Wiltshire architects abington, L. J. ?not an architect



Yüklə 2,26 Mb.
səhifə45/54
tarix28.07.2018
ölçüsü2,26 Mb.
#61464
1   ...   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   ...   54

1866-72 School, Chapmanslade; WBR; ref to GES plans for school at FS laying of church SWJ 23.6.66 but FS of school not laid until 1871 WG 25.8.71, Brown & Co of Frome contrs; BC 24.8.71; school of 1875 acc to VCH; design 1865-7 PJ, BN 13 1866 438;

1867 rest chancel St Thomas a Becket ch, Salisbury; reopened January 1868, the chancel proper has been divided from the aisles by a series of wainscot oak screens of elaborate design and is lighted by a number of gas tripod burners placed on top of them, level of loor raised and central portion paved with encaustic tiles, fine reredos with Crucifixion in alabaster, handsome altar cloth designed by the architect finely worked by the ladies of the parish, WI 23.1.1868 reopened; 1866-7 BoE; reredos by Thomas Earp, Bristol Mercury 25.1.68; £2000; pulpit 1876 by Street, carved by Thomas Earp, BoE; BN 31.1.68 twelve clerestory windows with glass by Horwood of Frome;

1867-8 rest Yatton Keynell ch; faculty 1867 WSHC PR/2602/6; papers re rebuilding Glos RO GDR/F1/3/5; ICBS opened 14.4.68; 1869 WBR; faculty 1866 Bristol RO EP/J/6/2/212; faculty renew chancel roof, build new NE vestry, renew floors, pews, resite memorials; DWG 23.4.68: cost exceeds £1700, chancel rebuilt from the foundations, some of the old work preserved in the arch of the window, the dimensions a little enlarged but still very narrow and contracted; in the N and S walls are two new lancet windows, the old piscina remains under the S window a new sedile; four chancel steps paved with Lugwardine tiles (ie Godwin); altar of oak of unusual size panelled each panel pierced with a fleur-de-lys; E window large and good; rails of brass on wrought-iron standards gold and brown; two Glastonbury chairs; stalls are heavy and oak of a width inappropriate to the chancel; chancel screen famous throughout Wilts restored to former beauty; bosses of chancel arch are new on l. vine and on r. oak; the original mouldings of the piers had been cut away for the screen and have not been replaced. Temporary pulpit reuses a part of 1767 pulpit with ISH and cross and date; new oak lectern; heads of almost all S aisle windows new; monumental tablets which disfigured the old church built into tower wall; new N vestry; vestry chimney with octagonal shaft pierced with vertical openings; organ against E wall of s aisle; sittings of varnished deal; porch roof covered in brown oblong tiles crowned by red ridging, questionable to a Wiltshireman;

1869-71 rest Wootton Bassett ch; WSHC plans 1869 D/1/61/21/11 rebuild chancel, enlarge, refit and partially rebuild church, erect N aisle, rebuild and reroof chancel and S chancel chapel, erect organ chamber and vestry; reopen tower arch, heighten tower with new ringing floor, remove galleries, add battlements and stair turret to porch; take down S wall beyond first buttress E of porch and whole of N and E walls; old E window to be reset in S wall of SE chapel; reopened 17.8.71, paid for by Sir Henry Meux; reredos Adoration of Magi by Earp; new top to tower and tower recased, SE chapel rebuilt, new E wall chancel, new N aisle and NE vestries, font; pews, stalls, arcade between chancel and SE chapel and parclose screens; DWG 8.6.71 approaching completion; reopened BC 17.8.71, DWG 17.8.71, SWJ 19.8.71;

1870 alts Lydiard Millicent ch, restored chancel and extended it by one bay, reusing E window, plans WSHC PR/1602/42; new vestry; PJ notes say 1870-1 new porch and reredos, no reredos there now; porch does look like GES;

1870-2 Littlefield, Marlborough College; WBR; of concrete to Charles Drake's system patented 1867 Drake Patent Concrete Building Co; Charles Drake 1839-92; plans alterations 1922 G22/760/30; dormitory block burnt 1962; plans 1962 by Robert Townsend qv;

1870-2 Cotton House, Marlborough College; of concrete to Charles Drake's system, like Littlefield, plans alts 1922 G22/760/18; minor alts by WG Newton qv 1929 G22/760/83;

1872-3 Bradleian Building, Marlborough College; chimneys since removed; T BN 4.10.72; opened 22.12.73; converted inside to a theatre, timber roof remains; Bradleian Arches by Street link to the Museum Block of 1881-3;

1872 School, Boreham, Warminster, school and school-house for St John church; 1871-2 PJ; lychgate added 1874 by GES; school extended 1893 by Graham Awdry qv;

1872-3 rest Britford ch; PJ suggests GES remodelled Radnor mausoleum; reopened Br 2.8.73; new s porch much tracery following medieval fragments;

1874 lychgate St John ch, Boreham, Warminster; dated plaque;

1874-8 rebuilt tower Corsham ch, previously church had a crossing tower, new tower with spire on S side, new crossing arches and chancel arch; WBR; WSHC 1157/43; letter 9.12.74 recommending with sorrow removal of the tower; estimate £5110; plans 1875 for replacement both arcades and chancel arch, new N aisle, tower and spire; tender Wall & Hook £5456, spec included chancel paving, repair of chancel roof; but according to the subscription list the chancel was restored 1875-8 by CF Hansom qv perhaps to GES plans; drawings for tower suggest reuse of old cornice and coping; new chancel arch and eastern arch to each arcade, in 1876 N elevation two-bay outer N aisle still planned W of N doorway, and no Methuen chapel; estimate 1875 Wall & Hook £7201; TNWA 15.6.78 reopened, CF Hansom architect for chancel, chapel S of chancel restored by Methuens, chapel N restored by GP Fuller with beautiful screen, two stained glass windows part of intended series of life and acts one on S given Mrs Pratt and W given by Mr Wass ; CFH added the new N Methuen chapel in 1879 and further embellished chancel in 1880

PJ notes: design 1874, faculty 1875, begun 1876, reopened Jun 1878. Remove galleries and dormers, reseating, remove central tower, new S tower and spire, new chancel arch and N and S arches at E end of nave. Hansom added the Methuen chapel only – GES did the rest.

1875 proposed restoration St Denys ch, Warminster; unex, restoration done by AW Blomfield in 1886-9; WSHC 2144/80 letter 24.10.75 estimate £7570, inc chancel £700, new nave aisle and S transept £5300, spire and parapet to tower £450; also plans of existing church 1874; also 3 plans at gallery and ground level inc new pew plan; also bundle of detailed drawings by GES: for chancel low stone screen and iron gates; for stalls with poppyhead ends and desk; for new choir vestry, plain with 3-lt window and door in N wall; for roof of transept; details of traceried parclose screen;

1875 proposed remodelling of Marlborough College including a new tower; unex; T Hinde;

1875-7 Porter's Lodge and Gates, Marlborough College; T Hinde says job given to Street in compensation for loss of his larger scheme of 1875; plans agreed 17.2.75;

1875-81 Museum Block, Marlborough College, plans agreed 17.2.75 for laboratories with museum above; not built, but see 1881-3

1876 ?Melksham Forest ch; Kelly dir 1899; but BoE says by CS Adye qv; earlier Kellys 1889 and 1895 only say that Street designed the Sunday School and sexton's house in 1880; lancet Gothic nave and chancel, paid for by Rev EL Barnwell of Melksham House, £3700; Melksham church guide, 1912, has no architect named;

1876 pulpit, St Thomas ch, Salisbury; BoE; by Thomas Earp;

1877 alts vicarage, Melksham; now The Grange, Canon Square; rebuilt main rooms at SW corner, new dining-room, study, drawing room and stair hall; altered facade; £2130; PJ;

1877 unex plans St Denys ch, Warminster, Br 12.2.1887 250 mentions a scheme 10 years before the one by AW Blomfield, by Street, for rebuilding and enlarging nave and asiles and rearranging and restoring E parts; not proceeded with;

1877-80 Erlestoke ch;

1877-80 vicarage, Erlestoke; contr Hale & son, Salisbury; Br 4.9.80;

1878 schoolroom, Church Lane Melksham, converted from C15 tithe barn as annexe to National School of 1840; new two-light windows on W, twin gabled addition on E; opened January 1879, altered to flats 1980, St Michaels Court;

1879-81 rest Hilmarton ch; D/1/61/30/7 1879; E window 1881 in memory WH Poynder, designed by Mr Street RA who had restored the church at Mr Poynder's cost, by Clayton & Bell, promised BN 11.3.81; installed G 7.6.82 ;

1880 school room and sexton's house, St Andrew ch, Melksham Forest; Kelly 1889 dir; not in PJ;

1880-1 rest N porch, Salisbury Cathedral;

1881-3 Museum Block, Marlborough College; Queen-Anne style; GES sent designs off in November 1881 the last designs made before his death built by AE Street with AW Blomfield in 1882-3, Blomfield having been called in to help AES finish outstanding works; GES had been involved since 1875 with plans for a museum over laboratories, sent plans November 1881, built in 1882-3 uncertain if to GES plans, only survivng plans are apparently by AES and AWB; acc to Peter Howell notes for Oxfordshire AHS 19.5.1990, the bursar Rev JS Thomas in 1889 described it as 'the work of Mr Blomfield' but Paul Joyce said that plans sent in november 1881 may have been uses; first-floor museum galleried on three sides with open timber roof in C17 style;

1881 restored chancel Melksham ch; restored roof, new stalls, screens N and S, sanctuary steps, encaustic tiles; angel on N wall painted by Miss Warre, the vicar's daughter; chancel repaved and new rails 1910, ceiling embellished over sanctuary 1922 by CE Ponting;

STREETER, EDWARD Builder, Bath.

1851 repairs to Railway Village cottages in Oxford St, Reading St and Faringdon St, C&F 77, then in 1852 contracted to keep all 243 railway village cottages in repair; £380 p.a.;

1853 completion of Railway Village, Swindon, won contract for class B & D cottages, May & son of Bath given class A, C, E and completion of Barracks but withdrew and whole contract given to May & son; C&F 78;

1854 blt Mechanics Inst, Swindon, Wilts, E Roberts archt; WBR2; also the octagonal market at back 1854, dem 1892;

1859-61 WM chapel, Faringdon Rd, Swindon; plans by James Wilson qv; 1614/237 accounts; demolished after new WM in The Barracks opened 1868;

(1861 bldr restor Chelwood ch, Som; Br 12.10.61, John Norton archt;
STREETER, Rev. HENRY THOMAS Vicar of Rodbourne Cheney in 1848;

1848 rest Rodbourne Cheyney ch; Geoff Brandwood/ ICBS: Bit of a puzzle re the architect. TH Wyatt reporting on the work then in progress in July 1848 says ‘no architect has been employed’ though he makes reference to a clerk of the works. It looks very much as though it’s a DIY job by the vicar the Rev. Henry T Streeter. The plan in the file says ‘Enlarged Restored & Repaired under the superintendence of the Revd. Henry Thomas Streeter in the year 1848.’ However, the plan also has, under the names of three principal inhabitants, ‘Architect John Phillips’ (no place stated). There is no mention of Sage who appears in BoE. The old tower was taken down and a new one built at the W end. Wyatt was none too keen on this but could not persuade Streeter: also N aisle and arcade and vestry are new. Reseating. My reading of this is that Streeter is our man and that Phillips has just signed off the plan to give it authority. CE Ponting in WAM 37 370 givesMr Sage as architect;


STRIBLING, HERBERT J. Architect, 65-7 High St, Slough; FRIBA; firm continues in Eton as Herbert J Stribling & Partners; did conservation work Eton College chapel 2005 and other works at Eton College;

1934 Two blocks cottages, 75-85 High St, Hullavington for Eton College; plans WSHC G7/760/38;


STRICKLAND, WILLIAM Architect, Hungerford, later surveyor to Marlborough & Ramsbury RDC;

1925 rear addition Memorial Hall, Aldbourne G8/760/75, minor addition rear NE to hall of 1921 by Tubbs & Messer qv;


STRIDE TREGLOWN PARTNERSHIP Bristol, Cardiff, London, Manchester, Reading, Plymouth, Abu Dhabi; firm developed a model boomerang-plan primary school for use by Persimmon Homes where Section 106 agreement stipulated a primary school in new housing developments;

(1989 BTI satellite station, Madley, Herefs BD 11.89)

2001-2 Fynamore Primary School, Calne, Wilts; Section 106 model

2003-4 Westbury Leigh Primary School, boomerang plan Section 106 model

2006-7 Paramount, Swindon, conversion of office block to 199 apartments; ?Sanford St/ Edgeware Rd

2010-11 Amesbury Archer Primary School: Section 106 model school;

2012 remodel Sainsburys store, Bath Road, Melksham; extended S and W;

2012-13 Adds County Hall, Trowbridge, new entrance link block to library; Kier Western contr; Sacala civic Building of Year awards 2013

2013-14 East Trowbridge Primary School: section 106 model;

2014-15 East Melksham Primary School, Snarlton Lane, Melksham; section 106 model; school website;

2016-17 Marlborough St Mary's CofE Primary School, George Lane, Marlborough; £6.5m; Kier construction contractors;
STRONG & WHITE

1819 repewed Calne church; VCH; pews replaced 1863;


STRONG family, masons, originally from Wiltshire. Timothy Strong owned quarries at Little Barrington, glos in early C17 and also Taynton, Oxon; rebuilt cornbury House, Oxon, 1632-3, died 1635-6, son Valentine +1662 owned Taynton, grandsons Thomas +1681, Timothy +1705 of Taynton and Edward +1724 of St Albans and John +1725 of Stanford in the Vale; Thomas Strong +1681 was working at Longleat in 1662 for Sir James Thynne who acc to an early C18 account made the stone terrace from the outward gate to the hall door and made the door by the direction of sir Christopher Wren (doorway now at Warminster School als new made the Great Stairs, paved the hall and passages with stone finished the Blue Parlour and drawing-room adjoining it and walled and planted the old Kitchen garden and made the door out of the hall into the great parlour'. ;

Another branch established at Box, where Thomas Strong qv owned quarries in early C19 and at Warminster where three generations were masons and builders from 1830 to 1964 inc William Strong and Egerton Strong qqv;


STRONG, EGERTON. Stone mason, Warminster; died 1964 aged 83 WJ 21.8.64;

1919 ?War Memorial, Sutton Veny unveiled 15.2.20 designed and blt by Mr Strong;

1921 carved War Memorial, Warminster to design of Thomas Falconer of Bligh Bond, Falconer & Baker; plans WSHC;
STRONG, THOMAS surveyor, architect, mason, builder, quarry owner, Fogleigh, Box; c1781-1851, aged 60 1841 census; memorial in Box churchyard; involved with repair of bridges 1823-4 acc to John Peniston qv papers, including Ray Bridge, Lacock, and Boreham Bridge, Warminster

1824-30 much work for John Peniston see Peniston letters, inc work on Rey Bridge, Lacock, Boreham Bridge, nr Warminster, Bulford Bridge, all 1824, balustrading at Somerley House, Hants, for Lord Normanton 1829;

1828 columns, etc Grand Jury Room, Council House, Salisbury; WBR;

1829 parsonage, Dauntsey; plans etc D/1/11/61 floor plans only, large Tudor style ashlar fronted, brick behind, extended 1869; 1829-33 VCH;

1840-1 enl St Mary ch, Westport, Malsmesbury; ICBS set a new roof, 360 additional seats;
STRONG, THOMAS builder, Warminster, son of William Strong qv of Warminster, worked with his father on restoration of St Denys ch, Warminster 1887-9; Thomas Strong renovated the Wren doorway at Lord Weymouth's School 1957 unlikely to be same one;
STRONG, W. Probably a mistake.

1829-33 ??rectory, Great Somerford; WBR ?error for Dauntsey altered 1829-33 by Thomas Strong, as Great Somerford is not neo-Tudor but C17 and C18, with new wing 1863 by J.H. Hakewill qv;


STRONG, WILLIAM architect, builder, Warminster 1890 dir; stonemason Portway in 1867 dir; dynasty of Warminster masons from 1830: R Strong did stonework on St Denys church, 1887-9, Thomas Strong, son of William, also worked on St Denys ch, 1887-9, Egerton Strong died 1964 aged 83 WJ 21.8.64, carved Warminster War Memorial 1921; Thomas Strong renovated the Wren doorway at Lord Weymouth's School 1957;

1864-5 bldr St John ch, Warminster; GE Street architect;

1874 involved with ext to Wiltshire Reformatory, Warminster; Hardick architect; WBR2;

1886-9 bldr St Denys church, Warminster, with his son T Strong WJ 22.2.89; Gaisford sub-contractor;

STUART, JAMES Architect, painter, 1713-88; published Antiquities of Athens, by Stuart & Revett 1762; vol 2 1789; HC;

1774 library fireplace, Bowood; IR; not in HC; CL 8.6.72 says library fireplace purchased 1774 £59/19/0d made by Carter, presumably Thomas Carter II; ?not the present library fireplace, 1775, illustrated in an unsigned engraving;


STUDIO OCTOPI Architects, London, est 2003; est by James Lowe and Chris Romer-Lee both born 1972;

2010-12 Orchard House, 18A The Green, Calne; £250K, for a wheel-chair user, original boundary wall rebuilt forms front , courtyard plan within, main living on ground floor, upper level office/ studio with potential for becoming care accommodation BD 8.1.10


STURGESS, EDWARD. Builder Cholderton

1857 School, Newton Toney; WSHC 782/79 dated 7.7.55; one-room school;

1874 School, Bulford; WBR;
STYLE, ARTHUR JAMES. Architect, 1 Westminster Chambers, London, 1847-1914, born Southborough, Kent, assistant to GG Scott, set up in London, lived at Thames Ditton, Surrey;

1876 reblt chancel, Seend ch; WBR; BoE by AJ Styles (sic); ill BN 1.3.78, archiseek; RB Mullings qv builder; further work in 1888 DWG 23.8.88; original plans PR/1048/27 1874 included chancel aisles, rebuilding of SW ed of S aisle, and removal of galleries, only chancel done in 1876 without the chancel aisles D1/61/27/1 1876; the alteration to SW corner and tower screen and organ loft not done until 1888-9 and new oak pews not done until 1909;

1876-7 reblt Wilcot ch after fire 1876; WBR; ICBS completion cert 11.7.77; MT 14.4.77 Admiral Montague to rebuild £2200; reopened MT 9.6.77 N walls, arcade and aisle E wall entirely rebuilt, new arch W wall of tower richly moulded arch and new gable to S porch, gables of nave and chancel, new traceried windows three in N aisle, two in chancel S, and E window; encaustic tile sanctuary, new roofs, fittings, font of Painswick stone shafts of green Chilmark; organ by Nicholson; by AJS of London and Thames Ditton; RB Mullings qv builder; Br 1877 618 opened; ICBS file

1879 rest Dauntsey ch; faculty 1608/13 plans are for chancel only, unclear what is new work Plan 1. Reseating; 2. section of chancel showing wooden sanctuary panelling, rails, and roof, new organ chamber arch, E window reveal, section through nave shows new or resited screen (??); 3 E elevation shows new (??) E window, and chancel S windows, two 2-lt and one flat-head 4-lt as now; 4. N elevation one chancel N flat head 4-lt as now; nave and aisle roofs were replaced by H Brakspear qv 1904-6;

1888 rest Seend ch; DWG 23.8.88; by AJ Style; he had made plans to restore whole church in 1874, but only rebuilt chancel in 1876 as funds had not been there for rest; 1888 work was to remove galleries, alter S aisle W end with new windows, make new organ loft and tower screen and move organ or install new organ in loft; plans D1/61/34/4; organ was not moved but replaced in 1889; pulpit of c1889 presumably by Style as also the reredos;

(1894 All Saints, Hastings, Sussex)

1905 rest Easterton ch; WBR;

1909 pews, Seend ch; plans WSHC D1/61/45/20; oak pews replacing deal ones of 1858 by Henry Weaver qv; AJS of 3 Victoria St, London;

SULLIVAN, IAN Architect, 101 Victoria St, Swindon; Ian Sullivan Architecture Ltd, South Marston, same as Ian Sullivan Architectural Design, 101 Victoria St Swindon and Wood St, Wootton Bassett;

(2014 proposed dev land adj 42 Grange Rd, Saltford, Som; BANES planning)

2016 Beaufort Mews, Station Rd, Wootton Bassett; board; housing
SULLIVAN, MIKE Architect, 2 Cricklade Ct, Old Town, Swindon; Mike Sullivan Associates, formerly Isis Design Services;

1986-8 Golf Clubhouse, The Common, Marlborough; club centenary history 1988; shape based on the Avebury Barn;

SUMSION, THOMAS mason, Colerne c1672-1744; family of stonemasons in Colerne, surname noted from 1560; Samuel Sumsion, stonecutter, will of 1734 mentions his brothers Thomas and Richard, and sons Joseph and Thomas; No 14 High St built for (by?) John Sumsion 1738; Thomas & John Sumsion mended pinnacles of Colerne church 1759;

(1707 tower Dursley ch, Clos; Thomas Sumsion and – Barker paid £500;

(1717 urns Kings Weston House, near Bristol; six or seven ft high;

1730 tower Sherston ch; WBR; paid £1/15/0 for 'draught';


SUTTON, GRIFFIN & SWEETNAM Newbury

1972 plans to convert Duchess of Somerset almshouses, Froxfield to flats, 2037/106;


SUTTON, BASIL Architect, Reading, see Webb & Sutton;

1929 work Ramsbury ch; WBR; Webb & Sutton designed lychgate at Ramsbury in 1909;


SUTTON, JOHN Horningsham

1827 alts to Parsonage, Horningsham (dem), WSHC plan CC/E/44, to repair pump and other works in vicarage; ?also chancel repairs to church;


SWEETMAN, JOHN Plasterer

1611 ceiling, drawing-room, South Wraxall Manor, signature found, CL 18.6.2014;


SWEETMAN, P. Architect;

1976 redec Froxfield ch and 1981 retiled roof; church guide;


SWINDON BOROUGH COUNCIL. John Bell Langhorn Thompson 1891-1961 Borough Surveyor 1924-48; J Ackroyd Borough surveyor 1948, - Flack Deputy Borough Architect 1945; J Loring Morgan Borough Architect c1947-65; NA Pritchard Borough Surveyor and planning officer 1966; J Winter, Controller Environmental Services 1974 when name of borough changed to Thamesdown qv reverted to Swindon in 1990s; Nic Newland Head of Design and Construction, Property Services 2011;

1927 clock turret added to bandstand, Town Gardens, Swindon; info board in park; SB 150, also designed rose garden c1930;

1930 two houses, Whitefield Farm, Ogbourne St George, by Borough Surveyor;

1935 Diving stage, Coate Water, Swindon, designed by SBC staff with A Ridout qv; WBR2; by JBL Thompson opened 22.6.35, SB;

1936 The Bowl outdoor concert shell, and turnstile kiosk, Town Gardens, Swindon; info board in park; opened 6.5.36; by JBL Thompson SB; by Alfred Ridout WBR2 c1936;

1938 gardens, Civic Offices, Euclid St, Swindon; buildings by Bertram, Bertram & Rice qv; Br 22.7.38; by JBL Thompson, borough surveyor; pergola and rose arbour; SB;

1943ff repairs Lydiard Park, Lydiard Tregoze bought for borough in 1943;

1949-53 and 1959-64 Queens Park, Swindon by J Loring Morgan with Maurice J Williams parks superintendent; EH; JLM designed N entrance, opened 15.11.50; W part of park opened 1953; Drove Road entrance 1960; York Rd entrance c1962; the Show House glass house 1960-3 by JLM, demolished down to footings;

195? Plessey Co works, Cheney Manor industrial estate, Rodbourne, Swindon; by JLM; BoE;

1958 Sussex Square centre, Walcot East estate, Swindon; shopping area; by JLM BoE

1964 Art Gallery extension to museum, Bath Rd, Swindon; SB by JLM;

1964 Cavendish Square, Park South estate, Swindon by JLM with Frederick Gibberd & Partners; BoE1975; article in AR 1958 14-15 suggests design by Gibberd;

1963-5 Courts of Justice, Princes St, Swindon; BoE 1975 by JLM former Borough Architect; completely reclad 1989-90 in brick; originally chequered exterior in panels with recessed portico, Clark Bros, Swindon, builders, FS 12.7.63 opened 21.4.65, SB;

1966 site plan for Crown Office Building, Princes St, Swindon December 1966, NA Pritchard CE Boro Surveyor; ?the present Spring Gardens house, but then only 3 storey front and one storey rear, rear now eight storeys;

19?? Multi-storey car park W of Brunel Centre, Swindon; by Borough Architects Dept; BoE1975;

196? two tower blocks, Penhill, Swindon by JLM with M de St Croix; BoE1975; actually three at Penhill and two similar on Marlowe Ave;

1969-79 restoration Railway Village, Swindon; Housing Design Award 1973; BN 29.6.79, RTPI award 1979 to Thamesdown BC, job architect Eric Golding;

1971-4 Eldene Centre, Swindon, by Borough Architect; BoE1975;

From 1974-96 Swindon BC was Thamesdown BC qv


Yüklə 2,26 Mb.

Dostları ilə paylaş:
1   ...   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   ...   54




Verilənlər bazası müəlliflik hüququ ilə müdafiə olunur ©muhaz.org 2024
rəhbərliyinə müraciət

gir | qeydiyyatdan keç
    Ana səhifə


yükləyin