1867 – Design for Royal Courts of Justice, London by J.P. Seddon
Design submitted by J.P. Seddon, for the Royal Courts of Justice competition in London, which was won by George Edmund Street.
Design submitted by J.P. Seddon, for the Royal Courts of Justice competition in London, which was won by George Edmund Street.
Design submitted by Edward Middleton Barry, for the Royal Courts of Justice competition in London,
One of the designs submitted for the Royal Courts of Justice competition in London, which was won by George Edmund Street.
Design submitted by Irish architect, Thomas Newenham Deane, for the Royal Courts of Justice competition in London,
One of the eleven renowned architects who had been invited to compete – Henry R.
When the public exhibition of designs submitted to the designated competition of the Royal Courts of Justice opened in February 1867,
View from The Strand published in The Building News, May 3rd 1867.
In 1868, an architectural competition was held for a new law courts building for Bristol.
The Finsbury School District, one of several such bodies set up to provide accommodation for pauper children away from the workhouse,
Never constructed. Originally the site of Saville House, formerly Aylesbury House of 1684, which was used for various exhibitions and entertainments from the first years of the nineteenth century.