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(1819–97)

English architect. He commenced practice in London in 1843, and designed numerous commercial buildings, before being elected Architect and Surveyor to the City of London in 1864 in succession to Bunning. He was responsible for the Central Meat Market (1866–7) and the General Market, Smithfield (1879–83—with the American ‘Phoenix’ system of rolled channelled iron columns (patented 1862) in its construction), Billingsgate Fish Market (1874–8—converted (1985–9) into offices by the Richard Rogers Partnership), and the charming Leadenhall Market (1880–2—brilliantly integrating shops and arcades into an ancient system of alleyways). In Basinghall Street he designed the former Guildhall Library and Museum (1870–2), and, to mark the site of Temple Bar, Fleet Street, he designed (1880) the memorial surmounted by a rampant bronze dragon by Charles Bell Birch (1832–93—the statues are by Sir Joseph Edgar Boehm, Bt. (1834–90) ). His great twelve-sided iron-framed Council Chamber at Guildhall (1883–4) was destroyed in 1940. When, in 1877, proposals were made for a bascule bridge over the Thames at the Tower of London, Jones collaborated with the engineer (Sir) John Wolfe Wolfe-Barry (1836–1918), but the concepts of how the bridge would operate and of its architectural treatment were Jones's alone. Part suspension-bridge and part bascule, the bridge-towers which contain elevators and support the high-level footbridges (for use when the bascules were open) are of steel clad with stone, so look like Gothic city-gates with towers over. Jones and Wolfe-Barry came in for predictable denunciation for the ‘untruthfulness’ of the towers, but the Gothic garb was insisted upon by Parliament, in deference to the neighbouring Tower of London: however, what Modernist critics failed to note was that the towers were among the first steel-framed structures in London, and that the steelwork is not carried on the masonry. The bridge was completed in 1894. Jones's last important work was the former Guildhall School of Music (1885–7) on the Thames Embankment, three façades of which survive, one with pretty terracotta panels facing south to Tallis Street.

Bibliography

  • Bradley & Pevsner (1997)
  • Freeman (1981, 2003)
  • Lady Freeman
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004)
  • J. Smith & J. Clarke (2003)

The full bibliography for this book is available to download as a pdf file.
Download the bibliography for A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (PDF: 1.2MB)

 
 
Wikipedia: Horace Jones

Sir Horace Jones (1819 - 1887) was an English architect of the 19th century, knighted in 30 July 1886.

He is particularly noted for his work as Architect and Surveyor for the Corporation of the City of London from 1864 to 1887. His works included:

His association with the Institute of British Architects started in 1842, eventually becoming president between 18821884. He was also a freemason, becoming Grand Superintendent of Works.

He was buried in West Norwood Cemetery in south London.

External links

G. C. Boase, Jones, Sir Horace (1819–1887) rev. Valerie Scott, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, 2004 (Subscription required)


 
 

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Architecture and Landscaping. A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. Copyright © 1999, 2006 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Horace Jones" Read more

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