- Quinlan Terry
Quinlan Terry (born 24 July, 1937 in
Hampstead ) is an Englisharchitect . He was educated atBryanston School and theArchitectural Association . He was a pupil of architectRaymond Erith , with whom he formed the partnership "Erith & Terry".=Work=Quinlan Terry is a deeply conventional architect who reacts against the Modernist style and its variants. He works principally in a classical retrospective
Palladian style. He holds the Philippe Rothier European Prize for the Reconstruction of the City of Archives d'Architecture Moderne (1982). His design for the library atDowning College , Cambridge won the Building of the Year Award in 1994. In 2003 Terry won the Best Modern Classical House 2003, awarded by the BritishGeorgian Group . In 2005 Terry won the 3rd AnnualDriehaus Prize the most prestigious award for outstanding Classical and Traditional architects.One of his best known works is
Brentwood Cathedral inEssex . This rebuilding of an earlierRoman Catholic church utilises the Italian Renaissance style, mixed with the early and short-livedEnglish Baroque style. It has aportico based on the south portico ofSt Paul's cathedral designed by SirChristopher Wren . Unusually, all five classical orders of architecture were used in the design.During the 1980s he was also appointed by the
Prime Minister of theUnited Kingdom ,Margaret Thatcher to renovate the interiors of10 Downing Street .Terry's domestic work, while retrospective, employs quality materials: where possible, indigenous stone is used, and modern construction methods are favoured.
In
Gloucestershire , he designedWaverton House , where he used the style made popular byMatthew Brettingham in the 18th century, featuring a central staircase lit from above, surrounded by rooms on both floors.Terry has said that he enjoys working for American clients because:
...apart from the fact that [they] have got the money [they have] no moral hangups against building a building in an 'outdated style,' as they put it... To Americans, morality is morality, architecture is architecture."
[ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9E05E1DF1139F93BA35752C1A9669C8B63&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/Subjects/R/Restoration%20and%20Rehabilitation] Ralph Blumenthal "Roll Over, Moses: It's a Centrum Lincolnensis", "New York Times" November 8, 2000 - retrieved 6 December 2007.]
His works in the USA include the Abercrombie Residence. This classical mansion is based on
Marble Hill House ,Twickenham ,England . Complete with a piano nobile approached by an external staircase, it has a pediment supported by Corinthian columns. The house is constructed ofKasota limestone , withIndiana limestone dressings.In 1989, he employed the Gothic style to create a mansion in London's
Regent's Park . Ironically, the plan was based onPalladio 'sVilla Saraceno , which it was felt would convert to the Gothic style.In the mid-1990s, he designed the restoration of
St Helen's (London) after the church building was severely damaged in two IRA bombings. He reworked its previousTractarian -inspired design into an open Georgian plan informed by the precepts ofReformation theology.Terry's architecture has been highly praised by David Watkin, who wrote the monograph "Radical Classicism: The Architecture of Quinlan Terry" (2006), and by
Roger Scruton who called it "one long breath of fresh air" [Roger Scruton, [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qa3724/is_200604/ai_n16522998|"Hail Quinlan Terry: our greatest living architect"] , "The Spectator " Apr 8, 2006.] .=Criticism=Terry has been called "our most controversial architect - precisely because he is so uncontroversial" [Lynn Barber, "Shock of the old", "
The Observer ", Sunday March 7, 2004.] and his work has attracted much criticism even from conservative quarters.Gavin Stamp remarked that after the death of Raymond Erith, Terry was left "to hold aloft the torch of classicism--something he was, I fear, quite unfitted to sustain" [Gavin Stamp, "The curse of Palladio", "Apollo", Nov, 2004.] and he has also been called "exquisite but impractical." [Robert Locke, "America’s Greatest Architect Is A Conservative", "Front Page Magazine", May 6, 2001.]In October 2007 Terry was fined a total of £25,000 by
Westminster City Council for demolishing two gate lodges by John Nash inRegent's Park . Westminster City Council’s Cabinet Member for Planning, Cllr Robert Davis, said:Westminster has a rich architectural heritage and it is the council’s duty to protect this for future generations. For one of the country’s pre eminent architects to fall foul of the law is disappointing, but I hope the size of the fine will send a very clear signal to anybody who thinks they can damage or destroy listed buildings without regard, whoever they may be. ["Renowned architect fined after demolition of two listed lodges" [http://www.westminster.gov.uk/councilgovernmentanddemocracy/councils/pressoffice/news/pr-3952.cfm Westminster City Council Website] retrieved 8 November 2007.]
ee also
*
Brentwood Cathedral
*Downing College, Cambridge
*St Helen's (London) References
External links
* [http://www.qftarchitects.com Quinlan and Francis Terry Architects]
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