John Madin

John Madin

Madin on 17 March 2011, at the launch of Alan Clawley's book about his work
Born John Hardcastle Dalton Madin
March 23, 1924 (1924-03-23) (age 87)
Moseley, Birmingham, England
Residence Hampshire
Occupation Architect/ Planner
Years active 1951-
Notable works Birmingham Central Library
Home town Birmingham

John Hardcastle Dalton Madin is an English architect. He was born in Moseley, Birmingham on 23 March 1924.[1] His company, known as John H D Madin & Partners from 1962 and the John Madin Design Group from 1968, were active in Birmingham for over 30 years. Some of the buildings his company designed have now been demolished. Societies such as the 20th Century Society have campaigned to have some of his buildings listed, but have not achieved this. English Heritage has twice recommended the Central Library for listing but without success.

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Biography

He served in Egypt with the Royal Engineers in World War II.

Madin is the indisputable giant of post-war Birmingham architecture. Although dismissed as derivative, Madin's reinterpretations of contemporary styles can now be regarded as significant works in their own right.[says who?] Madin's work has been much neglected and is not highly regarded by the current political leadership within Birmingham. Clive Dutton, the city's former Director of Planning and Regeneration, has described Madin's Central Library as a “concrete monstrosity” (Madin's original plans were for the building to be clad in marble; the city, however, was unwilling to foot the bill so a concrete finish was used instead).[2] There are currently plans to demolish the library and replace it with a new building on Centenary Square.

John Madin Design Group were also responsible for the early designs for Dawley New Town, which later became Telford. During the 1970s, Madin became increasingly involved in master-planning projects in the Middle East.

Since Madin's period of dominance in Birmingham there have been very few architectural practices able to match his commercial success at home and abroad. Only Associated Architects and more recently Glenn Howells have approached Madin in this respect.

Notable buildings

External links

References

  1. ^ Clawley, Alan (2011-03-17). John Madin. Twentieth Century Architects. RIBA Publishing. ISBN 9781859463673. 
  2. ^ Birmingham reveals new library plans - Building Design