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Edward Shepherd

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Name
  
Edward Shepherd

Role
  
Architect


Died
  
1747

Edward Shepherd

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Structures
  
Royal Opera House, London

Edward Shepherd (died 1747) was a prominent London-based English architect and developer in the Georgian period.

Architectural work

Shepherd worked on the following projects, among others:

  • Cannons, a house for James Brydges, 1st Duke of Chandos (1673–1744), in Middlesex (1723–25, now demolished).
  • Houses in Cavendish Square, London (1724–28).
  • Great Stanmore Rectory, Middlesex (1725).
  • Houses in Brook Street, London (1725–29).
  • Houses in St James's Square, London (1726–8), including No. 4, the Naval & Military Club and a former home of Nancy Astor from 1912 to 1942.
  • Palace-fronted buildings for the 1st Duke of Chandos in Grosvenor Square, London (c1728–30, now demolished).
  • Goodman's Fields Theatre, Ayliffe Street, Whitechapel, London (opened October 1732, demolished in 1746).
  • Theatre Royal, now the location of the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London (opened December 1732, destroyed by fire 1808).
  • Development of Shepherd Market and adjoining streets in Mayfair, London (1735–46).
  • Houses in South Audley Street, Mayfair, London (1736–37).
  • Work on De Grey Mausoleum, Church of St John the Baptist, Flitton, Bedfordshire (1739–40).
  • Unfortunately, much of Shepherd's architectural work has been demolished, but perhaps his greatest legacy of the eponymous Shepherd Market, which is now a highly desirable location.

    References

    Edward Shepherd Wikipedia