1857 – Deane & Woodward Design for Foreign Office, London
Fourth prize design in architectural competition for the Foreign Department, which won Deane & Woodward a premium of £200.
Fourth prize design in architectural competition for the Foreign Department, which won Deane & Woodward a premium of £200.
Perspective View published in The Building News, October 23rd 1857.
Little Aston Hall was originally constructed around 1730 by Richard Scott of nearby Great Barr Hall,
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office building originally provided premises for four separate government departments: the Foreign Office,
“THE country mansion which we this week engrave has been erected near Bakewell,
Published in The Building News, 1860. Constructed to continue the famous Chester Rows within the design,
David Carnegie of Stronvar purchased the Eastbury Park Estate in 1857 and rebuilt the mansion and many other estate buildings to designs by Scottish architect David Bryce.
The Foreign and Commonwealth Office building originally provided premises for four separate government departments: the Foreign Office,
Funded by Prince Albert’s Royal Patriotic Fund, the building was intended for the ‘Education and Training of three hundred Orphan Daughters of Soldiers,
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