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Richard Gibson (19 November 1935 – 26 December 2024) was a British architect who worked in London and Shetland. His works include housing developments, private houses, schools and museums, as well as restoration and conversion projects.
William Beck was a British Quaker architect, based in London On Wyatt George Gibson's death in 1862, he left £5,000 to build a hospital in Saffron Walden. It was built on London Road and the architect was Beck, and it opened in September 1866. His son George Stacey Gibson was elected treasurer.
The former St John the Evangelist's Church, Chichester. Elmes was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, and, after studying building under his father, and architecture under George Gibson, became a student at the Royal Academy, where he gained the silver medal in 1804.
George Pace (1915–1975) Claud Phillimore (1911–1994) Francis Pollen (1926–1987) Sir Philip Powell (1921–2003) Ernest Prestwich (1889–1977) Brian Ring; Ian Ritchie (born 1947) James A. Roberts (1922–2019) Howard Morley Robertson (1888–1963) – president of the Royal Institute of British Architects from 1952 to 1954; David Roberts ...
Hill House in October 2023. Hill House is a 19th-century building at 75 High Street, Saffron Walden, Essex, England.It is listed Grade II.. In 1845, George Stacey Gibson (1818–1883) and his wife Elizabeth, the daughter of Samuel Tuke, bought Hill House and lived there until their death.
At the age of 29, [4] Gibson was appointed as Coventry's first city architect and planning officer. The re-planning of Coventry City Centre began before the Blitz in 1940–1941; indeed, Gibson produced the initial plan to rebuild part of the city in early 1940, in order to resolve the problems of overcrowding and congestion of the medieval town centre. [5]
Gibson was born on a farm near Savannah, Ashland County, Ohio in 1862 and arrived in Butte, Montana. After learning the craft of architecture and carpentry, Gibson moved to Missoula, Montana, around 1889. He married Maud Lockley on January 30, 1889. Maud was the daughter of a well-known newspaperman, Fredrick Lockley.
Robert W. Gibson, AIA, (1854 in England – 1927 in New York City) was an English-born American ecclesiastical architect active in late-nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century New York state. He designed several large Manhattan churches and a number of prominent residences and institutional buildings.