This wonderful iconic building with its clock tower under a domed lantern was designed by William Tyler Architect also responsible for the now redundant Dorchester prison.
As fast as one building project is complete, another begins and it has been like this for as long as I can remember without a break regardless of recessions or the Pandemic.
Providing that there is a rapport between the client and architect and both are open to new ideas at all stages then usually a harmonious outcome can be achieved.
‘If you don’t know the past how can you understand the present, and how can you plan for the future?’ asked Sir Norman Foster on the Today programme on VE Day.
In my experience if you apply for something and a piece of information is missing you are asked to provide it – job done.
It is with a great pride and huge relief when works are completed and exceed not only the clients’ expectations but mine as well.
Eternal, a family run kitchen and furniture business based in Somerset has a simple ethos so different to other companies, it is like a breath of fresh air.
This picture was taken in the mid-late 90’s. More than 30 years later, I went back too see Oxford Castle and was pleasantly surprised.
What is this phenomenon where everyone is so industrious, so overworked, sleep deprived and unable to manage a reasonable proportion of downtime?
This was the title of a paper by Dan Cruikshank about the repair of historic buildings published in the 80’s. Today, our ability to adapt and survive is more about who we chose to work for and what motivates us to provide the services that we are instructed to deliver.