an English architect, famous for his part in 19th century Gothic Revival architecture and church restorations...

     (1825–1900)
  • James William Wild (1814–92)
  • Charles Wilson
    Charles Wilson (architect)
    Charles Wilson was a Scottish architect from Glasgow.-Biography:Charles Wilson was the younger son of a Glasgow-based master mason and builder. After working for his father, he was articled to the architect David Hamilton in 1827...

     (1810–1863)
  • Henry Woodyer (1816–1896)
  • Benjamin Woodward
    Benjamin Woodward
    Benjamin Woodward was an Irish architect who, in partnership with Sir Thomas Newenham Deane, designed a number of buildings in Dublin....

     (1816–1861)
  • Thomas Worthington
    Thomas Worthington (architect)
    Thomas Worthington was a 19th-century English architect, particularly associated with public buildings in and around Manchester.-Early life:...

     (1826–1909)
  • Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt
    Matthew Digby Wyatt
    Sir Matthew Digby Wyatt was a British architect and art historian who became Secretary of the Great Exhibition, Surveyor of the East India Company and the first Slade Professor of Fine Art at the University of Cambridge.-Life:...

     (1820–1877)
  • Thomas Henry Wyatt
    Thomas Henry Wyatt
    Thomas Henry Wyatt was an Irish British architect. He had a prolific and distinguished career, being elected President of the Royal Institute of British Architects 1870-73 and awarded their Royal Gold Medal for Architecture in 1873...

     (1807–1880)
  • William Young (1843–1900)

  • Edwardian and Inter–War Period

    1901 up to the outbreak of the Second World War in 1945.
    A - L
    • Stanley Davenport Adshead (1868–1947)
    • Henry Victor Ashley (1872–1945)
    • Charles Robert Ashbee
      Charles Robert Ashbee
      Charles Robert Ashbee was an English designer and entrepreneur who was a prime mover of the Arts and Crafts movement that took its craft ethic from the works of John Ruskin and its co-operative structure from the socialism of William Morris.-Early life:He was the son of businessman and erotic...

       (1863–1942)
    • Robert Atkinson
      Robert Atkinson (architect)
      Robert Atkinson, OBE was an English architect primarily working in the Art Deco style.Atkinson was born in Wigton, Cumberland and studied at University College, Nottingham before studying abroad in Paris, Italy and America. He was a talented draughtsman and worked for C.E. Mallows from 1905...

       (1883–1952)
    • Sir Frank Baines
      Frank Baines
      Sir Frank Baines, KCVO, CBE, FRIBA was at one time the architect heading Her Majesty's Office of Works.His most famous work was Thames House and its neighbour Imperial Chemical House in London, England...

       (1877–1933)
    • Sir Herbert Baker
      Herbert Baker
      Sir Herbert Baker was a British architect.Baker was the dominant force in South African architecture for two decades, 1892–1912....

       (1862–1946)
    • Peter Behrens
      Peter Behrens
      Peter Behrens was a German architect and designer. He was important for the modernist movement, as several of the movements leading names worked for him when they were young.-Biography:Behrens attended the Christianeum Hamburg from September 1877 until Easter 1882...

       (1868–1940)
    • John Belcher
      John Belcher (architect)
      John Belcher was an English architect.Belcher was born in Southwark on 10 July 1841, London. His father of the same name was an established architect. The son was articled with his father, spending two years in France from 1862 where he studied contemporary architecture...

       (1841–1913)
    • Edward Ingress Bell
      Ingress Bell
      Edward Ingress Bell was an English architect of the late 19th and early 20th century, who worked for many years in partnership with the more well-known Sir Aston Webb....

       (1834–1913)
    • Thomas Bennett
      Thomas Bennett (architect)
      Sir Thomas Penberthy Bennett KBE FRIBA was a renowned British architect, responsible for much of the development of the new towns of Crawley and Stevenage....

       (1887–1980)
    • Hendrik Petrus Berlage
      Hendrik Petrus Berlage
      thumb|120px|left|BerlageHendrik Petrus Berlage, Amsterdam, 21 February 1856 — The Hague 12 August 1934, was a prominent Dutch architect.-Overview:...

       (1856–1834)
    • Sir Reginald Blomfield
      Reginald Blomfield
      Sir Reginald Theodore Blomfield was a prolific British architect, garden designer and author of the Victorian and Edwardian period.- Early life and career :...

       (1856–1942)
    • Bradshaw Gass & Hope
      Bradshaw Gass & Hope
      Bradshaw Gass & Hope is an English firm of architects founded in 1862 by Jonas James Bradshaw . The style "Bradshaw Gass & Hope" was adopted after J. J...

      , founded 1862
    • Cecil Brewer (1871–1918)
    • Sir John James Burnet
      John James Burnet
      Sir John James Burnet was a Scottish Edwardian architect who was noted for a number of prominent buildings in Glasgow, Scotland and London, England...

       (1857–1938)
    • William Douglas Caroe (1857–1938)
    • Serge Chermayeff
      Serge Chermayeff
      Serge Ivan Chermayeff was a Russian born, British architect, industrial designer, writer, and co-founder of several architectural societies, including the American Society of Planners and Architects....

       (1900–1996)
    • Wells Coates
      Wells Coates
      Wells Wintemute Coates OBE was an architect, designer and writer. He was, for most of his life, an ex-patriate Canadian architect who is best known for his work in England...

       (1895–1958)
    • Sir Ninian Comper
      Ninian Comper
      Sir John Ninian Comper was a Scottish-born architect. He was one of the last of the great Gothic Revival architects, noted for his churches and their furnishings...

       (1864–1960)
    • Amyas Connell
      Amyas Connell
      Amyas Douglas Connell was a highly influential New Zealand architect of the mid-twentieth century. He achieved early and conspicuous success as a student, winning the Rome Prize in Architecture in 1926...

       (1901–1980)
    • S. N. Cooke
    • Sir Edwin Cooper (1874–1942)
    • James Hoey Craigie
      James Hoey Craigie
      James Hoey Craigie TD FRIBA was a Scottish architect. He studied at the Glasgow School of Art. In 1894 he won the Alexander Thomson travelling scholarship which he spent in France and Italy...

       (1870–1930)
    • Robert Cromie
      Robert Cromie
      Robert Cromie was a Belfast journalist and novelist. He was the third son of Dr. Cromie of Clough and was educated at the Royal Belfast Academical Institution...

    • Guy Dawber
      Guy Dawber
      Sir Edward Guy Dawber, RA, ARA was an English architect working in the late Arts and Crafts style whose work is particularly associated with the Cotswolds....

       (1861–1938)
    • Reginald Fairlie
      Reginald Fairlie
      Reginald Francis Joseph Fairlie was a Scottish architect.Born at Kincaple, Fife, he was educated in Birmingham....

       (1883–1952)
    • Sir Banister Fletcher
      Banister Fletcher
      Sir Banister Flight Fletcher was an English architect and architectural historian, as was his father, also named Banister Fletcher....

       (1866–1953)
    • Ernest Gimson
      Ernest Gimson
      Ernest William Gimson was an English furniture designer and architect. Gimson was described by the art critic Nikolaus Pevsner as "the greatest of the English architect-designers"...

       (1864–1919)
    • Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel
      Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel
      Harry Stuart Goodhart-Rendel was an English architect and writer, also a musician.-Life:He was educated at Eton College, and read music at Trinity College, Cambridge. He worked shortly for Sir Charles Nicholson, and then set up his own architectural practice...

       (1887–1959)
    • William Curtis Green
      William Curtis Green
      William Curtis Green was an English architect.Green was born in Alton, Hampshire. He studied engineering at the technical school at West Bromwich and architecture at Birmingham School of Art. Articled to John Belcher from 1895 he studied part time at the Royal Academy. In 1897 he joined the staff...

       (1882–1958)
    • Sidney Greenslade
      Sidney Greenslade
      Sidney K. Greenslade , born in Exeter, was the first architect of the National Library of Wales, located in Aberystwyth.-External links:*...

       (1867–1955)
    • Vincent Harris
      Vincent Harris
      Emanuel Vincent Harris OBE, RA was an English architect who designed several important public buildings.He was born in Devonport, Devon and educated at Kingsbridge Grammar School. He was articled to the Plymouth architect James Harvey in 1893; in 1897 he moved to London where he assisted E. Keynes...

       (1876–1971)
    • Thomas Hastings
      Thomas Hastings (architect)
      Thomas Hastings was an American architect.- Biography :He was born in New York City to Thomas Samuel Hastings, a Presbyterian minister, and Fanny de Groot. Hastings came from a colonial Yankee background, his ancestor Thomas Hastings having come from the East Anglia region of England to the...

       (1860–1929)
    • Stanley Heaps
      Stanley Heaps
      Stanley A. Heaps was an English architect responsible for the design of a number of stations on the London Underground system as well as the design of train depots and bus and trolleybus garages for London Transport.-Works:...

       (1878–1962)
    • Oliver Hill
      Oliver Hill (architect)
      Oliver Hill was an English architect, landscape architect, and garden designer. Oliver Hill was apprenticed to a builder and then to an architect. Oliver Hill's early garden designs were in the Arts and Crafts style but he turned towards modernism in the 1930s, favouring curved lines...

       (1887–1968)
    • Dr Harold Frank Hoar
      Frank Hoar
      Harold Frank Hoar, FRIBA , was a British architect, artist, academic and architectural historian. Hoar first came to public prominence when, at the age of 25, he won a competition to design the first terminal building at London's Gatwick Airport in the 1930s...

       (1907–1976)
    • Charles Holden
      Charles Holden
      Charles Henry Holden, Litt. D., FRIBA, MRTPI, RDI was a Bolton-born English architect best known for designing many London Underground stations during the 1920s and 1930s, for Bristol Central Library, the Underground Electric Railways Company of London's headquarters at 55 Broadway and for the...

       (1875–1960)
    • Arthur John Hope
      Arthur John Hope
      Arthur John Hope, known as “AJ” was an architect and president of the Manchester Society of Architects . He was born in Atherton, Greater Manchester, then in the historic county of Lancashire....

       (1875–1960)
    • P. Morley Horder
    • Thomas Cecil Howitt
      Thomas Cecil Howitt
      Thomas Cecil Howitt, OBE an eminent British provincial architect of the 20th Century, was born on 6 June 1889, at Hucknall, near Nottingham....

       (1889–1968)
    • Charles Holloway James
      Charles Holloway James
      Charles Holloway James R.A., F.R.I.B.A., , architect, specialised in designs for homes and housing projects, but also completed large public works, particularly in collaboration with Stephen Rowland Pierce.James was born in 1893 at Gloucester...

       (1893–1953)
    • Richard William Herbert Jones
    • Sir William Kininmonth
      William Kininmonth (architect)
      Sir William Hardie Kininmonth was a Scottish architect whose work mixed a modern style with Scottish vernacular.- Biography :...

       (1904–1988)
    • John Kinross
      John Kinross
      -Biography:Born in Stirling, Kinross was articled to Glasgow architect John Hutchison around 1870, and moved to the Edinburgh firm of Wardrop and Reid in 1875. He travelled to Italy in 1880 to study Renaissance buildings. In 1882 Kinross he established a partnership with Henry Seymour, which lasted...

       (1855–1931)
    • Ralph Knott
      Ralph Knott
      Ralph Knott FRIBA was a British architect responsible for building the massive 6-storey "Edwardian Baroque" style County Hall building for the London County Council....

       (1878–1929)
    • Henry Vaughan Lanchester
      Henry Vaughan Lanchester
      Henry Vaughan Lanchester was an English architect.Lanchester was born in St John's Wood, London. His father Henry Jones Lanchester was an established architect. The son was articled with his father, but also worked in the offices of London architects F.J. Eadle, T.W. Cutler and George Sherrin...

       (1863–1953)
    • Archibald Leitch
      Archibald Leitch
      Archibald "Offside Archie" Leitch was a Scottish architect, most famous for his work designing football stadia throughout the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland.-Early work:...

       (1865–1939)
    • William Lethaby
      William Lethaby
      William Richard Lethaby was an English architect and architectural historian whose ideas were highly influential on the late Arts and Crafts and early Modern movements in architecture, and in the fields of conservation and art education.-Early life:Lethaby was born in Barnstaple, Devon, the son of...

       (1857–1931)
    • Sir Robert Lorimer
      Robert Lorimer
      Sir Robert Stodart Lorimer was a prolific Scottish architect noted for his restoration work on historic houses and castles, and for promotion of the Arts and Crafts style.-Early life:...

       (1864–1929)
    • Berthold Lubetkin
      Berthold Lubetkin
      Berthold Romanovich Lubetkin was a Russian émigré architect who pioneered modernist design in Britain in the 1930s. His work includes the Highpoint housing complex, London Zoo penguin pool, Finsbury Health Centre and Spa Green Estate.-Early years:Berthold Lubetkin was born in Tiflis into a Jewish...

       (1901–1990)
    • Sir Edwin Lutyens
      Edwin Lutyens
      Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens, OM, KCIE, PRA, FRIBA was a British architect who is known for imaginatively adapting traditional architectural styles to the requirements of his era...

       (1869–1944)
    M - Z
    • Charles Rennie Mackintosh
      Charles Rennie Mackintosh
      Charles Rennie Mackintosh was a Scottish architect, designer, watercolourist and artist. He was a designer in the Arts and Crafts movement and also the main representative of Art Nouveau in the United Kingdom. He had a considerable influence on European design...

       (1868–1928)
    • Mewès & Davis (Arthur Joseph Davis
      Arthur Joseph Davis
      Arthur Joseph Davis was a British architect. Davis studied at the Paris École des Beaux-Arts in the 1890s. He was the co-partner in the firm Mewes & Davis, with Charles Mewès. The firm designed the elevations and interior decoration of the London Ritz Hotel which introduced modern French comfort...

       (1878–1951), Charles Mewès
      Charles Mewès
      Charles Frédéric Mewès was a French architect and designer.-Biography:Charles Frédéric Mewès was born at Strasbourg. He came from a Jewish family of Baltic origin. The whole family left Alsace in 1870 during the Prussian invasion. At 20, he joined the office of Jean-Louis Pascal, a then famous...

       (1860–1914)), founded 1900
    • Temple Moore (1856–1920)
    • G. Val Myer
    • F. Winton Newman
    • Ernest Newton
      Ernest Newton
      Ernest Newton, FRIBA, ARA was an English architect and President of Royal Institute of British Architects.-Life:Newton was the son of an estate manager of Bickley, Kent. He was educated at Uppingham School. He married, in 1881, Antoinette Johanna Hoyack, of Rotterdam, and had three sons...

       (1856–1922)
    • George Oatley
      George Oatley
      Sir George Herbert Oatley was an English architect noted for his work in Bristol, especially the gothic Wills Memorial Building, for which he was knighted in 1925.-Early life:...

       (1863–1950)
    • Segar Owen (born 1874)
    • Paul Paget (1901–1985)
    • Henry Paley
      Henry Paley
      Henry Anderson Paley was an English architect, the only son of Edward Paley, also an architect, of Lancaster. He started his training with his father and Hubert Austin, then went on to the London office of T. E. Collcutt. He returned to his father's practice in 1882 and became a partner in 1886...

       (1859–1946)
    • Stephen Rowland Pierce
      Stephen Rowland Pierce
      Stephen Rowland Pierce F.R.I.B.A, F.S.A. was an architect and town planning consultant. In partnership with Charles Holloway James he designed several large British public buildings, including Norwich City Hall....

       (1896–1966)
    • Arthur Beresford Pite
      Arthur Beresford Pite
      Arthur Beresford Pite was a British architect.-The early years:Arthur Beresford Pite was born on 2 September 1861 in Newington, London to Alfred and Hephzibah. The Pite lineage originated from Woodbridge, Suffolk and has been traced back to the late 17th century...

       (1861–1934)
    • John Russell Pope
      John Russell Pope
      John Russell Pope was an architect most known for his designs of the National Archives and Records Administration building , the Jefferson Memorial and the West Building of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC.-Biography:Pope was born in New York in 1874, the son of a successful...

       (1874–1937)
    • Henry Price
      Henry Price (architect)
      John Henry Price  – more commonly referred to as Henry Price – was the first person to hold the office of 'City Architect' in Manchester Corporation's newly created City Architect's Department of 1902...

       (1867–1944)
    • Edward Schroeder Prior
      Edward Schroeder Prior
      Edward Schroeder Prior was an architect who was instrumental in establishing the arts and crafts movement. He was one of the foremost theorists of the second generation of the movement, writing extensively on architecture, art, craftsmanship and the building process and subsequently influencing...

       (1857–1932)
    • Sir Charles Herbert Reilly
      Charles Herbert Reilly
      Sir Charles Herbert Reilly, was an English architect and teacher. After training in two architectural practices in London he took up a part-time lectureship at the University of London in 1900, and from 1904 to 1933 he headed the Liverpool School of Architecture, which became world-famous under...

       (1874–1948)
    • Sir Albert Richardson
      Albert Richardson
      Sir Albert Edward Richardson K.C.V.O., F.R.I.B.A, F.S.A., was a leading English architect, teacher and writer about architecture during the first half of the 20th century...

       (1880–1964)
    • Edwin Alfred Rickards (1872–1920)
    • W. H. Romaine-Walker
      W. H. Romaine-Walker
      William Henry Romaine-Walker was an English architect and interior decorator. From 1881 to 1896 he worked in partnership with Augustus William Tanner.-Works:These include:*Canford School, Canford Magna, Dorset, extended ....

       (1854–1940)
    • Herbert James Rowse
      Herbert James Rowse
      Herbert James Rowse was a British architect, born in Crosby, Merseyside on the northern outskirts of Liverpool. He graduated from the Liverpool University School of Architecture in 1907 three years after the influential Professor Charles Reilly became Head of the School.Rowse was one of the ...

       (1887–1963)
    • James Salmon (1873-1924)
      James Salmon (1873-1924)
      James Salmon was a Scottish architect, who practiced mainly in Glasgow. One of his most famous buildings is "The Hatrack" in St Vincent Street, a heavily glass-fronted Art Nouveau tower, remarkable in execution for its day...

    • Adrian Gilbert Scott
      Adrian Gilbert Scott
      Adrian Gilbert Scott was an English architect. He was the grandson of Sir George Gilbert Scott, son of George Gilbert Scott, Jr., nephew of John Oldrid Scott, and brother to Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, all architects....

       (1882–1963)
    • Baillie Scott
      Baillie Scott
      Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott was a British architect and artist He was born at Beards Hill, St Peters near Ramsgate, Kent, the second eldest of ten children....

       (1865–1945)
    • Elisabeth Scott
      Elisabeth Scott
      Elisabeth Whitworth Scott was a British architect who designed the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre at Stratford-upon-Avon, England. This was the first important public building in Britain to be designed by a female architect....

       (1898–1972)
    • Sir Giles Gilbert Scott
      Giles Gilbert Scott
      Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, OM, FRIBA was an English architect known for his work on such buildings as Liverpool Cathedral and Battersea Power Station and designing the iconic red telephone box....

       (1880–1960)
    • John Seeley
    • Sir John Simpson
      John William Simpson (architect)
      Sir John William Simpson KBE, FRIBA was an English architect and was President of the Royal Institute of British Architects from 1919 to 1921.- Background and early life :...

       (1858–1933)
    • George J. Skipper (1856–1948)
    • Arnold Dunbar Smith (1866–1933)
    • W. G. R. Sprague
      W. G. R. Sprague
      W. G. R. Sprague was a theatre architect in the grand age.Born in Australia, the son of actress Dolores Drummond who returned with acclaim to London in 1874. Sprague was articled to Frank Matcham for four years, then in 1880 to Walter Emden for three years; and then in partnershp with Bertie Crewe...

       (1863–1933)
    • James S. Stewart (1866–1904)
    • Leonard Stokes
      Leonard Stokes
      Leonard Aloysius Scott Stokes was an English architect.Leonard Stokes was born in Southport in 1858. He trained in London and travelled in Germany and Italy. Most of his designs were for Roman Catholic buildings, including churches, convents and schools. His first outstanding work was the...

       (1858–1925)
    • Walter Tapper
      Walter Tapper
      Sir Walter Tapper was a British architect known for Gothic Revivalist architecture. On his death in 1935 his son Michael Tapper completed some of his works....

       (1861–1935)
    • Thomas S. Tait
      Thomas S. Tait
      Thomas Smith Tait was a prominent Scottish Modernist architect. He designed a number of buildings around the world in Art Deco and Streamline Moderne styles, notably St...

       (1882–1954)
    • Tecton Group
      Tecton Group
      The Tecton Group was a radical architectural group co-founded by Berthold Lubetkin, Francis Skinner, Denys Lasdun, Godfrey Samuel, and Lindsay Drake in 1932. The name Tecton came from architecton, the Greek word for architecture...

      , founded 1932
    • Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas
      Alfred Brumwell Thomas
      Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas was an architect born in Virginia Water, Surrey who trained at Westminster School of Art and became an exponent of the Baroque Revival, a style of architecture prevalent for public buildings in the early years of the 20th century.In 1906, he was made a fellow of the...

       (1868–1948)
    • Sir Percy Thomas
      Percy Thomas
      Sir Percy Edward Thomas OBE , was an award-winning British architect based in Wales for the majority of his life. He was twice RIBA president ....

       (1883–1969)
    • Walter Aubrey Thomas
      Walter Aubrey Thomas
      Walter Aubrey Thomas , was a British architect.Walter Aubrey Thomas was born in 1859 at Tranmere, Birkenhead. He was the son of Humphrey Glegge Thomas who listed as an architect and engineer....

       (1859–1934)
    • Arnold Thornley
    • Twigg Brown Architects
      Twigg Brown Architects
      Twigg Brown are a London-based architecture practice. Their notable projects include the Hay's Galleria as part of the overall Twigg Brown masterplan for London Bridge City and the Grosvenor Waterside development in Chelsea for Grosvenor....

    • W. N. Twist
    • Sir Raymond Unwin
      Raymond Unwin
      Sir Raymond Unwin was a prominent and influential English engineer, architect and town planner, with an emphasis on improvements in working class housing.-Early years:...

       (1863–1940)
    • Charles Voysey
      Charles Voysey (architect)
      Charles Francis Annesley Voysey was an English architect and furniture and textile designer. Voysey's early work was as a designer of wallpapers, fabrics and furnishings in a simple Arts and Crafts style, but he is renowned as the architect of a number of notable country houses...

       (1857–1941)
    • Wallis, Gilbert and Partners
      Wallis, Gilbert and Partners
      Wallis, Gilbert and Partners was a British architectural partnership responsible for the design of many Art Deco buildings in the UK in the 1920s and 1930s. It was established by Thomas Wallis in 1914. Although the identity of Gilbert has not been established, later partners included Douglas...

      , founded 1914
    • Frederick Arthur Walters (1849–1931)
    • George Walton (1867–1933)
    • Sir Aston Webb
      Aston Webb
      Sir Aston Webb, RA, FRIBA was an English architect, active in the late 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th century...

       (1849–1930)
    • Harry Weedon
      Harry Weedon
      Harold William "Harry" Weedon was an English architect. Although he designed a large number of buildings during a long career, he is best known for his role overseeing the Art Deco designs of the Odeon Cinemas for Oscar Deutsch in the 1930s...

       (1887–1970)
    • Sir Owen Williams (1890–1969)
    • Sir Clough Williams-Ellis
      Clough Williams-Ellis
      Sir Bertram Clough Williams-Ellis, CBE, MC was an English-born Welsh architect known chiefly as creator of the Italianate village of Portmeirion in North Wales.-Origins, education and early career:...

       (1883–1978)
    • Edgar Wood
      Edgar Wood
      Edgar Wood was an architect who practised from Manchester at the turn of the 20th century and gained a considerable reputation both in Britain and abroad, notably in Germany. British design was then of European significance. His work is principally domestic, but he designed several churches and...

       (1860–1935)
    • George Grey Wornum
      George Grey Wornum
      George Grey Wornum was a British architect.Grey Wornum was born in London and educated at Bradfield College and the Slade School of Art. He studied architecture under the guidance of his uncle, Ralph Selden Wornum...

       (1888–1957)
    • Sir Percy Worthington
      Percy Worthington
      Sir Percy Scott Worthington was an English architect.He was born in Crumpsall, Manchester, the eldest son of the architect Thomas Worthington. He was educated at Clifton College, Bristol and Corpus Christi College, Oxford, where he graduated in 1887, and he qualified as an architect in 1890. He...

       (1864–1939)

    Post–War architects and practices

    1945 up to the present.
    A - L
    • Sir Patrick Abercrombie
      Patrick Abercrombie
      Sir Leslie Patrick Abercrombie ) was an English town planner. Educated at Uppingham School, Rutland; brother of Lascelles Abercrombie, poet and literary critic.-Career:...

       (1879–1957)
    • ABK (Peter Ahrends, Richard Burton & Paul Koralek), founded 1961
    • Robert Adam (born 1948)
    • David Adjaye
      David Adjaye
      David Adjaye OBE is a British architect.-Early life:David Adjaye was born in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The son of a Ghanaian diplomat who has lived in Tanzania, Egypt, Yemen and Lebanon before moving to Britain at the age of nine, he led a privileged life and was privately educated...

       (born 1966)
    • Allies and Morrison
      Allies and Morrison
      Allies and Morrison is a London-based architectural practice founded by Bob Allies and Graham Morrison in 1984. The practice is now headed up by 10 Partners and employs around 210 people in their purpose designed studios at 85 Southwark Street...

      , founded 1984
    • Will Alsop
      Will Alsop
      Will Allen Alsop, OBE RA is a British architect based in London. He is responsible for several distinctive and controversial modernist buildings, most in the United Kingdom. Alsop's buildings are usually distinguished by their use of bright colour and unusual forms...

       (born 1947)
    • Archigram
      Archigram
      Archigram was an avant-garde architectural group formed in the 1960s - based at the Architectural Association, London - that was futurist, anti-heroic and pro-consumerist, drawing inspiration from technology in order to create a new reality that was solely expressed through hypothetical projects...

      , architectural collective active circa 1962–1964
    • Arup
      Arup
      Arup is a global professional services firm headquartered in London, United Kingdom which provides engineering, design, planning, project management and consulting services for all aspects of the built environment. The firm is present in Africa, the Americas, Australasia, East Asia, Europe and the...

      , founded 1946
    • Bryan Avery
      Bryan Avery
      Bryan Avery RIBA is a London based architect, born in Berkshire, England in 1944He studied architecture at Leicester College of Art , followed by a MA in the History and Theory of Architecture at Essex University under Professors Joseph Rykwert and Dalibor Veseley...

      , born 1944
    • George Grenfell Baines
      George Grenfell Baines
      Professor Sir George Grenfell-Baines OBE DL was an English architect and town planner. Born in Preston, as George Baines, his family’s humble circumstances forced him to start work at the age of fourteen. Both George and his younger brother, Richard , were prodigiously gifted mathematicians and...

       (1908–2003)
    • Eric Bedford (1909–2001)
    • Bennetts Associates
      Bennetts Associates
      Bennetts Associates is one of the UK’s leading firms of architects, and has won more than 100 awards since its foundation in 1987.In particular, Bennetts Associates is recognised for its expertise in sustainability through innovative projects such as the Wessex Water Operations Centre in Bath,...

      , founded 1987
    • Benson & Forsyth
      Benson & Forsyth
      Benson & Forsyth is a British architectural partnership, whose principal architects are Gordon Benson and Alan Forysth. Their offices are in Islington, London, although they formerly also had a small office in Edinburgh. They were nominated for the Stirling Prize in 1999 and 2002 for the Museum...

    • Stephen Dykes Bower
      Stephen Dykes Bower
      Stephen Ernest Dykes Bower was a British church architect and Gothic Revival designer best known for his work at Westminster Abbey.-Early life and education:...

       (1903–1994)
    • Bradshaw Gass & Hope
      Bradshaw Gass & Hope
      Bradshaw Gass & Hope is an English firm of architects founded in 1862 by Jonas James Bradshaw . The style "Bradshaw Gass & Hope" was adopted after J. J...

      , founded 1862
    • Broadway Malyan
      Broadway Malyan
      Broadway Malyan is an international architecture, urbanism and design practice with fifteen offices worldwide. Established in 1958, the company has been ranked as one of the top 25 architectural practices in the world....

      , founded 1956
    • Building Design Partnership
      Building Design Partnership
      Building Design Partnership is a firm of architects and engineers employing over 1200 staff in the UK and internationally.-Foundation:The firm was founded in 1961 by George Grenfell Baines with architects Bill White and John Wilkinson, quantity surveyor Arnold Towler and eight associate partners:...

       (BDP), founded 1964
    • Alexander Buchanan Campbell
      Alexander Buchanan Campbell
      Alexander Buchanan Campbell was a Scottish architect. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland.He studied at the Glasgow School of Art and was apprenticed to the firm of Gillespie, Kidd and Coia....

       (born 1914)
    • Kenneth Capon
    • Caruso St John
      Caruso St John
      Caruso St John is an architectural firm established in 1990 by Adam Caruso and Peter St John.They have gained an international reputation for excellence in designing contemporary projects in the public realm. The practice came to public attention with the New Art Gallery in Walsall, a commission...

      , founded 1990
    • Sir Hugh Casson
      Hugh Casson
      Sir Hugh Maxwell Casson, KCVO, RA, RDI, was a British architect, interior designer, artist, and influential writer and broadcaster on 20th century design. He is particularly noted for his role as director of architecture at the 1951 Festival of Britain on London's South Bank.Casson's family...

      , (1910–1999)
    • Chamberlin, Powell and Bon
      Chamberlin, Powell and Bon
      Chamberlin, Powell and Bon were one of the most important modernist architectural firms in post-war England.- Formation :The practice was founded in 1952 by Geoffry Powell , Peter Chamberlin and Christoph Bon , following Powell's win in the 1951 architectural competition for the Golden Lane Estate...

       (Peter Chamberlin (1919–1978), Geoffry Powell (1920–1999), Christof Bon (1921–1999)), founded 1952
    • Chapman Taylor Architects, founded 1959
    • David Chipperfield
      David Chipperfield
      Sir David Alan Chipperfield CBE, RA, RDI, RIBA is a British architect, born in London. He has offices in London, Berlin and Milan, and a representative office in Shanghai...

       (born 1953)
    • Edward Cullinan
      Edward Cullinan
      Edward Cullinan, CBE, is a British architect.Cullinan was educated at Cambridge University, the Architectural Association, and the University of California, Berkeley before working for Denys Lasdun where he designed the student residences for the University of East Anglia.Cullinan's practice,...

       (born 1931)
    • Ivor Cunningham (1928–2007)
    • Dixon & Jones (Sir Jeremy Dixon (born 1939) & Edward Jones (born 1939)), founded 1972
    • Norman & Dawbarn (Graham Dawbarn), founded 1934, acquired by Capita Symonds
      Capita Symonds
      Capita Symonds is part of the Capita Group.Capita Symonds is a large UK multidisciplinary consultancy operating in the building design, civil engineering, environment, management and transport sectors....

       2005
    • Gabriel Epstein
    • Ralph Erskine
      Ralph Erskine (architect)
      Ralph Erskine, CBRE, RFS, ARIBA was an architect and planner who lived and worked in Sweden for most of his life.-Upbringing and influences :...

       (1914–2005)
    • Eldred Evans
    • EPR Architects
      EPR Architects
      EPR Architects is a London based architectural practice that originally started business under the names of its founders Elsom Pack & Roberts. It is well known for modern commercial projects....

      , founded 1947
    • Sir Terry Farrell
      Terry Farrell (architect)
      Sir Terry Farrell, CBE, RIBA, FRSA, FCSD, MRTPI is a British architect.-Life and career:Farrell was born in Sale, Cheshire. As a youth he moved to Newcastle upon Tyne, where he attended St Cuthbert's High School. He graduated with a degree from Newcastle University, followed by a Masters in urban...

       (born 1939)
    • FAT
      Fashion Architecture Taste
      Fashion Architecture Taste or FAT is an art and architecture collaborative that first established itself in the 1990s in London, England. Sean Griffiths, Charles Holland and Sam Jacob are the main members of the group. Emma Somerset Davis has been a previous member and a director of the group and...

       (Fashion Architecture Taste) established 1990s
    • Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank
      Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank
      Norman Robert Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank, OM is a British architect whose company maintains an international design practice, Foster + Partners....

       (born 1935)
    • Foster and Partners
      Foster and Partners
      Foster + Partners is an architectural firm based in London. The practice is led by its founder and Chairman, Norman Foster, and has constructed many high-profile glass-and-steel buildings....

      , founded 1967
    • Tony Fretton
      Tony Fretton
      Tony Fretton is a British architect known for his residential and public gallery buildings, as well as other British and international design work. He graduated from the Architectural Association and worked for various practices including Arup, Neyland and Ungless, and Chapman Taylor, before...

    • Maxwell Fry
      Maxwell Fry
      Edwin Maxwell Fry, CBE, RA, FRIBA, FRTPI, known as Maxwell Fry , was an English modernist architect of the middle and late 20th century, known for his buildings in Britain, Africa and India....

       (1899–1987)
    • Future Systems
      Future Systems
      Future Systems was a London-based architectural and design practice, formerly headed by Directors Jan Kaplický and Amanda Levete.Future Systems was founded by Kaplický after working with Denys Lasdun, Norman Foster, Renzo Piano, and Richard Rogers...

       (Jan Kaplický
      Jan Kaplický
      Jan Kaplický was a world-renowned Czech architect who spent a significant part of his life in the United Kingdom. He was the leading architect behind the innovative design office, Future Systems. He was best known for the futuristic Selfridges Building in Birmingham, England, and the Media Centre...

       (born 1937) & Amanda Levete (born 1955)), founded 1982
    • Barry Gasson
    • Sir Frederick Gibberd
      Frederick Gibberd
      Sir Frederick Ernest Gibberd was an English architect and landscape designer.Gibberd was born in Coventry, the eldest of the five children of a local tailor, and was educated at the city's King Henry VIII School...

       (1908–1984)
    • Gillespie, Kidd & Coia
      Gillespie, Kidd & Coia
      Gillespie, Kidd & Coia were a Scottish architectural firm famous for their application of modernism in churches and universities, as well as at St Peter's Seminary in Cardross. Though founded in 1927, it is for their work in the post-war period that they are best known...

      , founded 1927, wound up 1987
    • Ernő Goldfinger
      Erno Goldfinger
      Ernő Goldfinger was a Hungarian-born Jewish architect and designer of furniture, and a key member of the architectural Modern Movement after he had moved to the United Kingdom.-Biography:Goldfinger was born in Budapest...

       (1902–1987)
    • GMW Architects
      GMW Architects
      GMW Architects are an architectural practice based in the United Kingdom.-History:The practice was established in 1947 by Frank Gollins , James Melvin , and Edmund Ward and operated as Gollins Melvin Ward...

       (Frank Gollins, James Melvin & Edmund Ward), founded 1948
    • Sir Nicholas Grimshaw
      Nicholas Grimshaw
      Sir Nicholas Grimshaw, CBE is a prominent English architect, particularly noted for several modernist buildings, including London's Waterloo International railway station and the Eden Project in Cornwall...

       (born 1939)
    • Piers Gough
      Piers Gough
      Piers Gough , is an architect in the practice CZWG. His younger brothers are the composer Orlando Gough and Jamie Gough, the University of Sheffield's senior lecturer in Town and Regional Planning....

       (born 1946)
    • Zaha Hadid
      Zaha Hadid
      Zaha Hadid, CBE is an Iraqi-British architect.-Life and career:Hadid was born in 1950 in Baghdad, Iraq. She received a degree in mathematics from the American University of Beirut before moving to study at the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London.After graduating she worked...

       (born 1950)
    • Seymour Harris Partnership
      Seymour Harris Partnership
      Seymour Harris Partnership is an architectural partnership based in Birmingham, England. Buildings designed by the practice include Colmore Gate in Birmingham, Queensgate Market in Huddersfield and St David's Hall in Cardiff....

    • Haskoll Architects & Designers
    • Haworth Tompkins
      Haworth Tompkins
      Haworth Tompkins was formed in 1991 by architects Graham Haworth [b. 1960] and Steve Tompkins [b. 1959].Based in London, the studio has worked on projects across public, private and subsidised sectors including schools, galleries, theatres, housing, offices, shops and factories...

      , founded 1991
    • William Holford, Baron Holford
      William Holford, Baron Holford
      William Graham Holford, Baron Holford was a British architect and town planner.-Biography:He was born in South Africa and educated at Diocesan College, Cape Town. He studied architecture at Liverpool University, where he won the Rome Scholarship in Architecture to the British School at Rome in 1930...

       (1907–1975)
    • Sir Michael Hopkins (born 1935)
    • Hopkins Architects
      Hopkins Architects
      Hopkins Architects Partnership LLP is a prominent British architectural firm established in 1976 by Sir Michael and Lady Patricia Hopkins. The practice has won many awards for its work and has twice been shortlisted for the Stirling Prize, including in 2011 for the 2012 London Velodrome and in...

      , founded 1976
    • Glenn Howells
      Glenn Howells
      Glenn Howells is a British born architect. His practice, Glenn Howells Architects, has offices in Birmingham and London. Howells founded his practice in London in 1990 but later moved the main office to Birmingham in 1992....

    • Information Based Architecture
      Information Based Architecture
      Information Based Architecture was originally set up in London in 1998 as a partnership between architects Mark Hemel and Barbara Kuit. Using the newest technologies the practice challenges conventional thinking and seeks to exploit new opportunities to enrich our cities with conceptually...

      , founded 1998
    • Geoffrey Jellicoe
      Geoffrey Jellicoe
      Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe was an English landscape architect, garden designer, Architect and author.Jellicoe was born in Chelsea. He studied at the Architectural Association in London in 1919 and won a Rome Scholarship in 1923 which enabled him to research his first book Italian Gardens of the...

       (1900–1996)
    • Edward Jones
      Edward Jones (architect)
      Prof. Edward Jones, CBE RIBA is an English architect, born in St Albans in October 1939. He is married to Canadian architect Margot Griffin.-Career:...

       (born 1939)
    • Shiu-Kay Kan
      Shiu-Kay Kan
      Shiu-Kay Kan is a British architect, industrial designer, lighting designer and designer of lights. After making a successful start as an architect in the 1980s he turned his attention to designing lights. He has sold his design to some clients Shiu-Kay Kan (1951) is a British architect,...

       (born 1951)
    • Sidney Kaye, Eric Frimin & Partners
    • George Kenyon
    • Eric Kuhne
      Eric Kuhne
      Eric Robert Kuhne is an American-born architect living and working in London. Owner of CivicArts / Eric R Kuhne & Associates, his office is a research and design firm which has completed projects on five continents...

    • Sir Denys Lasdun
      Denys Lasdun
      Sir Denys Lasdun CH was an eminent English architect. Probably his best known work is the Royal National Theatre, on London's South Bank of the Thames, which is a Grade II* listed building and one of the most notable examples of Brutalist design in the United Kingdom.Lasdun studied at the...

       (1914–2001)
    • Richard Llewelyn-Davies, Baron Llewelyn-Davies
      Richard Llewelyn-Davies, Baron Llewelyn-Davies
      Richard Llewellyn-Davies, Baron Llewelyn-Davies was a British architect. Llewelyn-Davies was Professor of Architecture at the University College London from 1960 to 1969, and Professor of Urban Planning and Head of the School of Environmental Studies from 1970 to 1975...

       (1912–1981)
    • Owen Luder
      Owen Luder
      Owen Luder, CBE is a British architect who designed a number of notable and sometimes controversial buildings in the United Kingdom in the 1960s and 1970s...

       (born 1928)
    • Berthold Lubetkin
      Berthold Lubetkin
      Berthold Romanovich Lubetkin was a Russian émigré architect who pioneered modernist design in Britain in the 1930s. His work includes the Highpoint housing complex, London Zoo penguin pool, Finsbury Health Centre and Spa Green Estate.-Early years:Berthold Lubetkin was born in Tiflis into a Jewish...

       (1901–1990)
    • Jack Lynn
    • Eric Lyons
      Eric Lyons
      Eric Lyons was a British designer and architect. He was famous for the development of forward-looking housing communities in England in the latter part of the 20th century. His partnership in Span Developments lead to the building of over 73 estates.From 1936 to 1937 he worked for Walter Gropius...

       (1912–1980)
    M - Z
    • MacCormac Jamieson Prichard, founded 1972
    • MAKE Architects
      MAKE Architects
      Make Architects is an architectural practice based in the United Kingdom founded by Ken Shuttleworth after he left Foster and Partners in 2003. They have offices in London, Birmingham, Beijing, Abu Dhabi and Dubai and the practice is currently engaged in projects worldwide ranging from high rise...

      , founded 2003
    • Percy Johnson-Marshall
      Percy Johnson-Marshall
      Percy Edwin Alan Johnson-Marshall CMG was a British urban designer, regional planner and academic. Born in India, he was educated at Liverpool University, and worked initially with local authorities in the south of England...

       (1915–1993)
    • Rick Mather
      Rick Mather
      Rick Mather is an American-born architect working in England. Born in Portland, Oregon and awarded a B.arch. at the University of Oregon in 1961, he came to London in 1963 where he founded his own practice, Rick Mather Architects, a decade later....

    • Sir Robert Matthew
      Robert Matthew
      Sir Robert Hogg Matthew, OBE, FRIBA was a Scottish architect and a leading proponent of modernism.- Early life & studies :Robert Matthew was the son of John Matthew . He was born and brought up in Edinburgh, and attended the Edinburgh College of Art.- Career :Robert was apprenticed with his...

       (1906–1975)
    • Sir Leslie Martin
      Leslie Martin
      Sir John Leslie Martin KBE was an English Architect. A leading advocate of the International Style....

       (1908–1999)
    • Sir Edward Maufe
      Edward Maufe
      Sir Edward Brantwood Maufe KBE, R.A, F.R.I.B.A. was an English architect and designer, noted chiefly for his work on places of worship and remembrance memorials. He was a skilled interior designer and designed many pieces of furniture...

       (1883–1974)
    • Miller Partnership
    • Peter Moro (1911–1998)
    • Hidalgo Moya
      Hidalgo Moya
      John Hidalgo Moya , sometimes known as Jacko Moya, was a famous American-born architect who worked largely in England. Moya was a native of California where he was born to an English mother and Mexican father but lived in England since he was an infant. He formed the architectural practice Powell &...

       (1920–1994)
    • Richard Murphy
      Richard Murphy (architect)
      Richard Murphy OBE is an architect based in Edinburgh, Scotland, and principal architect in Richard Murphy Architects.-History:Murphy was educated at Newcastle and Edinburgh Universities, and has taught at the latter. He formed his practice in 1991, which has since grown to over twenty architects,...

    • John Outram
    • George Pace
      George Pace
      George Pace , English architect, was born in Croydon, Surrey.He won many prizes as a student including the Pugin Studentship in 1937 and the RIBA Asphitel Prize for the best architectural student in England....

       (1915–1975)
    • Claud Phillimore
      Claud Phillimore, 4th Baron Phillimore
      Claud Stephen Phillimore was an English architect who in 1990 succeeded to the title of 4th Baron Phillimore.-Works:These include:...

       (1911–1994)
    • Sir Philip Powell
      Philip Powell (architect)
      Sir Arnold Joseph Philip Powell , usually known as Philip Powell, was a ground-breaking English post-war architect.He was educated at Epsom College and then the Architectural Association....

       (1921–2003)
    • Renton Howard Wood Levin
    • Ian Ritchie
      Ian Ritchie (architect)
      Professor Ian Ritchie CBE is a British architect. He was born in 1947 in Sussex.After working with Norman Foster , Ritchie spent two years in France designing and constructing projects. In 1979 he founded Chrysalis Architects and also worked at Arup’s Lightweight Structures Group in London...

       (born 1947)
    • RMJM
      RMJM
      RMJM is an international architectural practice founded in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1956 by architects Robert Matthew and Stirrat Johnson-Marshall. The first offices of the practice were its headquarters in Edinburgh, and another in London...

      , founded 1956
    • James A. Roberts
      Jim Roberts (architect)
      Jim Roberts is an architect, known for the Rotunda in Birmingham, England, from which he ran James A. Roberts & Associates....

    • Robinson McIlwaine, founded 1963
    • Richard Rogers, Baron Rogers of Riverside
      Richard Rogers
      Richard George Rogers, Baron Rogers of Riverside CH Kt FRIBA FCSD is a British architect noted for his modernist and functionalist designs....

       (born 1933)
    • Richard Seifert
      Richard Seifert
      Reubin Seifert - normally known as Richard Seifert was a British architect, best known for designing the Centrepoint tower and Tower 42 , once the tallest building in the City of London...

       (1910–2001)
    • David Shaleff
    • Pringle Richards Sharratt
      Pringle Richards Sharratt
      Pringle Richards Sharratt is an architectural firm that was formed in 1996 by John Pringle [b. 1951], Penny Richards [b.1950] and Ian Sharratt [b.1948]. Based in London, the practice has worked on public buildings, art galleries, museums, libraries, archives, university and transport buildings...

      , founded 1996
    • Sir Peter Shepheard (1913–2002)
    • Richard Sheppard
      Richard Sheppard (architect)
      Sir Richard Herbert Sheppard CBE was an English architect.Sheppard was born in Bristol. He was educated at Bristol Grammar School and trained as an architect at the Royal West of England Academy...

       (1910–1982)
    • Sheppard, Robson and Partners
      Sheppard, Robson and Partners
      Sheppard Robson is an architecture firm founded in 1938 by Sir Richard Herbert Sheppard and responsible for the design of over eighty schools, as well as buildings at Loughborough University, the University of Leicester, Brunel University, City University, the University of Durham, the University...

      , founded 1938
    • Ken Shuttleworth (born 1952)
    • Ian Simpson
    • SMC Hickton Madeley Architects
      SMC Hickton Madeley Architects
      SMC Hickton Madeley Architects is an architects practice based in Telford, England. They were established in 1936. They have experience in designing prison buildings and have been partnered with Birmingham City Council on several projects....

      , founded 1936
    • Ivor Smith
    • Alison Smithson
      Alison and Peter Smithson
      English architects Alison Smithson and Peter Smithson together formed an architectural partnership, and are often associated with the New Brutalism .Peter was born in Stockton-on-Tees in north-east England, and Alison was born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire...

       (1928–1993)
    • Peter Smithson
      Alison and Peter Smithson
      English architects Alison Smithson and Peter Smithson together formed an architectural partnership, and are often associated with the New Brutalism .Peter was born in Stockton-on-Tees in north-east England, and Alison was born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire...

       (1923–2003)
    • Sir Basil Spence
      Basil Spence
      Sir Basil Urwin Spence, OM, OBE, RA was a Scottish architect, most notably associated with Coventry Cathedral in England and the Beehive in New Zealand, but also responsible for numerous other buildings in the Modernist/Brutalist style.-Training:Spence was born in Bombay, India, the son of Urwin...

       (1907–1976)
    • Sir James Stirling
      James Stirling (architect)
      Sir James Frazer Stirling FRIBA was a British architect. He is considered to be among the most important and influential British architects of the second half of the 20th century...

       (1926–1992)
    • Quinlan Terry
      Quinlan Terry
      Quinlan Terry is a British architect. He was educated at Bryanston School and the Architectural Association. He was a pupil of architect Raymond Erith, with whom he formed the partnership Erith & Terry....

       (born 1937)
    • Percy Thomas
      Percy Thomas
      Sir Percy Edward Thomas OBE , was an award-winning British architect based in Wales for the majority of his life. He was twice RIBA president ....

       (1883–1969)
    • Ralph Tubbs
      Ralph Tubbs
      Ralph Tubbs, OBE, FRIBA was a British architect. Well known amongst the buildings he designed was the Dome of Discovery at the successful Festival of Britain on the South Bank in London in 1951....

       (1912–1996)
    • Ronald Ward and Partners
    • Michael Wilford
      Michael Wilford
      Michael Wilford CBE is an English architect from Hartfield, East Sussex. Wilford studied at the Northern Polytechnic School of Architecture, London, from 1955 to 1962, and at the Regent Street Polytechnic Planning School, London, in 1967...

       (born 1938)
    • John Weeks (1921–2005)
    • Wilkinson Eyre
      Wilkinson Eyre
      Wilkinson Eyre Architects is an international architecture firm based in London, England. The firm won the Royal Institute of British Architects Stirling Prize two years in a row...

       (Chris Wilkinson & Jim Eyre), founded 1983
    • Sir Colin St John Wilson
      Colin St John Wilson
      Sir Colin Alexander St John Wilson, FRIBA, RA, was a British architect, lecturer and author. He spent over 30 years progressing the project to build a new British Library in London, originally planned to be built in Bloomsbury and now completed near Kings Cross.-Early and private life:Wilson was...

       (1922–2007)
    • G. R. Yeats
    • YRM (F. R. S. Yorke
      F. R. S. Yorke
      Francis Reginald Stevens Yorke , known professionally as F. R. S. Yorke and informally as Kay or K, was an English architect and author....

      , Eugene Rosenberg and Cyril Mardall), founded 1944

    18th, 19th & 20th century British & Irish architects who emigrated

    A - L
    • Edmund Anscombe
      Edmund Anscombe
      Edmund Anscombe was one of the most important figures to shape the architectural and urban fabric of New Zealand. He was important, not only because of the prolific nature of his practice and the quality of his work, but also because of the range and the scale of his built and speculative projects...

       (1874–1948) (New Zealand)
    • John Lee Archer
      John Lee Archer
      John Lee Archer , architect and engineer, was born in Ireland and emigrated to Tasmania in 1827.- Personal life :John Lee Archer, born 26 April 1791 near Thurles, Ireland, was an important factor in the development of the townships of Tasmania during early settlement...

       (1791–1852) (Australia)
    • Benjamin Backhouse (1829–1904) (Australia)
    • William Barnett Armson (1834–1883) (New Zealand)
    • Herbert Baker
      Herbert Baker
      Sir Herbert Baker was a British architect.Baker was the dominant force in South African architecture for two decades, 1892–1912....

       (1862–1946) (South Africa, though he returned to England in 1913)
    • James Barnet
      James Barnet
      James Johnstone Barnet was the Colonial Architect for New South Wales from 1862 - 1890.-Life and career:Barnet was born at Almericlose, Arbroath, Scotland. The son of a builder, he was educated at the local high school...

       (1827–1904) (Australia)
    • Edward Bartley
      Edward Bartley
      Edward Bartley was an architect from New Zealand. He was born in Saint Helier, Jersey, Channel Islands. He arrived in New Zealand 1854...

       (1839–1919) (New Zealand)
    • Claude Batley
      Claude Batley
      Claude Batley was an English architect who left for India in 1913 and started a successful practice there in 1917 with Gregson and King, a firm of architects which is still extant under the name of Gregson, Batley and King.Among his works are the Bombay Gymkhana , Wankaner Palace now Lincoln...

       (1879–1956) (India)
    • John Begg
      John Begg
      John Begg was a Scottish architect, who practised in London, South Africa and India, before returning to Scotland to teach at Edinburgh College of Art from 1922-1933....

       (1866–1937) (India)
    • Edward H. Bennett
      Edward H. Bennett
      Edward Herbert Bennett was an architect and city planner best known for his co-authorship of the 1909 Plan of Chicago.-Biography:Bennett was born in Bristol, England in 1874, and later moved to San Francisco with his family...

       (1874–1954) (USA)
    • John Bibb (1810–1862) (Australia)
    • James Blackburn
      James Blackburn (architect)
      James Blackburn was an English civil engineer, surveyor and architect best known for his work in Australia, to which he had been sentenced for forgery...

       (1803–1854) (Australia)
    • Edmund Blacket
      Edmund Blacket
      Edmund Thomas Blacket was an Australian architect, best known for his designs for the University of Sydney, St. Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney and St...

       (1817–1883)(Australia)
    • Charles Cameron
      Charles Cameron (architect)
      Charles Cameron was a Scottish architect who made an illustrious career at the court of Catherine II of Russia. Cameron, practitioner of early neoclassical architecture, was the chief architect of Tsarskoye Selo and Pavlovsk palaces and the adjacent new town of Sophia from his arrival in Russia in...

       (1843–1812) (Russia)
    • Paul Bell Chambers (1868–1930) (Argentina)
    • John James Clark
      John James Clark
      John James Clark , an Australian architect, was born in Liverpool, England. Clark’s 30 years in public service, in combination with 33 in private practice, produced some of Australia’s most notable public buildings, as well as at least one prominent building in New Zealand.-Biography:John James...

       (1838–1915) (Australia)
    • Nicholas J. Clayton
      Nicholas J. Clayton
      Nicholas Joseph Clayton was a prominent Victorian architect in Galveston. Clayton constructed many early public buildings in the city including the First Presbyterian Church .-External links:...

       (1840–1916) (USA)
    • Frederick de Jersey Clere
      Frederick de Jersey Clere
      Frederick de Jersey Clere was an architect in Wellington, New Zealand.He was born in Lancashire and trained as an architect before emigrating to New Zealand with his family in 1877....

       (1856–1952) (New Zealand)
    • Josiah Condor
      Josiah Conder (architect)
      Josiah Conder was a British architect who worked as a foreign advisor to the government of Meiji period Japan...

       (1852–1920) (Japan)
    • Frederick William Cumberland
      Frederick William Cumberland
      Frederick William Cumberland was a Canadian engineer, architect and political figure. He represented the riding of Algoma in the 1st and 2nd Ontario Parliaments and in the Canadian House of Commons from 1871 to 1872....

       (1821–1881)(Canada)
    • Peter Dickinson
      Peter Dickinson (architect)
      Peter Allgood Rastall Dickinson, , was a British-born architect responsible for many modernist buildings in Toronto....

       (1925–961) (Canada)
    • John Donaldson (1854–1941) (USA)
    • John Ewart
      John Ewart (architect)
      John Ewart was a Canadian architect and businessman.He was born in Tranent Scotland in 1788. After completing his apprenticeship in building, he moved to London around 1811. In 1816, he emigrated to New York City and moved to York in Upper Canada a few years later...

      (1788–1856) (Canada)
    • George Grant Elmslie
      George Grant Elmslie
      George Grant Elmslie was an American, though born in Aberdeenshire, Scotland, Prairie School architect whose work is mostly found in the Midwestern United States...

       (1869–1952) (USA)
    • Ralph Erskine
      Ralph Erskine (architect)
      Ralph Erskine, CBRE, RFS, ARIBA was an architect and planner who lived and worked in Sweden for most of his life.-Upbringing and influences :...

       (1914–2005) (Sweden)
    • Thomas Forrester (1838–1907) (New Zealand)
    • Charles Freeman (1833–1911) (South Africa)
    • Thomas Fuller
      Thomas Fuller (architect)
      Thomas Fuller was a Canadian architect.He was born in Bath, Somerset , where he trained as an architect. Living in Bath and London he did a number of projects. In 1845 he left for Antigua, where he spent two years working on a new cathedral before emigrating to Canada in 1857...

       (1823–1898) (Canada)
    • Alfred Giles
      Alfred Giles
      Alfred Giles was a British civil engineer and Conservative politician who sat in the House of Commons between 1878 and 1892....

       (1816–1895) (USA)
    • Francis Greenway
      Francis Greenway
      -References:* *...

       (1777–1837) (Australia)
    • Samuel Hannaford
      Samuel Hannaford
      Samuel Hannaford was an American architect based in Cincinnati, Ohio. Some of the best known landmarks in the city, such as Music Hall and City Hall, were of his design...

       (1835–1911) (USA)
    • William Critchlow Harris
      William Critchlow Harris
      William Critchlow Harris was an architect noted mainly for his ecclesiastical and domestic projects in Maritime Canada....

       (1854–1913) (Canada)
    • John Haviland (1792–1852) (USA)
    • John Cyril Hawes
      John Hawes (Monsignor)
      Monsignor John Hawes was an architect and priest.-Biography:He began training as an architect in London in 1892. In 1903 he was ordained an Anglican priest, after which he worked in The Bahamas...

       (1876–1956) (Australia)
    • Peter Harrison
      Peter Harrison
      Peter Harrison was a colonial American architect who was born in York, England and emigrated to Rhode Island in 1740. Peter Harrison and his brother, Joseph Harrison, came to the American colonies and established themselves as merchants and captains of their own "vessels." Peter Harrison returned...

       (1716–1775) (USA)
    • Peter Hemingway
      Peter Hemingway
      Peter Hemingway was an award-winning English architect who practised mainly in Canada on public works.Hemingway was born in Minster, Kent and after gaining a diploma from Rochester Technical College he emigrated to Canada in 1955. Serving briefly in the Alberta Department of Public Works,...

       (1929–1995) (Canada)
    • James Hoban
      James Hoban
      James Hoban was an Irish architect, best known for designing The White House in Washington, D.C.-Life:James Hoban was born and raised in a thatched cottage on the Earl of Desart's estate in Cuffesgrange, near Callan in Co. Kilkenny...

       (c. 1758–1831) (USA)
    • Talbot Hobbs
      Talbot Hobbs
      Lieutenant General Sir Joseph John Talbot Hobbs KCB, KCMG, VD was an Australian architect and First World War general.-Early life:...

       (1864–1938) (Australia)
    • Herbert Horne
      Herbert Horne
      Herbert Percy Horne was an English poet, architect, typographer and designer, art historian and antiquarian. He was an associate of the Rhymer's Club in London...

       (1864–1916) (Italy)
    • William Jay (1792–1837) (USA)
    • Richard Roach Jewell
      Richard Roach Jewell
      Richard Roach Jewell was an architect who designed many of the important public buildings in Perth during the latter half of the nineteenth century....

       (1810–1891) (Australia)
    • Gordon Kaufmann
      Gordon Kaufmann
      Gordon Kaufmann was an English born American architect mostly known for his work on the Hoover Dam. He arrived in California in 1914 and during his early career he did much work in the Mediterranean Revival Style which had become popular at that time.He was also the initial architect for Scripps...

       (1888–1949) (USA)
    • Henry Bowyer Lane
      Henry Bowyer Lane
      Henry Bowyer Joseph Lane was an English architect who worked in Toronto from c. 1841 to 1847.Lane's education included time at Blundell's School in Tiverton and subsequent professional training in England before he emigrated to Canada in 1841, living first in Cobourg, Upper Canada, and then in...

       (1817–1878) (Canada)
    • Benjamin Latrobe
      Benjamin Latrobe
      Benjamin Henry Boneval Latrobe was a British-born American neoclassical architect best known for his design of the United States Capitol, along with his work on the Baltimore Basilica, the first Roman Catholic Cathedral in the United States...

       (1764–1820) (USA)
    • Robert Lawson
      Robert Lawson (architect)
      Robert Arthur Lawson was one of New Zealand's pre-eminent 19th century architects. It has been said he did more than any other designer to shape the face of the Victorian era architecture of the city of Dunedin...

       (1833–1902) (New Zealand)
    • John Lemon (1828–1890) (New Zealand)
    • Gordon W. Lloyd
      Gordon W. Lloyd
      Gordon W. Lloyd was an architect of English origin, whose work was primarily in the American Midwest. After being taught by his uncle, Ewan Christian, at the Royal Academy, Lloyd moved to Detroit in 1858. There he established himself as a popular architect of Episcopal churches and cathedrals in...

       (1832–1905) (USA)
    • John M. Lyle
      John M. Lyle
      John MacIntosh Lyle was a Canadian architect, designer, urban planner, and teacher active in the late 19th century and into the first half of the 20th century. He was a leading Canadian architect in the Beaux Arts style and was involved in the City Beautiful movement in several Canadian cities...

       (1872–1945) (Canada)
    M - Z
    • Adam Menelaws
      Adam Menelaws
      Adam Menelaws, also spelled Menelas was an architect and landscape designer of Scottish origin, active in the Russian Empire from 1784 to 1831...

       (1748–1831) (Russia)
    • Charles Donagh Maginnis
      Charles Donagh Maginnis
      Considered the father of American Gothic architecture, Charles Donagh Maginnis was born in County Londonderry, Ireland on January 7, 1867. He was educated in Dublin, emigrated to Boston at age 18 and got his first job apprenticing for architect Edmund M. Wheelwright as a draftsman. In 1900 he...

       (1867–1955)(USA)
    • William Mason
      William Mason (mayor)
      William Mason was a New Zealand architect born in Ipswich, England, the son of an architect/builder George Mason and Susan, née Forty. Trained by his father he went to London where he seems to have worked for Thomas Telford . He studied under Peter Nicholson before eventually working for Edward...

       (1810–1897) (New Zealand)
    • Benjamin Mountfort
      Benjamin Mountfort
      Benjamin Woolfield Mountfort was an English emigrant to New Zealand, where he became one of that country's most prominent 19th century architects. He was instrumental in shaping the city of Christchurch's unique architectural identity and culture, and was appointed the first official Provincial...

       (1825–1898) (New Zealand)
    • Percy Erskine Nobbs
      Percy Erskine Nobbs
      Percy Erskine Nobbs was a Canadian architect who was born in Haddington, Scotland and trained in the United Kingdom. He spent most of his career in the Montreal area...

       (1875–1964) (Canada)
    • John Notman
      John Notman
      John Notman was a Scottish-born American architect, who settled in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He is remembered for his churches, and for popularizing the Italianate style and the use of brownstone.-Career:...

       (1810–1865) (USA)
    • John Ostell
      John Ostell
      John Ostell architect, surveyor and manufacturer, was born in London, England and emigrated to Canada in 1834, where he apprenticed himself to a Montreal surveyor André Trudeau to learn French methods of surveying. In 1837 he married Eleonore Gauvin a member of a prominent French Catholic family...

       (1813–1892) (Canada)
    • Clement Palmer (1857–1952) (Hong Kong)
    • John C. Parkin (1922–1988) (Canada)
    • John Parkinson
      The Parkinsons
      John B. and Donald D. Parkinson were a father-and-son architectural team operating in Los Angeles in the early 20th century.-Early years:...

       (1861–1935) (USA)
    • John A. Pearson
      John A. Pearson
      John Andrew Pearson was an early 20th Century Canadian architect and partner to the Toronto-based firm of Pearson and Darling.Pearson emigrated to Canada in 1888...

       (1867–1940) (Canada)
    • Cecil Ross Pinsent (1884–1963) (Italy)
    • Robert John Pratt
      Robert John Pratt
      Robert John Pratt was a Canadian architect, comedian, and politician.Born in London, England, his Irish mother lived in London and his father lived in Montreal. In 1933, he received a Bachelor of Architecture degree from McGill University...

       (1907–2003) (Canada)
    • Francis Rattenbury
      Francis Rattenbury
      Francis Mawson Rattenbury was an architect born in England, although most of his career was spent in British Columbia, Canada where he designed many notable buildings. Divorced amid scandal, he was murdered in England at the age of 68 by his second wife's lover.- Architectural career :Rattenbury...

       (1867–1935) (Canada)
    • Thomas Rowe
      Thomas Rowe
      Thomas Rowe , wasone of Australia's leading architects of the Victorian era.-Biography:Thomas Rowe was born in Penzance, Cornwall, United Kingdom, the eldest son of Richard Rowe and Ursula Mumford, and attended Barnes Academy. At 15 he became a draftsman in his father's building business before the...

       (1829–1899) (Australia)
    • Frederick Preston Rubidge
      Frederick Preston Rubidge
      Frederick Preston Rubidge, , was a surveyor and an architect. He was born in England and emigrated to Upper Canada around 1825 where he took his training....

       (1806–1897) (Canada)
    • Robert Russell
      Robert Russell (architect)
      Robert Russell was an architect and surveyor, active in Australia.-Early life:Russell was born near Kennington Common, London, England, the son of Robert Russell, a merchant, and his wife Margaret, née Leslie...

       (1808–1900) (Australia)
    • Conrad Sayce
      Conrad Sayce
      Conrad Harvey Sayce was a British born Australian architect and author.Conrad Sayce was born in Hereford and educated in England before migrating to Australia. He practised architecture in Melbourne with Rodney Alsop and the firm of Alsop & Sayce won the Hackett Competition for the design of...

       (1888–1935) (Australia)
    • Thomas Seaton Scott
      Thomas Seaton Scott
      Thomas Seaton Scott was a Canadian architect. Born in Birkenhead, England he immigrated to Canada as a young man first settling in Montreal...

       (1826–1895) (Canada)
    • Arthur Shoosmith (1888–1974)(India)
    • Frank Worthington Simon (1863–1933) (Canada)
    • Eden Smith
      Eden Smith
      Eden Smith was born in Birmingham, England but achieved fame as a Toronto, Ontario architect belonging to the Arts and Crafts movement...

       (1858–1949) (Canada)
    • Robert Smith
      Robert Smith (architect)
      Robert Smith was a Scottish-born American architect who was based in Philadelphia. Smith's work includes buildings such as Carpenters' Hall, St. Peter's Church, and the steeple on Christ Church—constituted the greater part of the city's early skyline.-Early life:Smith was born in Dalkeith Parish,...

      (1722–1777) (USA)
    • Frederick William Stevens
      Frederick William Stevens
      Frederick William Stevens was an English architectural engineer who worked for the British colonial government in India. Stevens' most notable design was the railway station Victoria Terminus in Bombay...

       (1847–1900) (India)
    • George Strickland Kingston
      George Strickland Kingston
      Sir George Strickland Kingston arrived in South Australia on the Cygnet in 1836. He was the Deputy Surveyor to William Light, engaged to survey the new colony of South Australia.-Early life:...

       (1807–1880) (Australia)
    • John Sulman
      John Sulman
      Sir John Sulman was an Australian architect. Born in Greenwich, England, he emigrated to Sydney, Australia in 1885. From 1921 to 1924 he was chairman of the Federal Capital Advisory Committee and influenced the development of Canberra.-Early life:Sulman was born in was born at Greenwich, England...

       (1849–1934) (Australia)
    • Florence Mary Taylor
      Florence Mary Taylor
      Florence Mary Taylor CBE was the first qualified female architect and the first woman to train as an engineer in Australia. She was also the first woman in Australia to fly in a heavier-than-air craft in 1909...

       (1879–1969) (Australia)
    • James Walter Chapman-Taylor
      James Walter Chapman-Taylor
      James Walter Chapman-Taylor born London, England, Was known as one of New Zealandʼs most important domestic architects of his time bringing the Arts and Crafts Movement to New Zealand houses...

       (1878–1958) (New Zealand)
    • George Temple-Poole
      George Temple-Poole
      George Thomas Temple-Poole was a British architect and public servant, primarily known for his work in Western Australia from 1886....

       (1856–1934)(Australia)
    • Frederick Thatcher
      Frederick Thatcher
      Rev. Frederick Thatcher was an English and New Zealand architect and clergyman.He was born at Hastings to a long-established Sussex family. He was one of the earliest associates of the Institute of British Architects, being admitted in 1836.He emigrated to New Zealand in 1843, working in New...

       (1814–1890) (New Zealand)
    • William Thomas
      William Thomas (architect)
      William Thomas was an Anglo-Canadian architect.Thomas was apprenticed under Charles Barry and A.W. Pugin as a carpenter-joiner. His younger brother was the sculptor John Thomas .Thomas began his own practice at Leamington Spa in 1831 but in 1837 went bankrupt...

       (c. 1799–1860) (Canada)
    • George Troup
      George Troup (architect)
      Sir George Alexander Troup, CMG was a New Zealand architect, engineer and statesman. He was nicknamed "Gingerbread George" after his most famous design, the Dunedin Railway Station in the Flemish Renaissance style . He was the first official architect of the New Zealand Railways...

       (1863–1941) (New Zealand)
    • Kivas Tully
      Kivas Tully
      Kivas Tully was an Irish-Canadian architect.Born in Garryvacum in County Laois, Ireland, Kivas Tully was the son of John P. Tully, a lieutenant in the Royal Navy, and Alicia Willington...

       (1820–1905) (Canada)
    • Richard Upjohn
      Richard Upjohn
      Richard Upjohn was an English-born architect who emigrated to the United States and became most famous for his Gothic Revival churches. He was partially responsible for launching the movement to such popularity in the United States. Upjohn also did extensive work in and helped to popularize the...

       (1802–1878) (USA)
    • Henry Vaughan
      Henry Vaughan (Architect)
      Henry Vaughan , a prolific and talented church architect, came to America to bring the English Gothic style to the American branch of the Anglican Communion . He was an apprentice under George Frederick Bodley and went on to great success popularizing the Gothic Revival style.-Life:Vaughan was...

       (1845–1917) (USA)
    • Calvert Vaux
      Calvert Vaux
      Calvert Vaux , was an architect and landscape designer. He is best remembered as the co-designer , of New York's Central Park....

       (1824–1895) (USA)
    • John Verge
      John Verge
      John Verge was an English architect, builder, pioneer settler of New South Wales, who migrated to Australia and pursued his career there. Verge was one of the earliest and the most important architect of the Greek Revival in Australia. He also brought more comprehensive range of Regency style than...

       (1788–1861) (Australia)
    • Richard A. Waite
      Richard A. Waite
      Richard A. Waite was a British-born American architect in the late 19th century.Richard Waite's father arrived in America in 1856 with his wife and children and settled in Buffalo, New York to work in a printing company. His son Richard, like many early architects, learned building design as an...

       (1848–1911) (USA)
    • William Wardell
      William Wardell
      William Wilkinson Wardell was a Civil Engineer and Architect, notable not only for his work in Australia, the country to which he emigrated in 1858, but also for having a successful career as a surveyor, and an ecclesiastical architect in England and Scotland before his departure.In Australia,...

       (1824–1899) (Australia)
    • John Cliffe Watts
      John Cliffe Watts
      John Cliffe Watts was a British military officer and architect who designed some of the first permanent public buildings in the young British colony of New South Wales, and who also later became Postmaster General in South Australia....

       (1786–1873) (Australia)
    • Charles Webb
      Charles Webb (architect)
      Charles Webb was an architect working in Victoria, Australia during the 19th century....

       (1821–1898) (Australia)
    • Leslie Wilkinson (1882–1973) (Australia)
    • George Wittet
      George Wittet
      George Wittet was a Scottish architect who worked mostly in Bombay , India.-Life:George Wittet was born in Blair Atholl, Scotland in 1878. He studied architecture with a Mr...

       (1878–1926) (India)
    • Charles Wyatt
      Charles Wyatt
      For musician and writer see Charles Wyatt .Charles Wyatt was an English architect and Member of Parliament for Sudbury, Suffolk....

       (1758–1813) (India)

    See also

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