- Walter Sykes George
Walter Sykes George (1881-1962) was an English architect who was active inIndia during the first half of the 20th century. He was born in a family ofQuaker architects and brought up inEast Anglia andManchester , where he worked in the family's architectural practice. Later, he studied under A. Beresford Pite and W. R. Lethaby at theRoyal College of Art ,London , and won the Soane Scholarship in 1906. From 1906 to 1911 he worked with theBritish School at Athens and joined several excavations, a result of which was his 1913 monograph, "The Church of St Eirene at Constantinople".He then joined Sir
Edwin Lutyens and SirHerbert Baker , in helping design the capital complex ofNew Delhi which was chosen by the British Government in 1912 to be the new capital of India. The project was completed in 1929 and officially inaugurated in 1931. Of the many talented British architects associated with the building of the new capital enclave, only Walter George elected to stay on and establish a private practice inDelhi . In the 1930s he took on the job designing of the new campus ofSt. Stephen's College, Delhi , a project that was completed in 1941.At this time there were few architects active in Delhi and the two existing schools for training architects in India were in
Bombay andBaroda . The outbreak ofWorld War II generated a sudden demand for engineer-architects by the Allied forces; consequently, Walter George and his colleagues helped establish the first training facility for architects in North India. The Department of Architecture came into existence as part of the Delhi Polytechnic at Kashmiri Gate in 1942.After independence, a comprehensive curriculum was designed and the first batch of students received their National Diplomas in Architecture in 1950. The building of the city of
Chandigarh designed byLe Corbusier was a powerful magnet for many fresh graduates. Meanwhile, other young Indian architects and planners were returning home to participate in nation building after postgraduate studies abroad. George took a keen interest in their welfare and helped them organise themselves, one result of which was the creation of the Institute of Town Planners (India) (ITPI), in 1951.Walter Sykes George died in Delhi on
7 January 1962 .External links
* [http://www.lutyenstrust.org.uk The Lutyens Trust]
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