Frederick Gibberd
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Sir Frederick Ernest Gibberd (b. 1908 in Coventry, Warwickshire - d. 1984) was an English architect and landscape designer.
A good friend of Sir Geoffrey Jellicoe, Gibberd's work was influenced by Le Corbusier , Mies van der Rohe , and F.R.S. Yorke . He set up in practice in 1930, designing Pulman Court, Streatham, London (1934–6), a low-cost housing development which established his reputation.
He was consultant architect planner for the Harlow development and spent the rest of his life living in the town he had designed.
In 1953 he published "Town Design," a book on the forms, processes, and history of the subject.
[edit] Notable buildings
A list of buildings by Frederick Gibberd:
- 1933-1936, Pullman Court, Streatham, London
- 1937-1939, Macclesfield Nurses Home, Cheshire, England
- 1945-1949, Somerfield Estate, Hackney, London
- 1946-1963, Nuneation Town Centre, Warwickshire, England
- 1949-1951, Lansbury Market, Poplar, London
- 1950-1969, Terminal Buildings, Heathrow Airport, near London
- 1952, Market Square, Harlow, Essex, England
- 1953-1961, Ulster Hospital, Belfast
- 1956, Bath Technical College, Somerset, England
- 1956-1968, Civic Centre, Saint Albans, Hertfordshire, England
- 1958, Derwent Reservoir, Durham and Northumberland, England
- 1959-1969, Civic Centre, Donaster, Yorkshire, England
- 1960-1966, Priory Square, Birmingham, England
- 1960-1967, Roman Catholic Cathedral, Liverpool, England
- 1962-1966, Douai Abbey, Berkshire, England
- 1964, Saint George's Chapel, Heathrow Airport, near London
- 1964-1968, Didcot Power Station, Berkshire, England
- 1966-1975, Arundel Great Court, The Strand
- 1968-1975, Inter-Continental Hotel, Hyde Park Corner; London
- 1970-1977, London Central Mosque