Stillman & Eastwick-Field Partnership

Stillman & Eastwick-Field Partnership (SEF) was an architects' firm based in London, founded in 1949 by the architects John Stillman and John and Elizabeth Eastwick-Field, a married couple. The firm made notable contributions to Britain's post-war reconstruction, first with schools and, hospitals, later with housing and university accommodation.[1] [2] [3] Much of the firm's output displays a restrained 'New Brutalist' manner with robust detailing in brick and exposed concrete.[4] SEF closed in 2004, and was succeeded by the architects' firms Bennett SEF Ltd / TP Bennetts LLP (formerly TP Bennett).[5][6]

Elizabeth Eastwick-Field (née Gee) was born on 21 November 1919, and died on 8 March 2003 aged 83. John Eastwick-Field, OBE, was born on 6 December 1919, and died on 30 March 2003 aged 83. John Stillman was born in 1920.

The firm's three founding partners met in 1937 when studying at the Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London.

John Eastwick-Field was tutor at the School of Architecture at the Architectural Association from 1946 to 1956, sitting on the council there from 1956 to 1958, and becoming President of the school in 1966-67. He had also been on the council of the Royal Institute of British Architects for ten years from 1951.

John Stillman and John Eastwick-Field wrote together the book The Design And Practice of Joinery, first published in 1958. [7]

The architects Terry Farrell and Nicholas Grimshaw met when working at SEF, before setting up in practice together.

Selected buildings

Lister House on Vallance Road in Tower Hamlets, 1956
Camden School for Girls, London, 1957
Marborough Children's Convalescent Hospital, 1958
Westhope House and Kinsham House on Derbyshire Street in Tower Hamlets, London, 1959
Mackintosh Hall, a combined school and cultural centre in Gibraltar, 1964–1977
Hide Tower, a tower block of flats on Regency Street in Westminster, London, 1961
LBH Training Centre, Hackney, London, 1964[8]
West of England (Residential) School for the Partially Sighted, Exeter, 1965
Keele University Students' Union, 1966
Market Harborough (1966)
Clissold School (now Stoke Newington School and Sixth Form), Hackney, London, 1967–70
Trevelyan College, Durham, 1968
Allington Park, Kent, 1970)
Princess Marina Psychiatric Hospital, Northampton, 1977
Development of Chase Farm Hospital in Enfield, Middlesex, 1976
Girls' school in Gibraltar, 1977
Working girls' hostel and day centre in Highbury, London, 1977
gollark: What are you doing with holograms™™?
gollark: It would give it a great modern look.
gollark: Yes, that is what I said.
gollark: White concrete. Or glass.
gollark: I mean, loads of major buildings have been made with it, so it would be extremely triskaidecagonal if they banned it *now*.

References

  1. "Obituary for John and Elizabeth Eastwick-Field". The Times. 2003-05-05. Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  2. John, Stillman (2003-04-16). "Obituary for John and Elizabeth Eastwick-Field". The Guardian. Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  3. Nicky, Hirst (1999). "Stillman Eastwick-Field Partnership, London 1999". In Alistair Raphael; Victoria Clarke (eds.). Artists-in-Research 1996-98. London: Institute of International Visual Arts. pp. 36–45.
  4. "English Heritage Listing Advice Report (Case UID: 170219)" (PDF). English Heritage. 2010-05-24. Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  5. "TP Bennett History". Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  6. "Bennett SEF Ltd". Retrieved 2011-06-07.
  7. Stillman, John; Eastwick-Field, John (1958). The Design and Practice of Joinery. London: The Architectural Press.
  8. Lisa, Rigg (2010-03-27). "RIP: demolition begins before English Heritage decides on listing: Workshops by Stillman Eastwick-Field, Morning Lane". The Hackney Society. Retrieved 2011-06-07.


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