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Two perspective views of roads passing through a rural landscape and approaching a village featuring weight and speed restriction symbols painted on the road surfaces

RIBA20611
Cullen, Gordon (1914-1994)
NOTES: The roads are shown passing through a rural landscape and approaching a village.

Design for the Ghyllgrove housing estate, Basildon, Essex

RIBA20612
Brett & Boyd
NOTES: Basildon, created from the conglomeration of four small villages, namely Pitsea, Laindon, Basildon and Vange, was designated a new town in 1948, together with the other London orbital developments of Stevenage, Harlow, Hemel Hempstead and Bracknell. The development of the New Towns, built after World War II to ease overcrowding in London, was overseen by Lewis Silkin, 1st Baron Silkin (1888-1972), the Minister for Town and Country Planning from 1945 to 1950.

Criccieth Castle: distant view of the castle and town from a country lane

RIBA21543
NOTES: This drawing originates from a volume containing topographical sketches of castles and country houses executed in a number of different hands from the office of Anthony Salvin.

Plan for the rebuilding of the City of London, following the Great Fire of 1666

RIBA21865
Wren, Sir Christopher (1632-1723)
NOTES: This image is one of a number collected by Robert Stanley-Morgan, FRIBA.

Plan for a network of coach roads through Bath with proposed new buildings for the estate of Lord Newark indicated in red

RIBA21998
NOTES: This design is by an unidentified 19th century English architect and is post 1805 in date.

Design for the West Strand, London: perspective view

RIBA22095
Herbert, William (1771-1851)
NOTES: This design is by an unidentified 19th century English architect.

Royal Hotel and St Andrew's Chapel (later St Catherine's Church), Lockyer Street, Plymouth: perspective view of the street and its buildings

RIBA22718
Foulston, John (1772-1842)
NOTES: John Foulston was appointed as Plymouth's first Town Architect in 1810. SOURCE: John Foulston, 'The Public Buildings erected in the West of England' (London, 1838), pl. 1.

Cumbernauld New Town: the turn-off for Cumbernauld House

RIBA23342
Cumbernauld Development Corporation
NOTES: Created as a population overspill for Glasgow City, Cumbernauld was designated a new town in 1955. Leslie Hugh Wilson was the first Chief Architect to the Cumbernauld Development Corporation (CDC) which oversaw the development, promotion and management of the New Town until 1996. He was succeeded in 1962 by Dudley Roberts Leaker.

Access road toThamesmead, Greenwich, London

RIBA23424
Greater London Council. Department of Architecture & Civic Design
NOTES: Thamesmead was planned in 1965-1966 as a new town on the riverside marshes of south-east London between Plumstead and Erith. It was scheduled for completion in 1974 but was never fully finished and the projected population of 60,000 for the new town was downgraded to 45,000 by the end of the 1970s. From then around 400 houses were being built annually and by 1982, the population stood at 20,000. Since 2014 the managment and regeneration of the area has come under the aegis of Peabody.
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