Percy Richard Morley Horder

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Percy_Richard_Morley_Horder an entity of type: Thing

Percy Richard Morley Horder (18 November 1870 – 7 October 1944) was an English architect who early in his career worked from offices in Stroud and later in London. His early work included public houses for the Godsell Brewery work included the designing of new country houses or partially rebuilding existing houses. He also designed country house gardens and is noted for laying out Highfields Park, Nottingham together with the adjacent Nottingham University Campus. His early work was in the Arts and Crafts style, but after the First World War his buildings were increasingly in the Neo-Georgian fashion. He undertook architectural work in many parts of the British Isles including Ireland and at Thurso in Caithness. He is probably best remembered for the Trent Building in the University of Not rdf:langString
rdf:langString Percy Richard Morley Horder
rdf:langString Percy Richard Morley Horder
rdf:langString Percy Richard Morley Horder
rdf:langString Dartford, Kent
rdf:langString Torquay
xsd:integer 48651060
xsd:integer 1123816806
rdf:langString Trent Building, Nottingham University.
rdf:langString Shops for Boots the Chemist
rdf:langString City of London School. Articled to Devey and Williams.
xsd:integer 1870
rdf:langString University of Nottingham, Trent Building at night
xsd:integer 1944
xsd:integer 275
rdf:langString English
rdf:langString Percy Richard Morley Horder (18 November 1870 – 7 October 1944) was an English architect who early in his career worked from offices in Stroud and later in London. His early work included public houses for the Godsell Brewery work included the designing of new country houses or partially rebuilding existing houses. He also designed country house gardens and is noted for laying out Highfields Park, Nottingham together with the adjacent Nottingham University Campus. His early work was in the Arts and Crafts style, but after the First World War his buildings were increasingly in the Neo-Georgian fashion. He undertook architectural work in many parts of the British Isles including Ireland and at Thurso in Caithness. He is probably best remembered for the Trent Building in the University of Nottingham. and for design of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. His work at Upton House, Warwickshire for Viscount Bearsted is notable, but it is his work for Jesse Boot, both the Boot's the Chemists stores, but most importantly the Trent Building and the laying out of the Nottingham University Campus, which influenced design at other English universities, for which he must take the greatest credit.
rdf:langString Williams and Morley Horder 1895 Morley Horder and Briant Alfred Poulter. 1919–1925. Morley Horder and Verner O Rees. 1925–1929.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 22515

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