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John Winter (architect)

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Occupation
  
Architect

Name
  
John Winter

Role
  
Architect


John Winter (architect) itelegraphcoukmultimediaarchive02408winter

Born
  
16 May 1930

Practice
  
John Winter & Associates

Died
  
November 12, 2012, Cambridge

John winter annual docomomo lecture


John Winter (16 May 1930 – 12 November 2012) was a British architect born in Norwich who lived and worked in London. He was well known for his modernist designs, and was reported to have never have had a planning application refused.

Contents

John Winter (architect) Modernist architect John Winter has died The Twentieth

Winter had two sons, Timothy (now Abdul-Hakim Murad), Henry, the football correspondent for The Daily Telegraph, and a daughter, Martha, an artist.

John Winter (architect) Winter House EllisMiller Architects

Career

John Winter (architect) John Winter Telegraph

Winter started his architectural career in Norwich where he completed a pupillage under an Arts and Crafts architect. From 1950 to 1953 he studied at the Architectural Association in London and subsequently undertook national service with the Royal Engineers and learned to weld. He returned to education in the U.S. where he studied at Yale and then moved to San Francisco, where he worked for both Skidmore, Owings & Merrill and Charles Eames. Winter eventually returned to great England and joined the office of Ernő Goldfinger, before setting up his own private practice John Winter & Associates.

John Winter (architect) John Winter Winter Architects and News

Winter wrote for various publications throughout his career including the Daily Telegraph and the Architectural Review, and in 1970 published Industrial Architecture: A Survey of Factory Buildings.

John Winter (architect) John Winter on Pinterest Winter House London and Winter

The National Portrait Gallery has two colour print portraits of Winter in its collection.

John Winter (architect) Architect39s own house by Highgate Cemetery Architects

Winter retained close links with the Architectural Association during his career, teaching from 1960-64 with students including Jeremy Dixon, Edward Jones and Nicholas Grimshaw, and went on to become a member of Council, Honorary Secretary and as a trustee of the AA Foundation.

Built projects

  • Virginia Water house, Wentworth (1966)
  • Cor-ten house, 81 Swains Lane, Highgate (1969; Grade II listed)
  • Woughton Village housing, Milton Keynes (1974)
  • 85 Swains Lane house, Highgate (1982, demolished 2008)
  • References

    John Winter (architect) Wikipedia