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  1. 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.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_HomewoodThe Homewood - Wikipedia

    Designed by architect Patrick Gwynne for his parents, The Homewood was given by Gwynne to the National Trust in 1999. Origins. The family demolished the original rambling Victorian house called "Homewood", to make way for the house on stilts ( pilotis) their son Patrick Gwynne would design and build to replace it, at the age of 24.

  3. 1 de abr. de 2023 · A comprehensive and intimate study of the high modernist Patrick Gwynne, his architecture and interiors. In 1938, the young Patrick Gwynne burst upon the architectural scene with The Homewood, Surrey, the early modern movement country house now open to the public by the National Trust.

  4. 8 de may. de 2003 · Building of the Month. • RIBA. Alban Patrick Gwynne [commonly known as Patrick Gwynne] was born in Portchester, Hampshire, England, on 24 March 1913. On leaving school he was articled to the New Zealand-born architect Ernest William George Coleridge (1875-1949).

  5. 8 de may. de 2003 · Patrick Gwynne, born 1913, was educated at Harrow and began his architectural training as an articled pupil of John Coleridge, a former assistant of Edwin Lutyens. However, it was the radical developments on the Continent - both visited and read about - that provided the vital inspiration. Gwynne became an assistant in the office of Wells ...

  6. 23 de may. de 2003 · Patrick Gwynne. Architect who made his home an illustration of what modern design could offer. Fri 23 May 2003 04.42 EDT.

  7. Patrick Gwynne conceived The Homewood's expansive surrounds as ‘a woodland garden, not a park’. The planting celebrated Surrey's heathland species, including silver birch, firs and heathers, with azaleas and rhododendrons adding an exotic blaze of seasonal colour.