- Harry Weedon
Infobox Architect
caption=
name=Harry Weedon
nationality=English
birth_date=1887
birth_place=Birmingham
death_date=17 June 1970
death_place=
practice_name=Weedon Partnership
significant_buildings=Odeon Cinemas
significant_projects=
awards=|Harold William "Harry" Weedon (1887 –
17 June 1970 ) was an Englisharchitect . Although he designed a large number of buildings during a long career, he is best known for his role overseeing theArt Deco designs of theOdeon Cinemas forOscar Deutsch in the 1930s. Influenced by the work ofErich Mendelsohn andHans Poelzig - the Odeons "taught Britain to love modern architecture" [cite news|first=Jonathan|last=Glancey|title=The mogul's monuments: How Oscar Deutsch's Odeon cinemas taught Britain to love modern architecture|url=http://arts.guardian.co.uk/critic/feature/0,1169,717532,00.html|work=The Guardian|publisher=|pages=|page=|date=2002-05-18|accessdate=2008-06-12] and form "a body of work which, with London Underground stations, denotes the Thirties like nothing else".cite web|url=http://www.search.digitalhandsworth.org.uk/engine/resource/exhibition/sequential/child.asp?txtKeywords=kingstanding&lstContext=&lstResourceType=&lstExhibitionType=&chkPurchaseVisible=&txtDateFrom=&txtDateTo=&x1=&y1=&x2=&y2=&scale=&theme=&album=&viewpage=%2Fengine%2Fresource%2Fexhibition%2Fsequential%2Fchild%2Easp&originator=%2Fengine%2Fsearch%2Fdefault%5Fhndlr%2Easp&page=&records=&direction=&pointer=24&text=0&resource=6896&exhibition=2165|title=The name above the title|accessdate=2008-06-13|last=Dingley|first=Christopher|year=2004|month=March|work="Enter the dream-house, brothers and sisters......."|publisher=Digital Handsworth]Life
Education and early career
Weedon was born in Handsworth,
Birmingham , the son of a commercial traveller, and educated at King Edward's School in the city.cite web|url=http://www.search.digitalhandsworth.org.uk/engine/resource/exhibition/sequential/child.asp?txtKeywords=kingstanding&lstContext=&lstResourceType=&lstExhibitionType=&chkPurchaseVisible=&txtDateFrom=&txtDateTo=&x1=&y1=&x2=&y2=&scale=&theme=&album=&viewpage=%2Fengine%2Fresource%2Fexhibition%2Fsequential%2Fchild%2Easp&originator=%2Fengine%2Fsearch%2Fdefault%5Fhndlr%2Easp&page=&records=&direction=&pointer=24&text=0&resource=6896&exhibition=2163|title=Harry Weedon (1887-1970)|accessdate=2008-06-02|last=Dingley|first=Christopher|year=2004|month=March|work="Enter the dream-house, brothers and sisters......."|publisher=Digital Handsworth] He studiedarchitecture at theBirmingham School of Art from 1904, before being articled to the architectural practice ofRobert Atkinson . In 1912 at the age of 24 he was made an associate of theRoyal Institute of British Architects and went into partnership with Harold S. Scott, with whom he designed a cinema inBirchfield , completed in 1913,cite book|last=Eyles|first=Allen|title=Odeon Cinemas 1: Oscar Deutsch Entertains Our Nation|year=2002|publisher=BFI Publishing|location=London|isbn=0851708137|pages=50|chapter=] and several upmarket houses inWarwickshire .cite encyclopedia|editor=Curl, James Stevens|encyclopedia=A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture|title=Weedon, Harold William|url=http://www.oxfordreference.com/views/ENTRY.html?subview=Main&entry=t1.e6174|accessdate=2008-06-02|edition=Oxford Reference Online|year=2006|publisher=Oxford University Press]The outbreak of
World War I saw building work dry up, however, and in 1914 he volunteered as a pilot in theRoyal Flying Corps , serving until 1917.cite news|title=Mr Harry Weedon - Noted cinema architect (Obituary)|work=The Times|publisher=|page=12|date=1970-06-20 |accessdate=2008-06-05] On his demobilisation he set about re-establishing his architectural practice, but an affair with the wife of a neighbour resulted in a scandalous double divorce that destroyed his reputation, and he spent the following years inLeamington Spa working as a manager in thecatering industry.The Odeon era
Weedon returned to Birmingham and to architecture in 1925, quickly building up his practice designing housing estates and commercial and industrial premises. It was his work in 1932 designing the enlargement of a factory in
Hockley, Birmingham for the firm of Deutsch and Brenner that brought him to the attention ofOscar Deutsch - the factory's owner's son - who was in the process of building up his Odeon chain of cinemas and was dissatisfied with the interior proposed for his cinema under construction inWarley near Birmingham. Weedon was approached by Deutsch to complete the design, but at the time his office numbered only six staff and had nobody other then Weedon himself with any cinema experience, so the youngCecil Clavering was recruited to complete the work.It was Clavering's next cinema design, built in Birmingham's expanding
Kingstanding suburb in 1935, that cemented the relationship between Deutsch and Weedon. Originally designed for another chain and to be called the "Beacon", [cite web|url=http://cinematreasures.org/theater/22733/|title=Odeon Kingstanding|accessdate=2008-06-14|last=Roe|first=Ken|work=Cinema Treasures] Deutsch saw in Clavering's simple and originalArt Deco design the making of the house style he sought to distinguish the Odeon chain from his rivals. The cinema was quickly bought for the Odeon group and Weedon was appointed to oversee all of the group's designs.cite book|last=Atwell|first=David|title=Cathedrals of the Movies: a History of British Cinemas and Their Audiences|year=1980|publisher=Architectural Press|location=London|isbn=0851395627|pages=|chapter= ]Between Weedon's appointment in 1934 and the outbreak of
World War II in 1939 the Weedon office was to design or act as consultant architect to over 250 of Deutsch's cinemas. Not all of these were designed by the practice itself: of the thirty-six Odeons that opened in 1936 only eight were Weedon designs. Even those that were designed by the Weedon practice were not designed by Weedon himself [cite news|first=Allen|last=Eyles|title=Obituary: Robert Bullivant|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20010214/ai_n14371336/pg_1|work=The Independent|publisher=Newspaper Publishing Plc|page=6|date=2001-02-14|accessdate=2008-06-14|quote=Weedon himself had little or no direct involvement in designing the stream of Odeons that came from his office.] - Weedon's role has been likened to that of anexecutive producer , creating the house style and maintaining consistent quality. The practice's other major notable building of the era - the "Villa Marina", an early British example of a house in theInternational Style built inLlandudno in 1936 - was designed by Weedon personally. [cite web|url=http://www.cadw.wales.gov.uk/upload/resourcepool/HBC_English5253.pdf|title=Condover House, Colwyn Road, Llandudno|accessdate=2008-06-14|year=2004|format=pdf|work=ANNUAL REPORT 2003–04|publisher=Historic Buildings Council for Wales|pages=32]Clavering himself designed three more Odeons for Weedon after Kingstanding - in
Sutton Coldfield ,Colwyn Bay and Scarborough, "one masterpiece after the other" [cite news|first=Jonathan|last=Glancey|title=The mogul's monuments: How Oscar Deutsch's Odeon cinemas taught Britain to love modern architecture|url=http://arts.guardian.co.uk/critic/feature/0,1169,717532,00.html|work=The Guardian|publisher=|pages=|page=|date=2002-05-18|accessdate=2008-06-12|quote=With Weedon in Deutsch's stride, the Odeon chain produced one masterpiece after the other: Sutton Coldfield, Scarborough, Colwyn Bay] considered "the finest expressions of the Odeon circuit style". [cite news|first=Allen|last=Eyles|title=Obituary: J. Cecil Clavering|url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20020102/ai_n9667943|work=The Independent|publisher=Newspaper Publishing Plc|page=6|date=2002-01-02|accessdate=2008-06-14|quote=The exteriors of the Kingstanding and Sutton Coldfield Odeons were the finest expressions of the Odeon circuit style ... However, the style that Clavering had so brilliantly established was gradually coarsened and diluted in the later Weedon output - excepting the Odeon Harrogate, a replica of Sutton Coldfield] Later in 1935 however Clavering stunned Weedon by resigning to take up a job with theOffice of Works . Weedon approached Clavering's former tutor who recommendedRobert Bullivant as Clavering's replacement.Post-war
In March 1939, Weedon brought four of his senior staff into partnership to form the "Weedon Partnership". The outbreak of
World War II later that year, and the take-over of the Odeon group byJ. Arthur Rank on the death of Deutsch in 1942, saw cinema design work evaporate, and Weedon spent most of the war overseeing the dispersal of Birmingham's wartime industries to protect them during theBirmingham Blitz . This resulted in a wide range of contacts with the Midlands' engineering and industrial firms and the post-war era saw the Weedon Partnership focusing on the design of factories, including notable work at theBritish Motor Corporation 'sLongbridge plant and inCowley, Oxford , and a large factory forTyphoo Tea inDigbeth ,Birmingham .Weedon himself continued design work until his final illness. The Weedon Partnership is still in business and is based in
Edgbaston , Birmingham, employing 36 people. The partnership has been involved in a variety of projects including ones atBrindleyplace (Birmingham),Piccadilly Place (Manchester ),The Mailbox (Birmingham) and Hicking Pentecost (Nottingham ). [cite web|url=http://www.weedonpartnership.co.uk/Projects.html|title=Projects|accessdate=2008-06-14|publisher=Weedon Partnership Architects ]External links
* [http://www.weedonpartnership.co.uk/index.html Weedon Partnership Architects website]
* [http://www.product-design.info/pooled/profiles/BF_COMP/view.asp?Q=BF_COMP_29340 Product-design: Weedon Partnership Architects]References
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