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  1. 12 de ene. de 2022 · Portsmouth Road, Esher, Surrey, KT10 9JL. 01372467806. thehomewood@nationaltrust.org.uk. Join and renew. Discover architect Patrick Gwynne's early 20th-century country villa at the National Trust's The Homewood in Surrey.

  2. Hace 4 días · It was designed by the architect Patrick Gwynne for his family - his father, mother, sister and himself - and completed in the early summer of 1938. Gwynne lived in the house for the rest of his life, continuing to keep the building fashionably up-to-date until his death in 2003.

  3. 30 de oct. de 2023 · Portsmouth Road, Esher, Surrey, KT10 9JL. 01372467806. thehomewood@nationaltrust.org.uk. Join and renew. Discover architect Patrick Gwynne's early 20th-century country villa at the National Trust's The Homewood in Surrey.

  4. Patrick Gwynne. York Theatre Royal, showing a distinctive and characteristic modernist addition by Gwynne, 1967. (Alban) Patrick Gwynne (1913 – 2003) was a British modernist architect with Welsh roots, best known for designing and building The Homewood, which he left to the National Trust in 2003. [1]

  5. 3 de ago. de 2021 · The Homewood, a paean to Modernist style and living, was designed by Patrick Gwynne (1913–2003) for his somewhat indulgent parents. He convinced them to demolish their large Victorian villa to make way for this individual, luxurious house of the International Style. It was completed in 1938 and is a supreme architectural tour de force.

  6. The Homewood is a modernist house inspired by the work of Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe. It was designed by the architect Patrick Gwynne for his family and completed in the early summer of 1938. Situated at the top of a gently sloping hill, the Homewood is an elevated house on pilotis or pillars. The reinforced concrete structure of the ...

  7. 13 de abr. de 2015 · The family moved into a large Victorian house in Esher in Surrey a year later, and Patrick’s younger sister Babs was born soon after. In the mid 1930s it was all change for the Gwynne family. It’s important to understand that they were extremely sociable and were very well to do; at a time when most families didn’t have a car at all, the Gywnne family had four – a car each!