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规范记录
个人 · 1900-1981

Studied at the Polytechnic School of Art from 1917-1924. Won a Polytechnic sliver medal for Figure Composition in 1922. Painted the Tapestry Weaving painting in Fyvie Hall.

He later worked as an illustrator, before writing children’s books. His first book, A Valley Grows Up won a Carnegie Medal in 1954. During World War Two he produced posters for the Ministry of Information including 'Wings for Victory More Savings More Wings' and '"Saving Life at Sea" Exhibition'.

个人 · 15 Aug 1888 – 4 Oct 1944
Samuel Joseph studied Building Construction at the Regent Street Polytechnic from l906-8. He had a particular interest in carpentry and joinery. Samuel Gluckstein Joseph was from a wealthy Ashkenazi Jewish family, changing his name in the 1930s to Samuel George Joseph. He was co-chair and managing director of Bovis. He was twice Mayor of St Marylebone (1928 and 1930), Sheriff of the City of London (1933-34) and Lord Mayor (1943-44). He was knighted in 1934 and made 1st Baronet of Portsoken in the City of London in 1943.
Yip, Nicholas
个人
Graduate of University of Westminster BA (Hons) Fashion Design in 2017.
个人 · 12 Apr 1914–25 Jul 2017
German athlete who was a member of the Polytechnic Ladies Athletics Club whilst in the UK in 1934. She was also a day student in the matriculation department studying English and French 1933-1934.
Trained for the 1936 Olympic Games.
个人 · 9 Aug 1914-11 Aug 1994

Influential English urban designer who was a key motivator in the Townscape movement.

Cullen was born in Calverley, Pudsey, near Leeds. He studied architecture at the Regent Street Polytechnic, the present day University of Westminster, and subsequently worked as a draughtsman in various architects' offices including that of Berthold Lubetkin and Tecton, but he never qualified or practised as an architect.

Between 1944 and 1946 he worked in the planning office of the Development and Welfare Department in Barbados, as his poor eyesight meant that he was unfit to serve in the British armed forces. He later returned to London and joined the Architectural Review journal, first as a draughtsman and then as a writer on planning policies. There he produced a large number of influential editorials and case studies on the theory of planning and the design of towns. He was also involved in the Festival of Britain in 1951.

His techniques consisted largely of sketchy drawings that conveyed a particularly clear understanding of his ideas, and these had a considerable influence on subsequent architectural illustration styles. He also illustrated several books by other various authors, before writing his own book - based on the idea of Townscape - in 1961. The Concise Townscape has subsequently been republished around 15 times, proving to be one of the most popular books on Urban Design in the 20th Century.

In 1956 Cullen became a freelance writer and consultant and, in the years immediately following he advised the cities of Liverpool and Peterborough on their reconstruction and redevelopment plans. In 1960 he was invited to India to advise on the planning aspects of the Ford Foundation's work in New Delhi and Calcutta and so in 1962 he and his family lived in India for 6 months while he worked on the projects. Later, his work included planning advice to the city of Glasgow and during the 1980s, the London Docklands Development Corporation.

For a while Cullen teamed up with a student, David Price, and they formed an architectural firm together - Price & Cullen. They won a competition in London in the 1980s and together designed and oversaw the building of the Swedish Quays housing development in Docklands. They worked together until 1990 as Cullen's health was deteriorating. Price died in 2009 at the age of 53.

Cullen lived in the small village of Wraysbury (Berkshire) from 1958 until his death, aged 80, on 11 August 1994, following a serious stroke. After his passing, David Gosling and Norman Foster collected various examples of his work and put them together in the book "Visions of Urban Design".

In 1972 he was elected Honorary Fellow of the RIBA. In 1975 he was awarded with an RDI for illustration and Townscape. The following year he was awarded a medal from The American Institute of Architects. In 1978 he was awarded a CBE for his contribution to architecture.

Activities include:
Assistant Editor Architectural Review, 1945-1955
Author of Townscape, textbook on visual planning
Civic design consultant to replanning of Delhi for Ford Foundation and local authority
Ditto Calcutta
Townscape consultant to replanning teams: Liverpool, Bolton and Northampton
Survey and proposals for Castletown and Peel, Isle of Man for Local Government Board
Consultant to replanning of Llantrisant for Glamorgan County Council
Survey of Tenterden as Conservation Area for the Borough and Kent County Council (with F MacManus)
Proposals for redevelopment of Kentish Town for Borough of Camden
Consultant to Bucks County Council, Village development

个人 · 10 May 1924-28 Jun 1999

Edward James Back was born on 10 May 1924 and died on 28 June 1999. He studied electrical engineering at Faraday House from 1941-1944, and was awarded an Honours diploma with silver and gold medals (the only student to do so). From 1944-1945 he was a temporary experimental officer at the Admiralty Research Laboratory at Teddington. In 1949 he gained an external University of London BSc (Engineering) at Regent Street Polytechnic, and worked from 1949-1956 as Senior Assistant to S. Austen Stigant in the Education Department of Johnson and Phillips at Charlton. In 1953 he became a member of the Institute of Electrical Engineers (MIEE). He worked as a Personnel and Training Officer at BP from 1956-58 and then at Henry Wiggin in Hereford.

From 1963-1965 Back was at the London College of Divinity in Northwood, gaining the ALCD, after which he was curate of Emmanuel Church, Northwood, Middlesex, from 1965-1969. He then returned to electrical engineering, and lectured in that subject at Hendon College of Technology (a predecessor body of the University of Middlesex), where he was also honorary chaplin, for 19 years.

个人 · 1918-2000
W K A Barnes attended the Polytechnic Secondary School from July 1934. He enrolled in the School of Architecture at the Poly in 1938, but his studies were interrupted by WW2 and he left to join the RAF in July 1940. He recommenced his studies in April 1946 and gained the Polytechnic Certificate and Diploma in Architecture, graduating in December 1948. Barnes worked at architect firm Saxon, Snell and Philips before moving to the NW Thames Regional Health Authority where he was involved on several hospital projects including Brompton Hospital and Whittington Hospital.
个人 · 20 May 1904-30 Jun 1966
Writer of detective stories such as those featuring the detective Albert Campion.
Studied Speech and Drama at the Regent Street Polytechnic (1921-1923)