1881 – Chiswick School of Art, Bedford Park, London
This was one of the public buildings on the Bedford Park estate intended to give the new development a sense of community.
This was one of the public buildings on the Bedford Park estate intended to give the new development a sense of community.
The church, mainly built of brick, in the style of the 13th century, consists of a nave and choir terminating in a polygonal apse,
The site was the gift of Lord Tredegar who laid the foundation stone on 18 April 1882.
The main house was demolished in 1927, leaving the service wing and ancillary buildings. Originally built between 1864 and 1870 by architect William Eden Nesfield for Liverpool banker John Pemberton Heywood.
“This building, which has been created and furnished at the coat of Charles G. Hale,
“This drawing has been admitted into the Exhibition of the Royal Academy this year. The cottages are of red brick, tiled roof,
“The new pavilion for the use of the Oxford University Cricket Club is built in the Parks,
Cruciform church constructed to replace an earlier church of 1781 on same site. With its 130 ft spire,
“The house which we illustrate to-day was built by the Botanic Garden Syndicate, at Cambridge, from the design of Mr.