St Quentin
…my St. Quentin design with acclamation!’ When the scheme was abandoned in 1927, Lutyens developed the design for the new Memorial at Thiepval. (Amery et al, 1981, Cat no.297) Bibliography…
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…my St. Quentin design with acclamation!’ When the scheme was abandoned in 1927, Lutyens developed the design for the new Memorial at Thiepval. (Amery et al, 1981, Cat no.297) Bibliography…
…India Act. In the event, the Chamber of Princes never met before independence. Hyderabad House was the first to be built around Princes’ Place. Like Baroda House, it has a…
…arch-like forms (reminiscent of the more subtle Thiepval Arch) have a stylishness rare in architecture after 1914. The Pavilions seen riding over the trees of the park are a worthy…
…et al, 1981, cat no.300) Doric temple that could equally as well be at home on the Western Front as in the heart of London. Names of the fallen on…
…the highest has the almost same dimensions as the Arc de Triomphe. The arches are identical in their form, with the largest arch at the top. The keystone of each…
…some success, to combine Williamsburg with Wren. Lutyens, fulfilling the requirements of the two different functions of diplomatic life, divided the embassy into the chancery office building and the ambassador’s…
…and then Lindisfarne Castle for him. First he converted the nearby mill house (the largest of three water mills at Plumpton) as a weekend cottage, from which the house can…
…Lutyens designed very simply and effectively, only making architectural references to the cathedral he so much admired, in the dome and cross on top of the flagon. (Amery et al,…
…the elevations. The design incorporated a Banking Hall on the ground floor and flats above. The façade demonstrated a facility, much admired to the 1920s of ‘how to get up…
…was built on a relatively narrow site with only a single extension. Lutyens used the maximum height then permitted by the London Buildings Acts but he also added two tall…