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427


George Saumarez Smith


Adam Architecture FOCUS Traditional, urban


One of six directors at Adam Architects, George Saumarez Smith is among the leading lights of classical architecture today. Saumarez Smith’s style is one of simple and elegant English classicism, and it permeates his entire portfolio, whether the work is new buildings, extensions and repairs to historic properties or design consultancy. The last time Spear’s asked, his proudest project was the new art gallery for Richard Green in Bond Street, completed in 2011. ‘I like that many people walk past


it every day – and they don’t realise it’s a new building,’ he has said. In his residential work, Saumarez Smith attracts mainly financial investors and entrepreneurs as his clients.


Skene Catling Skene Catling de la Peña FOCUS Turnkey solutions FOCUS International projects


Charlotte Skene Catling calls her unique approach ‘geoarchaeology’, seeking to excavate meaning from context to develop architecture. This method sees her taking


observations of the composition of the earth, historical artefacts and the cultural landscapes of her commissions, which she uses to respond to her clients’ wishes in an original way.


She is working on some housing


projects, seeking to question the ‘underlying assumptions about the way groups live together’. Projects include Flint House in Buckinghamshire, ‘extruded’ from the landscape in strata of flint and chalk with the appearance of a natural, geological form, winning RIBA’s House of the Year 2015.


Having been involved since the firm’s inception in 2006, CEO Wayne Stokes has been instrumental in the establishment of Rigby & Rigby. He brings more than three decades of industry experience, and his depth and breadth of construction and delivery knowledge have proven invaluable to the firm. Stokes’ experience in delivering


luxury residential properties has given him vital insight in his role of overseeing and managing the commercial development of Rigby & Rigby. He has practised his craft at leading large teams, communicating with UHNW clients and liaising with leading architecture and interior design studios, and he ensures the great execution and seamless delivery of complex projects.


FOCUS New-build classical homes


After being in partnership with his father for two decades, Francis Terry started his own practice in 2016. A leading practitioner in new-build classical houses for UHNW clients, he runs a flexible practice. ‘We are happy to turn our hand to more contemporary design if the brief requires it,’ says Terry. Nevertheless, his inspiration comes from classical sources such as English Georgian, Louis XV design and Italian Renaissance. The firm was granted planning consent for a new Palladian house, due to be built in Norfolk. Permission was given on account of the proposed house being considered an ‘exceptional’ work of architecture – which says it all.


Charlotte


Wayne Stokes Rigby & Rigby


Francis Terry Francis Terry and Associates


Quinlan Terry Quinlan Terry Architects FOCUS Classical and traditional


Carl Turner Carl Turner Architects


FOCUS Bespoke homes, regeneration schemes


One day in 1968, Quinlan Terry teetered along the external cornice of the Pantheon in Rome to measure the pediment, wearing a five-piece tweed suit. It’s that attention to detail that has given the veteran architect an edge over the years. Working with Raymond Erith,


Terry has been one of the leading champions of the classical revival in the UK.


Buildings such as Downing


College, Cambridge, Brentwood Cathedral and Richmond Riverside stand out. He is one of a small number of architects involved in the construction of Poundbury, an experimental urban extension to Dorchester in Dorset. His contribution to architecture was recognised in 2015 with a CBE.


‘We think of ourselves as thinkers and makers,’ says Carl Turner, the AA- and RCA-trained architect, who set up his practice in 2007. The firm works across the gamut of project scales, from bespoke houses to larger regeneration schemes. Projects range from a shipping container at Hackney City Farm to an arts academy in Peckham. While Turner prides himself


on always‘ responding to local or site-specific context’, he also prefers a simple palette, consisting mainly of industrial materials. ‘Our style has been described as


minimal,’ he says. The studio won RIBA’s Manser Medal for Turner’s own home, Slip House: a south London gin distillery converted into a modern residence.


A skilled and stable team – with excellent relationships to


the supply chain – means much more than nice CGIs


Kees van der Sande Formation Architects


Kees van der Sande Formation Architects


FOCUS Prime residential


‘A skilled and stable team – with excellent relationships to the supply chain – means much more than nice CGIs,’ says Kees van der Sande, a director at Formation Architects, which specialises in projects in the global prime residential sector. The company has won notable


contracts in prime central London, while Chelsea’s ultimate development, The Glebe, is rapidly approaching completion. Projects have also started in locations in the Middle East, North America and China. Van der Sande says clients desire


‘certainty of budget and programme. We are a skilled, safe pair of hands when it comes to designing and delivering such complicated, curated and personal projects.’


ARCHITECTS


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