Architecture, Designs and Plans
Found in 128 Collections and/or Records:
Redevelopment of Coventry - general material, 1939-1945
Redevelopment of Coventry - general material consists of:
- general papers, c1945
- general photographs, 1939
- press clippings and articles, 1940-1944
- plans,c1941-1943
Redevelopment of Coventry - housing, c1940-1944
Redevelopment of Coventry - housing subseries consists of:
- material relating to the opening of the Canley Estate houses, 18 December 1941
- photographs of the Canley Estate,c1941
- press clippings and journal articles concerning Coventry's housing developments, 1940-1944
- plans for housing, a nursery and a panoramic view, c1940
Refuse disposal plant, 1938
Copy of a set of 4 architectural plans (69cm x 93cm) for the Willesden refuse disposal plant. The plans are at the scale 8 feet to 1 inch and include elevations, plans and sections. The architect was the borough engineer F Wayman Brown and the draftsman Percy Johnson-Marshall.
Second year assignments, 1932-1933
South Bank: drawings, c1954
6 draft perspective drawings, on 3 sheets of rough paper, in pen and coloured pencil, for buildings and pedestrian walkways on London's South Bank. These relate to London County Council's Comprehensive Redevelopment Area no 4: South Bank.
South Bank: Festival of Britain 1951 competition - "Design a restaurant for the South Bank", 1949
Programme and schedule of requirements for an architectural competition, promoted by the Festival of Britain Office, to design a restaurant for London's South Bank as part of the London Festival of Britain 1951. The winning design would be included in London County Council's Comprehensive Development Area no 4: South Bank.
South Bank: photographs, 1954-1961
South Bank: plans, 1950-c1960
Suggested flats on the site of Roundwood House, 1937
Unfinished manuscript architectural plan (35cm x 56cm), in ink on tracing paper of a proposed block of flats on the site of Roundwood House, Willesden. The only sheet shows an unfinished plan of a two bedroom flat and the stairwell at the scale 1 inch to 8 feet. The architect was the borough engineer, F Wayman Brown.