Welcome to RIBApix!
You have no items in your basket.
Close
Filters
Search

Garden buildings

View as Grid List
Sort by

Munstead Orchard, Godalming: a garden building

RIBA152989
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: This was the house designed by Lutyens in 1894-1895 for Gertrude Jekyll's Swiss gardener. See RIBA156378 for a colour version of this image.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153062
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153063
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153064
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park. See RIBA156374 for a colour version of this image.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153065
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park. See RIBA156375 for a colour version of this image.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153066
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park. See RIBA156076 for a colour version of this image.

Tyringham House, Buckinghamshire: the Temple of Music

RIBA153067
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: Between 1924 and 1928, Sir Edwin Lutyens created a classical landscape with a bathing pavilion and a Temple of Music to complement the eighteenth century Tyringham Park. See RIBA156377 for a colour version of this image.

Gledstone Hall, Skipton, North Yorkshire: the south-west garden pavilion

RIBA153441
Lutyens, Sir Edwin Landseer (1869-1944)
NOTES: See RIBA156946 for a colour version of this image.

Hestercombe House and gardens, Taunton: the Orangerie

RIBA153908
Bampfylde, Coplestone Warre (1720-1791)
NOTES: The house dates back to the 17th century but was extensively remodelled in the 18th and 19th centuries. But the house is famous for its gardens. First landscaped in the 1750s by the then owner Coplestone Warre Bampfylde, a landscape designer and amateur painter. Then in 1904, Lutyens with Jekyll responsible for the planting created one of his largest single garden designs, creating a series of paved terraces, raised walks and water features and a grand Orangery of 1906-1908.

Hestercombe House and gardens, Taunton: the Orangerie

RIBA153909
Bampfylde, Coplestone Warre (1720-1791)
NOTES: The house dates back to the 17th century but was extensively remodelled in the 18th and 19th centuries. But the house is famous for its gardens. First landscaped in the 1750s by the then owner Coplestone Warre Bampfylde, a landscape designer and amateur painter. Then in 1904, Lutyens with Jekyll responsible for the planting created one of his largest single garden designs, creating a series of paved terraces, raised walks and water features and a grand Orangery of 1906-1908.

Montacute House, Somerset: the garden pavilion

RIBA154129
Arnold, William (fl. 1595-1637)
NOTES: The house was built for Sir Edward Phelips from circa 1590 to 1601. The architect is thought to have been William Arnold. See RIBA161798 for a colour version of this image.

Montacute House, Somerset: the cupola with the garden pavilion behind

RIBA154130
Arnold, William (fl. 1595-1637)
NOTES: The house was built for Sir Edward Phelips from circa 1590 to 1601. The architect is thought to have been William Arnold. See RIBA161800 for a colour version of this image.
Close
)
CLOSE