List of Australian architects

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of Australian architects.

A[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
George Henry Male Addison[1]
  • Born Wales 23 March 1857
  • Died Brisbane 6 February 1922
Lily Isabel Maude Addison[2]
  • G.H.M. Addison & Son
  • Brisbane
Joseph Allen[3]
  • Articled to
  • Born Cornwall 6 August 1869
  • Arrived Australia 1879
  • Died 23 May 1933 Swan River
  • Rhodes & Co (Civil Engineers)
  • Henry Simon & Co (Milling Engineers)
  • Allen & Nicholas Perth
  • New South Wales and Western Australia
Rodney Alsop[4]
  • Articled to Hyndman & Bates
  • Born Kew, Victoria 22 December 1881
  • Died 26 October 1932

Partners

  • Glyn, Kooyong Road, Toorak
  • Edrington, Berwick, Victoria[5]
  • St. Mark's Anglican Church Camberwell, Victoria[6]
  • Footscray Park, Ballarat Road, Footscray, Victoria[7]
  • Temperance and General Mutual Life offices in several state capitals
  • Hackett Memorial Buildings, 1932 University of Western Australia
  • Royal Institute of British Architects Bronze Medal[8]
Ruth Alsop[2]
  • Born in Kew, Victoria 1879
  • Died 1976
  • Klingender & Alsop
  • Melbourne and Sydney
Sydney Ancher[9]
  • Articled to
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Born Woollahra 25 February 1904
  • Died Waratah 8 December 1979
  • Wunderlich Limited
  • Prevost, Synnot & Ruwald
  • Ross & Rowe
  • Emil Sodersten
  • Prevost & Ancher
  • Ancher Mortlock Murray & Woolley
  • Prevost House, Kambala Road, Bellevue Hill (1937)
  • Ancher House, Killara Sulman Medal (1945)
  • Farley House, North Curl Curl (1948)
  • English House, St Ives (1949)
  • Ancher House, Neutral Bay (1956)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1975)
Brit Andresen
  • Bachelor of Architecture, University of Trondheim, Norway
  • Born Trondheim, Norway
  • Arrived Australia 1977
  • Andresen and O'Gorman
  • Associate Professor, Architecture, University of Queensland
  • Burrell Museum, Glasgow, Scotland (1976)
  • House, Mooloomba, Queensland 1996
  • House, Highgate Hill Brisbane (1997)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2002)
John Andrews AO
  • Architecture, University of Sydney
  • Architecture, Harvard University
  • Born Sydney 29 October 1933
  • John Andrews International
  • Canada, United States and Australia
  • University of Canberra Student Residences, Bruce (1973)
  • Hooker Tower, Sydney (1974)
  • American Express Tower, King & George Streets, Sydney (1976)
  • King George Tower in Sydney (1976)
  • Australian National University Toad Hall Student Residences, Acton (1977)
  • Cameron Offices, Belconnen in Canberra
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1980)
Harold Desbrowe Annear[10]
  • Articled to
  • Articled to Joseph Reed
  • Born Bendigo 16 August 1865
  • Died St Kilda 22 June 1933
  • Victoria
  • Springthorpe Memorial, Kew Cemetery (1897)
  • Houses, 32, 34 and 38 The Eyrie Eaglemont (1903)
  • Macgeorge House, Alphington (1910)
  • Broceliande (also known as Troon) 224 Orrong Road, Toorak (1918, demolished)
  • Inglesby, 97 Caroline Street, South Yarra (1919, demolished)
  • Church Street Bridge, Richmond (1924)
  • Cloyne, 609 Toorak Road, Toorak (1929)
John Lee Archer[11]
  • Born Chatham, Kent 26 April 1791
  • Died Stanley, Tasmania 4 December 1852
  • Tasmania
William Archer[13]
  • Born Launceston, Tasmania 1820
  • Died Cressy, Tasmania 15 October 1874
  • Tasmania
  • Hutchins School (1848–49)
  • Wesleyan Chapel, St Leonards, Tasmania (1846)
  • Anglican Church of St Peter, St Leonards (1846–47)

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B[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings, awards and publications
Benjamin Backhouse[14]
  • Born Ipswich, England 1829
  • Arrived Australia 1853
  • Died Sydney 29 July 1904
  • Geelong, Ballarat, Brisbane, Sydney, Newcastle, and Bathurst
Walter Bagot[15]
  • Apprenticed to E J Woods
  • Architecture, King's College, University of London
  • Born North Adelaide 17 March 1880
  • Died North Adelaide 27 July 1963
Arthur Baldwinson[16]
  • Architecture, Gordon Institute of Technology, Geelong
  • Born Kallaroo 26 February 1908
  • Died Royal North Shore Hospital 25 August 1969

Worked with:

  • Raymond McGrath (London)
  • & Walter Gropius (London)
  • Stephenson & Meldrum (Sydney)

Partners:

  • John Oldham
  • Coomaditchy Lagoon housing project, Port Kembla (1938)
  • Collins House, Palm Beach (1938)
  • Kingsford Smith House, Pittwater (1939)
  • Maritime Services Board ferry wharves, Manly and Circular Quay (1940)
  • Foot/Haxton House, Clareville (1949)
  • Max Dupain House, Castlecrag (1952)
  • Baldwinson House, Greenwich (1953)
  • Hotel Belmont, Belmont (1956) Sulman Medal
James Barnet[17]
  • Apprenticed to a builder
  • Studied drawing and design under William Dyce
  • Studied architecture with Charles James Richardson
  • Born Arbroath, Scotland 1827
  • Arrived Australia December 1854
  • Died Sydney 16 December 1904
  • Clerk of Works, University of Sydney
  • NSW Colonial Architect
    (1862-90)
  • New South Wales
Nahum Barnet[18]
  • Early career as insurance clerk
  • Articled to Terry and
  • Worked with John Harry Grainger
  • Victoria
  • Her Majesty's Theatre, Melbourne
  • Auditorium, Collins Street, Melbourne
  • Austral Building, Collins Street, Melbourne
  • Wertheim Piano Factory
  • Melbourne Synagogue, Toorak Road, South Yarra (1928)
Hillson Beasley[19]
  • Born Canterbury, Kent, England 30 April 1855
  • Died Albany, Western Australia 7 October 1936
  • Principal Architect (Western Australia) 1905-17
  • Western Australia
Guilford Marsh Bell
  • Articled to
  • Architecture, Central Technical College
  • Studied under Professor Sir Albert Richardson, London
  • Born Brisbane 21 December 1912
  • Died Melbourne 9 January 1992

Partners

  • Neil Clerehan
  • Victoria and New South Wales
  • ANA Air Terminal, Philip Street, Sydney (1948)
  • Hayman Island Resort, Hayman Island, Queensland (1952)
  • Hordern House, Point Piper (1956) demolished
  • Santosa, Albany Road, Toorak (1963)
  • Myer House, Yulgibar Station, Grafton (1966) restoration and alteration
  • Gordon House, Birkenburn Station, Bungendore (1968)
  • Fairfax Pavilion, Retford Park, Bowral (1969)
William G. Bennett
  • Born 1896
  • Died 1977
  • Western Australia
Raymond Berg
  • Born 25 October 1913
  • Died 1989
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1974)
[20]
  • Born 1810
  • Died 1862
James Birrell
  • Born 1928
  • Died 2019
  • Queensland
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2005)
James Blackburn[21]
  • Born 1803
  • Died 1854
  • Church Ruin, Port Arthur (1836)
  • St Mark's Anglican Church, Pontville (1841)
  • St Matthew's Presbyterian Church, Glenorchy
  • Congregational church, New Town (1842)
  • Lady Franklin Museum, Lenah (1843)
  • The Grange, Campbelltown (1840s)
[22]
  • Born Sydney 1848
  • Died 1929
  • Blackett & Son
  • Blacket Brothers (1883–85)
  • New South Wales
[22]
  • Born Sydney 1857
  • Died Manly 1937
  • Blacket & Son
  • Blacket Brothers (1883–85)
  • New South Wales
  • All Saints Anglican Church, tower addition, Bodalla (1901)
Edmund Blacket[22]
  • Born Surrey 25 August 1817
  • Arrived Australia 1842
  • Died Petersham 9 February 1883
  • NSW Colonial Architect
    (1849-54)
  • Blacket & Sons
  • New South Wales
  • Great Hall University of Sydney
  • St. Paul's College, Sydney
  • Anglican Churches, St Mark's Darling Point, St Paul's Redfern, St Philip's Church, Sydney, St Paul's Carcoar, St Mary's West Maitland, St Paul's Burwood St Stephen's Newtown All Saints' Woollahra, St Saviour's Goulburn, St Peter's East Maitland, St Thomas's North Sydney and St Stephen's Willoughby
[23]
  • Born 1873
  • Died 1962
Carl Heinrich Edmund Blackmann
  • Born 1835
  • Died c. 1912
Gorrie Blair
  • Born Scotland 1862
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1923-26)
  • New South Wales
  • Several NSW War Memorials
  • Court House, Katoomba
  • Wards 24 and 25, Callan Park
Harold Boas[24]
  • Born Adelaide 27 September 1883
  • Died Subiaco 17 September 1980
  • M. F. Cavanagh & Austin Bastow
  • Oldham, Boas, Ednie-Brown & Partners
  • Western Australia
Robin Boyd[25]
  • Born 1917
  • Died 1971
  • Grounds, Romberg & Boyd
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1969)
[26]
  • Born 1893
  • Died 1976
Henry Budden CBE
  • Articled to Harry Kent
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Royal Academy
  • Born Rockley, New South Wales 11 August 1871
  • Died Sydney 25 December 1944
Eva Buhrich[2]
  • Born in Nuremberg, Germany, in 1915
  • Arrived in Australia in 1939
  • Died in March 1976
  • Hans Poelzig's office (Berlin)
  • Otto Salvisberg's office (Zurich)
  • Buhrich House II
Hugh Buhrich
  • Born Hamburg, Germany 25 April 1911
  • Died Castlecrag, New South Wales 18 June 2004
  • Buhrich House II, 375 Edinburgh Road, Castlecrag
  • Point Piper House, Point Piper
Walter Bunning CMG[27]
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Town Planning, Regent Street Polytechnic, London
  • Born South Brisbane 19 May 1912
  • Died Bondi Junction 13 October 1977
  • Carlyle Greenwell
  • Stephenson & Meldrum
  • Bunning & Madden
  • New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory
  • Bunning House, Ryrie Street, Mosman (1952)
  • ANZAC House, College Street, Sydney (1957) RIBA Bronze Medal
  • Liner House, Bridge Street, Sydney (1962) Sir John Sulman Medal
  • Bruce Hall, Australian National University (1961)
  • International House, University of Sydney (1967)
  • National Library of Australia (1968)
  • Homes in the Sun (Published 1945)
Gregory Burgess
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2004)
Graeme Butler[28]
  • Architecture, University of Melbourne (1972)
  • Born Melbourne
  • Yuncken Freeman Architects (YFA)
  • Austin Hospital ward block fit-out (1973)
  • Toorak Teachers College library and theatre building under YFA partner
  • Pioneering recycling of the Henry Jones Jam Factory Chapel Street, Prahran, under McIntyre & McIntyre (opened 1975)
  • Museum Underground railway station fit-out and MURLA graphics documentation, with Perrott Lyon Timlock & Kesa, under associate David Simpson (completed 1980)
Walter Butler[29]
  • Articled to (Barnstaple)
  • Born Somerset, England 24 March 1864
  • Arrived Australia 1888
  • Died 1949
  • J D Sedding (London) Partners
  • Beverley Ussher
  • George Inskip
  • Ernest Bradshaw
  • Richard Butler (Nephew)
  • Marcus Martin
  • Hugh Pettit
  • Residences in Victoria
  • Anglican Cathedral, Wangaratta (1907)
  • Christ Church Anglican, Benalla (1910)
  • Collins House, Melbourne (1910)
  • Queensland Insurance Building, Melbourne (1911)
  • Edzell, additions, St Georges Road, Toorak (1917)
  • Coombe Cottage, lodge and gatehouse, Coldstream (1925)
  • Bank branches for the Union Bank of Australia
  • Modern Architectural Design (published 1902)
  • Healthy Homes (published 1902)
Stroma Buttrose[2]
  • Born 29 October 1929
  • Died 26 February 2020
  • South Australia

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C[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Michael Cavanagh
  • Associate, Royal Institute of British Architects (1888)
  • Inaugural vice-president, West Australia Institute of Architects (1896)
  • Born Beechworth, Victoria 1860
  • Died Subiaco, Western Australia 29 May 1941
  • Federation Filigree
  • Federation Gothic
  • Romanesque Revival
[30]
  • Articled to H C Kent
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Architecture Lectures, University of Sydney

Partners

  • Walter Burley Griffin
  • (son)
  • Shore Chapel, North Sydney
  • St Matthew's Anglican Church, Manly (with Wright and Apperly)
  • Church of England Boys' Home, Carlingford
  • Canberra Grammar School
  • Ainslie Hotel, Canberra
[31]
  • Born 4 July 1931
  • Died Perth, Western Australia 27 September 1998
  • Powell Cameron & Chisholm
  • Cameron Chisholm Nicol (CCN Architects)
  • Australia
  • Reid Library, University of Western Australia, Crawley (1964)
  • National Carillon, Canberra (1970)
  • Allendale Square, St Georges Terrace, Perth (1976)
  • Fire Brigades Board Headquarters, Hay Street, Perth (1986)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1983)
J. James Clark[32]
  • Prime instructor in architecture, Pritchard of Smith and Pritchard Architects
  • Born Liverpool, England 23 January 1838
  • Arrived Australia 10 March 1852
  • Died St Kilda, Victoria 25 June 1915
  • Colonial Architect's Office, Victoria (1852–78)
  • Private practice, Collins Street, Melbourne (1880)
  • Private practice with engineer brother, George Clark, Sydney (1881–83)
  • Colonial Architect, Queensland (1883–85)
  • Private practice with (son), Australia (1896–1915)
  • Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland and Western Australia
[33]
  • Clifton Parry
  • Clifton Leach
  • Captain Stirling Hotel, Nedlands (1935)
  • The Clifton house, Johnston Street, Mosman Park (1937)
  • Day House, Victoria Avenue, Claremont (1939)
  • Faculty of Arts Building, University of Western Australia (1962)
[34]
  • Born 1895
  • Died 1968
CMG[35]
  • Articled to
  • Architecture, Working Men's College, Melbourne
  • Born Clifton Hill 6 January 1887
  • Died Auchenflower 3 February 1979
  • Queensland Department of Public Works (1911)
  • H W Atkinson & C McLay (1912–17)
  • Atkinson & Conrad (1919–26)
  • Atkinson, Powell & Conrad (1926–38)
  • Conrad & Gargett (1938–74)
  • Queensland
  • Trades Hall, Brisbane
  • Craigston, Spring Hill (1928)
  • Brisbane General Hospital
  • Brisbane General Hospital, nurses' quarters
  • Tristram's soft-drink factory
  • Greek Orthodox Church
  • Courier-Mail Building (1936 with Stephenson & Meldrum)
  • St John's Cathedral, organ loft, Brisbane (1974)
George Cookney
  • Born England
  • NSW Colonial Architect 1825-26
  • Trainee architect under C. R. Cockerell
  • Trainee civil engineer under
  • Born London 1822
  • Arrived Australia 1852
  • Died 1898
  • Queensland
  • Old Brisbane Town Hall, Brisbane
Bill Corker
  • Denton Corker Marshall
  • Australia and International
Peter Corrigan
  • Born 6 May 1941
  • Died 1 December 2016
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2003)
Keith Cottier
  • Born Australia 1938
  • Allen Jack+Cottier Architects Pty Ltd
  • Australia
  • Sydney School
  • Late 20th century modernist
  • Heritage and adaptive reuse
  • Penfolds Magill Estate Winery, Adelaide, South Australia
  • Moore Park Gardens, Sydney, New South Wales
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2001)
Philip Cox
  • Born Australia 1939
  • Ian McKay & Philip Cox
  • Philip Cox & Partners
  • Philip Cox, Richardson, Taylor & Associates
  • New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory
  • National Maritime Museum, Darling Harbour
  • Sydney Exhibition Centre, Darling Harbour
  • Sydney Football Stadium, Moore Park
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1984)
Matthew Crawford
  • Born Western Australia 1969
  • Matthew Crawford Architects
  • Hougoumont Hotel, Fremantle
  • School of Early Learning, North Perth
  • Warders Hotel, National Heritage, Fremantle
Hugh Ralston Crawford
  • Born United States 1876-1954)
  • Practised both as an engineer and architect in Australia and the United States in the first half of the 20th century

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D[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
John Dalton
  • 1927-2007
  • John Dalton Architect and Associates, Brisbane
  • responsive designs for the subtropical climate
Alexander Dawson
  • NSW Colonial Architect
    (1856-62)
  • New South Wales
  • Supreme Court of New South Wales Registry Office, Elizabeth Street, Sydney
Charles D'Ebro
  • 1850-1920
  • Stonnington (1890)
  • Winfield Building (1891)
  • Richmond Power Station (1891)
  • Gollin Building (1902)
  • Scottish House (1908)
Bruce Dellit[37]
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Architecture Lectures, University of Sydney
  • Born Darlington 7 November 1898
  • Died Hornsby 21 August 1942
  • Design Team, Brisbane City Hall
  • Aleuria, Fox Valley Road, Wahroonga (1928)
  • Kyle House, Macquarie Place, Sydney (1931)
  • Kinsella's Chapel, Bourke Street, Darlinghurst
  • Anzac War Memorial, Hyde Park, Sydney (1934)
  • Delfin House, O'Connell Street, Sydney
John Denton
  • Denton Corker Marshall
  • Australia and International
Robin Dods
  • Architecture,
  • Born Dunedin 9 June 1868
  • Arrived Australia via Scotland 1879
  • Died Edgecliff 23 July 1920
  • Hay & Henderson (Edinburgh)
  • Sir Aston Webb (London)
  • Hall & Dods (Brisbane)
  • Spain & Cosh (Sydney)
  • Queensland and New South Wales
  • Webber House, Ann Street, Brisbane (1905)
  • Archbishop's Chapel, Milton
  • Australian Mercantile Land & Finance building, Brisbane
  • St Brigid's Catholic Church, Red Hill (1914)
  • Fenton, Albert Street, Edgecliff
Hedley Allen Dunn[38]
  • Born 27 October 1865, North Adelaide
  • Died 5 June 1942
  • Adelaide, South Australia

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E[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
William Henry Ellerker
  • Died 1891
  • Melbourne, Victoria
Russell Ellis
  • Born 20 August 1912
  • Died 2 February 1988
Sir Bernard Evans DSO
  • Born 13 May 1905
  • Died 19 February 1981
  • Bernard Evans & Partners
  • Lord Mayor of Melbourne (1961–63)
  • Victoria and Western Australia
  • Toorak Village, Toorak Road, Toorak (1936)
  • London Court, Hay Street, Perth (1937)
  • Former John Batman Motor Inn, 69 Queens Road, South Melbourne
  • The Stamford Hotel, Rowville (1959)
  • 505 St Kilda Road, Melbourne (1960)
  • CRA House, 95 Collins Street, Melbourne (1960)
  • Victoria

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F[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Ted Farmer
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1958-73)
  • New South Wales
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1972)
Joseph Fowell
  • Articled to (Beccles, Suffolk)
  • Completed training with Travers & Mileham (London)
  • Born Albany 2 August 1891
  • Returned to Australia 1919
  • Died Bayview 3 July 1970
  • Gibson, Skipworth & Gordon (London)
  • Atkinson & Alexander (London)
  • Leslie Wilkinson
  • Henry Budden
  • Fowell and McConnel (1928–39)
  • Fowell and Mansfield (1939–46)
  • Fowell, Mansfield & Maclurcan (1946–62)
  • Fowell, Mansfield, Jarvis & Maclurcan (1962–70)
  • British Medical Association House, 135-137 Macquarie Street, Sydney (1928)
  • St Anne's Shrine, Blair & Mitchell Streets, North Bondi (nave 1935, sanctuary 1964)
  • St Peter's, Church of England, Proston, Queensland (1937)
  • St Mary's, North Sydney (1939)
  • St Canisus College, Pymble (1939)
  • St Joseph's, Neutral Bay (1941)
  • Orient Line Building, 2-6 Spring Street, Sydney (1943)
  • St Augustine's Church, Yass (1956)
  • P&O, 565 Hunter Street, Sydney (1962)
  • Gladesville Bridge, Parramatta River (1965)
  • Church of St Rose, Rose Street, Collaroy Plateau (1967)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1962)

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G[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Robin Gibson
  • Born 15 May 1930
  • Died 28 March 2014
  • Robin Gibson and Partners
  • Queensland
  • Queensland Performing Arts Centre, Brisbane (1984)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1989)
Romaldo Giurgola
  • University of Rome La Sapienza
  • Columbia University
  • Born Rome, 1920
  • Arrived Australia, 1980
  • Died Canberra, 2016
  • Mitchell/Giurgola Architects
  • Mitchell/Giurgola & Thorp
  • USA and Australia
  • United Fund Headquarters Building, Philadelphia (1971)
  • Columbus East High School, Columbus (1972)
  • Lang Music Building, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore (1973)
  • Tredyffrin Public Library, Strafford (1976)
  • Sherman Fairchild Center Columbia University (1977)
  • Parliament House, Canberra (1988)
  • INA Tower, Philadelphia
  • Swissotel, Boston (1985)
  • Casa Thomas Jefferson, Brasília
  • Penn Mutual Tower, Philadelphia
  • AIA Gold Medal (1982)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1988)
John Harry Grainger
  • Born: Westminster, London 30 November 1854
  • Died: Melbourne 1917
  • Principal Architect (Western Australia) 1897-1905
  • Fremantle Town Hall
  • Government House ballroom
  • Supreme Court
  • Perth Museum, Library and Art Gallery
  • Parliament House, Perth
  • Perth Central Police Courts
Francis Greenway
  • Born Bristol 1777
  • Arrived Sydney 1814
  • Died Maitland 1837
  • NSW Colonial Architect 1816-22
  • Bristol and New South Wales
  • First Macquarie Lighthouse, Vaucluse
  • Hyde Park Barracks, Sydney
  • St. James Church, Sydney
  • Government House Stables, Sydney
Carlyle Greenwell
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Architecture Lectures, Sydney University
  • BSc (Arch), Pennsylvania University
  • Born Windsor 16 March 1884
  • Died Collaroy 7 February 1961
  • Kent Budden & Greenwell
  • Budden & Greenwell
  • Greenwell & Shirley
  • New South Wales
  • Killara Congregational Church (Uniting Church)
  • Yeulba, Strathfield
  • Terhyn Worthle, Killara
  • Norman House, Vaucluse
  • Harrison House (now Weis Restaurant), Toowoomba
  • Mothers and Wives Memorial to Soldiers, Woolloomooloo
Roy Grounds
  • Born 1905
  • Died 1981
  • Grounds, Romberg & Boyd
  • Australia
  • Australian Academy of Science, Canberra (1959) Sir John Sulman Medal
  • National Gallery of Victoria
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1968)
Neville Gruzman
  • Born 1925
  • Died 2005
  • Regionalism, Sydney School, Organic Modernism
  • Hill's House (1966)
  • Holland House (1962)

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H[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Winsome Hall Andrew[2]
  • Born Woollahra, New South Wales 1905
  • Died 1997
  • Robert Atkinson's office
  • Stanley Livrock's office
  • New South Wales
  • Surf Pavilion, Manly
Ambrose Hallen[39]
  • Born England
  • Arrived Australia 1827
  • Died en route to London 1845
  • NSW Colonial Architect 1832-34
  • Berrima Gaol
William Hardwick
  • Born: Rylstone, New South Wales December 1860
  • Died: South Perth, Western Australia 2 October 1941
  • Principal Architect (Western Australia) 1917-27
Standish Harris[40]
  • Born England
  • NSW Colonial Architect 1822-24
Eric Heath
  • Born Junee 1894
  • Died Sydney 23 September 1952
  • Eric Heath
  • Laurie & Heath (1936–1952)
  • New South Wales
[43]
  • Articled to Reed & Barnes
  • Engineering, University of Melbourne
  • Born Cork 3 March 1853
  • Arrived Australia 1863
  • Died Melbourne 15 November 1922
  • Reed, Henderson & Smart (1883–90)
  • Anketell Henderson (1890–1906)
Kingsley Henderson CMG[43]
  • Articled to
  • Combined Architecture course, University of Melbourne and Melbourne Technical College
  • Born Brighton, Victoria 15 December 1883
  • Died Portsea, Victoria 6 April 1942
  • Firms
    • Anketell and K Henderson (1906–20)
    • Anketell and K Henderson, Alsop & Martin (1920–24)
    • A & K Henderson (1924–42)
  • Partners:
  • Australia and New Zealand
Jack Hennessy
  • Born 1853
  • Died 1924
Jack Hennessy, junior
  • Born 1887
  • Died 1955
Kerry Hill
  • Born 1943
  • Died 26 August 2018
  • Kerry Hill Architects
  • Ogilvie House, Sunshine Beach, Queensland (2003) Robin Boyd Award
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2006)
John Hipwell
  • Born 30 November 1920
  • Death 16 June 2007
  • Hipwell, Weight & Mason
  • Hipwell, Weight & Ross
  • Department of Works
  • Hipwell House Research Road Warrandyte
Lieutenant General Sir Talbot Hobbs KCMG, KCB
  • Born London 1864
  • Arrived Australia 1886
  • Died en route to France 1938
  • Firm
    • Hobbs, Smith & Forbes
  • Partners
    • (son)
  • Western Australia
  • Weld Club, Barrack Street, Perth (1892)
  • War Memorial, Kings Park, Perth (1929)
John Horbury Hunt[44]
  • Born Saint John October 1838
  • Arrived Australia January 1863
  • Died Darlinghurst 27 December 1904
  • Charles F Sleeper
  • Edward Clarke Cabot
  • Edmund Blacket (1863–69)
  • John Horbury Hunt (1869–1904)
  • Boston and New South Wales
  • St Peter's Anglican Cathedral, Armidale (1871)
  • St Matthias's Church, Denman (1871)
  • St John's, Branxton (1873)
  • Christ Church Anglican Cathedral, Grafton (1880)
  • Tivoli, Rose Bay (1881)
  • St Luke's Osborne Memorial Church, Dapto (1882)
  • Cloncorrick, Darling Point (1884)
  • Booloominbah, Armidale (1888)
  • Camelot, Narellan (1888)
  • Pibrac, Warrawee (1888)
  • Tudor House, Moss Vale (1891)
  • Convent of the Sacred Heart, Rose Bay (1896)
  • Trevenna, Armidale (1898)
  • Highlands, Wahroonga (1893)
Henry Hunter
  • Born Nottingham, England October 1832
  • Arrived Australia 1846
  • Died Brisbane 17 October 1892
  • Crawford Padas Shurman Architects
  • Alan Cameron Walker (apprentice)
  • Leslie Corrie (apprentice/partner)
  • Brisbane and Tasmania
  • Neo-Renaissance
  • Gothic-revival
Beatrice Hutton[2]
  • Born The Folly, Lakes Creek, Queensland 16 July 1893
  • Died Indooroopilly, Brisbane 7 October 1990
  • J.W.Dalzell Residence, Rockhampton
  • Myles House, Rockhampton
  • H Rudd Residence, Rockhampton
  • 'Ngarita', Bellevue Hill, Sydney
  • Brecknell Street, Rockhampton
  • New South Wales Masonic Club building
  • Sirius House, Macquarie Place

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I[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
James Campbell Irwin[45]
  • Born 23 June 1906
  • Died 22 June 1990
[46]
  • 9 November 1892 (Eastwood, Adelaide, South Australia)
  • 4 August 1962 (Richmond, Melbourne, Victoria)
  • Woods, Bagot, Laybourne-Smith & Irwin
  • Royal Australasian College of Surgeons, Melbourne, Victoria
Iwan Iwanoff[47]
  • 2 July 1919 (Küsstendil (Kusestendil), Bulgaria)
  • 2 March 1950 (Fremantle, Western Australia)
  • 7 October 1986 (Perth, Western Australia)
  • Krantz and Sheldon
  • Studio of Iwan Iwanoff
  • Late 20th century Brutalist architecture

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J[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Daryl Jackson
  • Born on 7 February 1937 in Clunes, Victoria, Australia
  • Brutalist
  • Modernist

E. Jeaffreson Jackson

  • Fellow, Royal Institute of British Architects (1900)[48]
  • Born London 1862
  • Colonial Architect's Office of NSW (1884) (1902–1908)
  • partner with J. S. Edwards (1885) (Sydney)[49]
Arts and Crafts
[52]
  • Articled to Harry Kent
  • Associate, Royal Institute of British Architects
  • Born Adelaide 1867
  • Died Albany, Western Australia 1947
  • Harry Kent (Sydney)
  • (London)
  • Thomas Edward Collcutt (London)
  • (Perth)
  • Western Australia
Richard Roach Jewell
  • Born Devon 1810
  • Arrived Australia 1852
  • Died Perth 1891
  • Colonial Architect and Clerk of Works
  • Western Australia
Prof Peter Johnson AC[53]
  • Architecture, University of Sydney
  • Died 2003
  • McConnel Smith and Johnson
  • Dean of Architecture, University of Sydney
  • New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory
  • Kindersley House, Bligh Street, Sydney
  • Water Board Building, Bathurst Street, Sydney (1962)
  • Johnson House, Chatswood (1963) Wilkinson Award
  • Commonwealth State Law Courts, Queens Square, Sydney 1967
  • Benjamin Offices, Belconnen (1981)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1985)
George Sydney Jones[54][55]
  • Architecture, London
  • Associate, Royal Institute of British Architects (1890)
  • Born Sydney 1868
  • Died Sydney 1927
  • George Sydney Jones 1891-1927
  • Arts and Crafts
  • Trinity Congregational Church, Strathfield (1889)
  • Springfort, Strathfield (1894)
  • Darenth, Strathfield (1895)
  • Bickley, Strathfield (1894)
  • Treghre, Strathfield (1899)
  • Luleo, Strathfield (1912)
  • Fellow NSW Institute 1896-1901
  • Editor Art & Architecture 1909-1912
  • President NSW Institute of Architects (1912–1914 & 1920-21)
Howard Joseland[56]
  • Born Worcestershire 14 January 1860
  • Arrived Australia via New Zealand 1888
  • Died Darlinghurst 20 July 1930
  • Haddon Bros (Hereford)
  • George Trollope & Sons (London)
  • Joseland & Vernon (1903–14)
  • Howard Joseland (1914–19)
  • Joseland & Gilling (1919–23)
  • New South Wales
  • Westholme, 1 Water Street, Wahroonga (1894)
  • Redleaf, Wahroonga (1899) Restoration (1996) RAIA Lachlan Macqaurie Award
  • Craignairn, 37 Burns Road, Wahroonga (1909)
  • National Building, Pitt Street, Sydney (1920)
  • Tobacco Company Administration Building, 50 Todman Avenue, Kensington (1926)

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K[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Peter Kaad
  • Born Fiji 28 February 1897
  • Died Gold Coast, Queensland 1967
  • Design Team, Brisbane City Hall
  • Rural Bank, Martin Place, Sydney (1935 – demolished 1983)
  • Hastigs Deering Motors (now City Ford), Woolloomooloo (1938)
  • Packard Showroom, East Sydney (1938)
Anatol Kagan
  • Born Saint Petersburg 4 October 1913
  • Died Sydney 2009
  • Blumin & Kagan
  • Department of Works & Housing
  • Anatol Kagan & Associates
  • Mount Scopus Memorial College, Burwood, Victoria (1953–60)
  • Sydney Opera House – unplaced competition entry (1957)
Nonda Katsalidis
  • Born 1951 (Athens, Greece)
  • Tom Kovac
  • Ian Potter Museum of Art (Victorian Architecture Medal, Melbourne Prize and William Wardell Award 1999
  • Eureka Tower
Lindsay Kelly
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1988-95)
  • New South Wales
Henry Hardie Kemp[57]
  • Born 10 March 1859 in Broughton, Lancashire
  • Died 22 April 1946 in Kew, Melbourne, Victoria
  • Ussher and Kemp
  • Federation Queen Anne
  • Federation Arts and Crafts
  • Queen's College, University of Melbourne
  • Queen's Coffee Palace, Carlton (1889, demolished)
  • Australian Property and Investment Co. Building, corner of Elizabeth Street and Flinders Lane (1887, demolished)
  • Workingmen's College (1888)
  • for Alex McCracken, North Essendon (1888)
  • Highbury Grove manse, Kew
  • A pair of residences at 117 Princess Street and 1 Fellows Street, Kew
  • Kerang Shire Office, formerly a bank
  • The Priory, Gladesville (1857), with William Weaver

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L[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
William Laurie
  • Born 11 August 1902 Dumfriesshire, Scotland
  • Arrived in Australia via Canary Islands 1911
  • Died 22 August 1970 Sydney
  • Laurie & Heath
  • New South Wales
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1966)
Robert Lawson
  • Born 1833 Scotland
  • Died 1902 New Zealand
  • New Zealand
  • Melbourne 1854–1862 and 1890–1900
  • Earlsbrae Hall, Essendon, Victoria (1890); now known as Lowther Hall, it forms part of an Anglican grammar school
Louis Laybourne Smith[58]
  • Born 1880 Unley, South Australia
  • Died 1965 Adelaide, South Australia
  • School of Mines, South Australia
  • Woods, Bagot, Jory & Laybourne Smith
  • National War Memorial, Adelaide
  • Repatriation General Hospital, Daw Park
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1961)
William T. Leighton
  • Born 1905
  • Died 1990
  • Western Australia
  • Art-Deco
  • Former State Theatre (Astor Cinema), Mount Lawley
  • Former Como Theatre (Cygnet Cinema), Como
  • Piccadilly Theatre and Arcade, Perth
  • Windsor Theatre, Nedlands
Mortimer Lewis[59]
  • Born London 1796
  • Died Sydney 1879
  • NSW Colonial Architect 1835-49
Richard Leplastrier
  • Born 1939, Melbourne, Australia
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1999)
Peter Lovell
  • Lovell Chen
  • Restoration
  • Royal Exhibition Building (1983-2004)
  • State Library of Victoria (1985- 2011)
  • Immigration Museum, Melbourne (1997- 2003)
  • Young and Jackson Hotel (1999- 2003)
Clive Lucas
  • Born 1943 Australia
  • Clive Lucas Stapleton Partners
  • Restoration

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M[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings, awards and publications
Robert Henry Macdonald
  • Canada
  • Many landmark buildings in Canada
Raymond McGrath
  • English and Architecture, University of Sydney
  • Architecture, Clare College, Cambridge
  • Born Gladesville 7 March 1903
  • Left Australia 1926
  • Died Dublin 23 December 1977
  • Worked with Serge Chermayeff and Wells Coates
  • Architect, Public Works, Dublin (1940–46)
  • Principal Architect, Public Works, Dublin (1946–68)
  • Professor of Architecture, Royal Hibernian Academy
  • England and Ireland
  • Art Deco
  • Remodelling, Finella, Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge (1929)
  • Interiors, BBC Broadcasting House, Portland Place, London (1931)
  • St. Ann's Hill House, Chertsey (1936)
  • Land's End, Galby, Leicestershire
  • Various Irish Embassies abroad
  • Cenotaph, Leinster House, Dublin
  • Royal Hibernian Academy (1970)
  • Glass in Architecture and Decoration (published 1937)
Peter McIntyre
  • Born 1927 Melbourne, Australia
  • McIntyre Partnership
  • Victoria
Charles McLay
  • Born circa 1860
  • Died Brisbane 1918
George McRae
  • Born Edinburgh 1858
  • Arrived Australia 1884
  • Died Sydney 1923
  • City Architect Sydney (1886–97)
  • Principal Assistant NSW Government Architect
    (1897-12)
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1912-23)
  • New South Wales
  • Corn Exchange, 139-151 Sussex Street, Sydney (1887)
  • Corporation Building, Hay Street, Sydney (1893)
  • Queen Victoria Building, George Street, Sydney (1898)
  • Department of Education Building, Sydney, New South Wales (1912)
  • Parcels Post Office, Railway Square, Sydney (1913)
  • Entrances and Elephant House, Taronga Zoo, Mosman
  • Court House, Cessnock
Colin Madigan
  • Born 1921
  • Died 2011
  • Edwards, Madigan, Torzillo & Briggs
  • New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory
  • High Court of Australia (1980)
  • National Gallery of Australia (1982)
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1981)
Barrie Marshall
  • Denton Corker Marshall
  • Australia and International
Marcus Martin
  • Born 1893
  • Died 1981
  • Broome, 6 Glyndebourne Avenue, Toorak (1925)
  • Maisonettes, Cnr Domain Road and Caroline Street, South Yarra (1925)
John Morphett
  • Born 1 August 1932
  • Died 25 March 2016
  • RAIA Gold Medal (2000)
Bryce Mortlock
  • Born 14 October 1921
  • Died 3 July 2004
  • Ancher Mortlock Murray & Woolley
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1979)
Elina Mottram
  • Born 1903
  • Died 1996
Tudor Revival
Peter Muller[60]
  • B.Engineering, University of Adelaide (1948)
  • M.Architecture, University of Philadelphia (1951)
  • Born Adelaide 1927
  • New South Wales
  • Bali
  • Audette House, Edinburgh Road, Castlecrag (1952)
  • Muller House, 42 Bynya Road, Whale Beach (1954)
  • Richardson House, 949 Barrenjoey Road, Palm Beach (1956)
  • McGrath House, 4 Dunara Gardens, Point Piper (1957)
  • Richardson Ski Lodge, Threbo Village (1959)
  • Hoyts Cinema Centre, Bourke Street, Melbourne (1967)
  • Townhouses, Trelawney Street, Woollahra (1969)
  • Dulhunty homestead, Nant Lodge, Glen Innes (1970)
  • Bali Oberoi, Indonesia (1977–2001)
  • Oberoi Kolva Beach resort Hotel, Goa, India (1980)
  • Karnak Oberoi Hotel, Luxor, Egypt (1982)
  • Oberoi Lombok, Indonesia (1997)
  • Amandari Hotel Bali (1989)
Glenn Murcutt
  • Born London 1936
  • New South Wales
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1992)

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N[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Peter Newell
  • Born 1916
  • Died 2010
  • Melbourne, Sydney, and Brisbane
  • Modernism
  • Modernist movement in the design of family homes in Queensland
Ellice Nosworthy
  • Born 1897
  • Died 1972
  • Early female architect in New South Wales
Harry Norris
  • Born 1888
  • Died 1966

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O[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
John Oldham OA
  • University of Western Australia
  • Melbourne University
  • Born Perth 1907
  • Died Perth 1997
  • Oldham, Boas and Ednie-Brown
  • Stephenson and Turner
  • WA State Government Landscape Architect
Edwin Roy (Ted) Orchard
  • Born Sydney 1891
  • Died Sydney 1963
  • Sydney, New South Wales
  • Cairns, Queensland
Eddie H. Oribin
  • Born Cairns 1927
  • In Practice with SG Barnes (1953–1959), and privately (to 1973)
  • Far North Queensland
  • St Paul's Anglican Church, Proserpine (1958)
  • Oribin house & studio (1958 & 1960)
  • Mareeba Public Hall (1961)
  • St Andrew's Presbyterian Memorial Church, Innisfail (constructed 1961)
  • Oribin House, Stanthorpe (c.1980)
Sir John Overall CBE MC
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Born Sydney 1913
  • Died 2001
  • Chief Architect, South Australian Housing Trust (1945–49)
  • Partner, Overall and Walkley (1949–52)
  • Chief Government Architect, Commonwealth Department of Works (1952–57)
  • Commissioner, National Capital Development Commission (1958–72)
  • Member, Parliament House Construction Authority (1979–85)
  • South Australia
  • Australian Capital Territory

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P[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Cobden Parkes
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1935-58)
  • New South Wales
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1964)
Varney Parkes
  • Born Ryde, New South Wales 4 June 1859
  • Died Sydney, New South Wales 14 May 1935
  • Blackmann & Parkes
George Herbert Parry
  • Born 1882
  • Died 1947
  • Western Australia Public Works Department
  • Cavanagh & Cavanagh
  • Parry and Clifton
  • Western Australia
  • Chapel, Sister's Kate's Children's Home, Queens Park
  • St Mary the Virgin Church, South Perth
  • St Cuthbert's Anglican Church, Darlington
Barry Patten
  • Combined architecture course, Melbourne Technical College and University of Melbourne
  • Yuncken Freeman Brothers Griffiths & Simpson
  • Victoria
  • Sidney Myer Music Bowl
  • Former BHP Tower
  • Victorian State Offices
Susan Phillips
  • Born Adelaide 1958
  • Phillips Pilkington
  • Sir James Irwin President's Medal (2014)
William Pitt
  • Born 1855
  • Died 1918
  • Olderfleet and Rialto Buildings Collins Street, Melbourne
  • Princess Theatre, Melbourne
  • Federal Coffee Palace, Melbourne
  • Empire Works, Richmond
Christopher Porter
  • Born 1801
  • Died 1874
  • Geelong, Ballarat, Brisbane
Alex Popov
  • Born Shanghai 3 February 1942
  • Arrived Australia 1954
  • SCEGCGS Redlands Gym, Cremorne
  • Griffin House, Castlecrag
Albert Purchas[64]
  • Born Chepstow, Monmouthshire, Wales 1825
  • Arrive Australia 1851
  • Died Kew 1909

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R[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Howard Raggatt
  • Ashton Raggatt McDougall
  • National Museum of Australia
Joseph Reed
  • Born c. 1823
  • Died 1890
Bruce Rickard
  • Born 1929
  • Died 2010
Lord Livingstone Ramsay[65]
  • Born 1867
  • Died 1924
  • L L Livingstone
  • Dobroyde, Burwood (1913)[66]
  • School of Arts, Epping (1906-1916)[67]
Frederick Romberg
  • Born 1913
  • Died 1992
  • Partners:
    • Robin Boyd
    • Roy Grounds
Thomas Rowe
  • Born Penzance, England 20 July 1829
  • Arrived Australia 1848
  • Died Darling Point 7 March 1899
  • Partners:

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S[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical location Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Thomas Pollard Sampson
  • Born Launceston, Tasmania 24 June 1875
  • Died Paddington 25 June 1961
  • T P Sampson
  • Herbert Dennis & T P Sampson
  • New South Wales
Conrad Sayce
  • Born Hereford, England 1888
  • Arrived Australia 18??
  • Died Melbourne 1935
  • Alsop & Sayce
  • Victoria and Western Australia
  • Winthrop Hall, University of Western Australia
Harry Seidler
  • Born Vienna 25 June 1923
  • Arrived Australia 1948
  • Died Sydney 9 March 2006
  • Harry Seidler & Associates
  • Australia and International
[73]
  • Articled to G. A. Mansfield
  • Born Sydney 4 March 1841
  • Died Shanghai 17 November 1903
  • New South Wales
  • Queensland
  • Sydney Trades Hall, Sydney (1888)[74]
  • Stanmore Methodist Church, Newington College Chapel (1883, demolished 1975)
  • Waterloo Town Hall (1880)[75]
Ermin Smrekar
  • Born Trieste, Italy 1931
  • Arrived Australia 1956
  • Died 25 June 2016
  • Smrekar Architects
  • Victoria
  • Modernist
  • Lygon Lodge motel, Carlton (1967)
  • Old Melbourne Hotel, North Melbourne (1970)
  • Veneto Club, Bulleen (1972)[76]
Alfred Louis Smith
  • Born 1830
  • Died 1907
Smith & Johnson
Edwin Smith
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1929-35)
  • New South Wales
Douglas Snelling
  • Born Kent, England 1917
  • Died Sydney, Australia 1985
  • Modernist
Emil Sodersten[77]
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Architecture Lectures, University of Sydney
  • Articled to Ross & Rowe
  • Born Balmain 30 August 1899
  • Died Manly 14 December 1961
  • Hall & Prentice
  • John P. Tate & Young
  • Emil Sodersteen/Emil Sodersten
  • Sodersten & Sodersten
  • Queensland and New South Wales
  • Design Team, Brisbane City Hall (1921)
  • Australian War Memorial, Canberra (1925)
  • Birtley Towers, Elizabeth Bay (1935)
  • CML Building, Sydney (1936)
  • Nesca House, Newcastle (1939)
Colin Still[78]
  • Born Sydney 13 March 1943
  • NSW Government Architects Office
  • Philip Cox Partners
  • New South Wales
Peter Stutchbury
  • Born 1954 Sydney
  • Stutchbury + Pape
  • New South Wales
Sir John Sulman[79]
  • Born Greenwich 29 August 1849
  • Arrived Australia 1885
  • Died North Sydney 18 August 1934
  • Blackmann & Sulman
  • Sulman & Power
  • New South Wales

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T[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Enrico Taglietti[80]
  • Born Italy 1926
  • Arrived Australia early 1960s
  • Died 2019
  • Australian Capital Territory
  • Dickson Library, Antill Street, Dickson (1964)
  • Associated Chamber of Manufacturers, Brisbane Avenue, Barton (1967)
  • Apostolic Nunciature, Vancouver Street, Red Hill (1977)
  • St Anthony's Catholic Church, Agincourt Rd, Marsfield, NSW (1968)
[81]
  • Sorbonne
  • Born London 26 October 1830
  • Arrived Australia 1851
  • Died Brighton 17 August 1900
  • Partners
  • Victoria
  • Kamesburgh, Brighton (1872)
  • Thyra, Brighton (1883)
  • Leighswood, Toorak
  • Rosecraddock, Caulfield
  • Cherry Chase, Brighton
  • Blair Athol, Brighton
  • Kilwinning, East St Kilda
  • St Mary's Church of England, Hotham (1860)
  • St Philip's, Collingwood (1865)
  • Presbyterian Church, Punt Road, South Yarra (1865)
  • Trinity Church, Bacchus Marsh (1869)
  • Eastern Hill Fire Station, Melbourne (1892)
Florence Mary Taylor CBE[82]
  • Articled to Edmund Skelton Garton
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Architecture Lectures, Sydney University
  • Born Bedminster, England 29 December 1879
  • Arrived Australia 1884
  • Died Potts Point 13 February 1969
  • J. Burcham Clamp
George Temple-Poole[83]
  • Inaugural president of the West Australia Institute of Architects (1896)
  • Born 29 May 1856 Rome, Italy
  • Arrived Australia 1885
  • Died Darlington, Western Australia 13 February 1969
  • Principal Architect (Western Australia) 1891-97

Free Style Arts and crafts

  • Perth Observatory
  • Perth railway station
  • Jubilee Building, Perth
  • Perth Mint
Ian Thomson
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1978-88)
  • New South Wales
Alexander Tzannes
  • Born 1950 Sydney

Tzannes Associates

  • New South Wales
  • Federation Pavilion, Centennial Park (1987)
  • Henwood House, Paddington (1988) Robin Boyd Award
  • House, Northbridge (1997) Robin Boyd Award

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U[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Jørn Utzon AC (honorary)
  • Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts
  • Born Denmark 1918
  • Lived Australia 1959-1966
  • Died Denmark 2008
  • International
  • Sydney Opera House
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1973)
  • Pritzker Prize (2003)

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V[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
John Verge[85]
  • Born Hampshire, England 1782
  • Arrived Australia 27 December 1828
  • Died Macleay River 9 July 1861
  • Worked with:
  • New South Wales
  • St James Anglican Church, vestries, King Street, Sydney (1833)
  • Denham Court, Denham Court (1834)
  • Camden Park, Elizabeth Macarthur Drive, Camden (1835)
  • Lyndhurst, Glebe (1835)
  • Engehurst, Ormond Street, Paddington (1835, partial remains)
  • Rockwall, Rockwall Crescent, Potts Point (1835)
  • Tusculum, Manning Street, Potts Point (1836)
  • Tempe House, Princes Highway, Tempe (1836)
  • The Vineyard (later named Subiaco), Rydalmere (1836, demolished 1961)
  • Terrace house, 39 and 41 Lower Fort Street, The Rocks (1936)
  • Elizabeth Bay House, Onslow Avenue, Elizabeth Bay (1837)
  • Chapel of St Mary the Virgin, Denham Court (1838)
DSO[86]
  • Articled to Howard Joseland
  • Born Hastings 20 February 1877
  • Arrived Australia 3 November 1883
  • Died Warrawee 3 July 1935
  • Joseland & Vernon (1903–14)
  • New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory
Colonel Walter Liberty Vernon VD[86]
  • Royal Academy of Arts
  • South Kensington School of Art
  • Born High Wycombe, England 11 August 1846
  • Arrived Australia 3 November 1883
  • Died at Darlinghurst on 17 January 1914
  • Habershon & Pite London
  • Charles Moreing Hastings
  • Vernon & Wardell (1884–89)
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1890-1911)
  • New South Wales
  • Art Gallery of New South Wales, main facade (1906)
  • Darlinghurst Fire Station (1910)
  • Bourke Court House (1900)
  • Pyrmont Fire Station
  • State Library of New South Wales, Mitchell wing
  • Fisher Library at the University of Sydney
  • Central railway station, Sydney
[87]
  • Born London 17 March 1792
  • Arrived Australia November 1842 and left December 1848
  • Died Edinburgh on 4 February 1864
  • Royal Engineers
  • Tasmanian Board of Public Works
  • Tasmania

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W[]

Architect and education Birth, immigration and death Firms, institutions and geographical locations Architectural style Notable buildings and awards
Alan Walker[88]
  • Born 1864
  • Died 1931
William Wardell[89]
  • Born 1823
  • Died 1899
B. J. Waterhouse OBE[90]
  • Articled to John Spencer
  • Architecture, Sydney Technical College
  • Born Leeds, England 8 February 1876
  • Arrived Australia March 1885
  • Died Neutral Bay 21 December 1965
  • NSW Government Architect's Office (1900–08)
  • Waterhouse and Lake (1908–1924)
  • Worked in association with Leslie Wilkinson[91]
  • Director, and later Chairman, National Capital Planning and Development Committee (1938–58)
  • New South Wales
  • Ailsa, 33 Shellcove Road, Neutral Bay (1908)
  • Tulkiyan, 707 Pacific Highway, Gordon (1913)
  • Brent Knowle, 31 Shellcove Road, Neutral Bay (1914)
  • Refectory Building, Science Road, University of Sydney (1924)
  • Nutcote, May Gibbs's House, Neutral Bay (1925)[92]
Charles Weatherburn
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1974-78)
  • New South Wales
William Weaver
  • NSW Colonial Architect
    (1854-56)
  • New South Wales
Charles Webb[93]
  • Born 1821
  • Died 1898
Peter Webber
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1973-74)
  • New South Wales
Seymour Wells
  • Born Australia 1865
  • Architect, NSW Department of Public Instruction
  • NSW Government Architect
    (1927-29)
  • New South Wales
  • Conversion Covernment House Stables to Sydney Conservatorium of Music (1913)
  • Dixson Wing, State Library of New South Wales
  • Nurses' Home, Maitland Hospital
[94]
  • Born 1819
  • Died 1888
[95]
  • Born 1876
  • Died 1952
[96]
  • Born 1886
  • Died 1942
Prof Leslie Wilkinson OBE[97]
  • Royal Academy
  • Architect, University of Sydney
  • Dean of Architecture, University of Sydney
  • Diocesan Architect Anglican Church Diocese of Sydney
  • New South Wales
  • Greenway, Vaucluse (1923)
  • Chemistry Building, University of Sydney (1923)
  • Physics Building, University of Sydney (1926)
  • House, 6 Wiston Gardens, Double Bay (1934)
    Sir John Sulman Medal
  • Samuel Hordern House, Bellevue Hill, NSW (1936)
  • Maiala, Warrawee (1937)
  • Greyleaves, Burradoo (1934)
  • Hazeldean, Cooma (1937)
  • Silchester, Bellevue Hill (1930)
  • St Michael's Church Complex Additions, Vaucluse (1942)
    Sir John Sulman Medal
  • RAIA Gold Medal (1960)
Henry Austin Wilshire
  • Born Potts Point, Sydney, 1860
  • Died Neutral Bay, Sydney, 1923
  • H.A. Wilshire and Day (1913-1923)
  • Grafton Gaol (Grafton Correctional Centre) (1893)
  • Ingleneuk, Neutral Bay (1903)
  • Dalkeith, Cremorne (1908)
  • Bennett and Wood (Speedwell bicycles) building (1908)
  • Warringah Hall, Neutral Bay (1910)
  • Furlough House, Narrabeen (1918)
Ernest Willis[98]
  • Born 1867
  • Died 1947
Andrew Wilson
  • Born 1866
  • Died 1950
  • Western Australian goldfields and Perth
[99]
  • Born 1886
  • Died 1967
William Hardy Wilson[100]
  • Born Campbelltown 14 February 1881
  • Died Richmond 1955
  • Kent & Budden
  • Wilson, Neave & Berry
  • NSW, Tasmania & Victoria
  • Eryldene Gordon
  • Purulia Wahroonga
  • Newington College War Memorial Stanmore
  • Ku-Ring-Gai Council Chambers Gordon
  • Domestic Architecture in Australia (published 1919)
  • Old Colonial Architecture of New South Wales and Tasmania (published 1924)
Arthur Winston[101]
  • Born 1908
  • Died 1980
Edward John Woods
  • Born 1839
  • Died 1916
  • Woods Bagot
Frank Woolacott[102]
  • Born 1903
  • Died 1968
Ken Woolley
  • Born 1933
  • Died 2015
  • Ancher Mortlock Murray & Woolley
  • Ancher Mortlock & Woolley
Edmund Wright[103]
  • Born 1824
  • Died 1888
James Wright[104]
  • Born London 1854
  • Died Perth 1917
J. W. Wright & Co.

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See also[]

References[]

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