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  1. gilbertscott.org › buildings › holy-trinity-frogmoreHoly Trinity, Frogmore

    9 de ago. de 2018 · Holy Trinity, Frogmore. This church was built between 1841-2 for Marcus Richard Southwell, the vicar, helped by a grant from the Incorporated Church Building Society and was to seat 460. It is in a Norman style in flint with red brick dressings and stone details with patterned brickwork at the west end. It is symmetrical with no chancel, just ...

  2. The original 19th-century boathouse, designed by John Oldrid Scott, was destroyed through arson in 1999. After eight years, a new boathouse designed by Belsize Architects was completed in 2007 at a cost of £2.7million.

  3. 6 de abr. de 2018 · The working drawings for the Albert Memorial were made in Scott’s office, after November 1863, by John Oldrid and Richard Coad and Coad became Scott’s Clerk of Works for the Albert Memorial. Scott received £5,000 in fees while Coad was paid a mere £602.

  4. gilbertscott.org › buildings › new-college-chapel-oxfordNew College Chapel, Oxford

    6 de ago. de 2018 · It was plastered over by Wyatt but Scott designed the present structure and it was completed by Pearson between 1888 and 1891, with over fifty figures by Nathaniel Hitch (1846-1938). New College Chapel, as seen today, is not one of Scott’s best efforts. The dons had acted against his advice over the roof, while John Oldrid, who knew how his ...

  5. www.wakefieldcathedral.org.uk › about-us › heritageHistory - Wakefield Cathedral

    Wakefield Cathedral is actually built on the site of a Saxon church, evidence of which was uncovered in 1900 when extensions to the East End were being made. There was a church in Wakefield mentioned in the 1086 Domesday Book and in 1090, William II gave the church and land in Wakefield to Lewes Priory in Sussex and shortly after that a Norman ...

  6. Due to GG Scott’s declining health his brother, John Oldrid Scott (1841–1913) periodically took over as lead architect, first in 1884 and increasingly from 1888 until GG Scott’s withdrawal from the project in 1894. The foundations were laid in 1882-1883 and building of the nave formally commenced on 17th July 1884.