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Sir 'William Chambers' (
October 27,
1723 -
February 17,
1796) was a
Scottish architect, born in
Gothenburg,
Sweden, where his father was a merchant. Between 1740 and 1749 he was employed by the
Swedish East India Company making several voyages to
China where he studied
Chinese architecture and decoration.
Returning to
Europe, he studied architecture in
Paris (with
J. F. Blondel) and spent five years in
Italy. Then, in 1755, he travelled to
England and established an architectural practice in
London. Through a recommendation of the
4th Earl of Bute he was appointed architectural tutor to the Prince of Wales, later
George III, and also, with
Robert Adam,
Architect of the King's Works. He worked for
Augusta, Dowager Princess of Wales making fanciful garden buildings at
Kew, and in 1757 he published a book of Chinese designs which had quite an influence on contemporary taste.

The central courtyard of Chambers'
Somerset House in London. The pavement fountain was installed in the 1990s.
In 1759 his more serious and academic ''Treatise on Civil Architecture'' had an influence on builders; it went into several editions and was still being republished in 1826. His influence was transmitted also through a host of younger architects trained as pupils in his office, including
Thomas Hardwick Junior (1752-1825) who helped build
Somerset House with him and who wrote a biography of Chambers's life.
He was the major rival of Adam in British
Neoclassicism. Chambers was more international in outlook (his knighthood being originally a Swedish honour) and was influenced by continental neoclassicism (which he in turn influenced) when designing for British clients. A second visit to Paris in 1774 confirmed the French cast to his sober and conservative refined blend of Neoclassicism and
Palladian conventions.
Chambers died in London in 1796. He is buried in
Westminster Abbey.
Writings
★ ''Designs of Chinese buildings, furniture, dresses, machines, and utensils : to which is annexed a description of their temples, houses, gardens, &c'' (London) 1757
★ ''Desseins des edifices, meubles, habits, machines, et ustenciles des Chinois ; Auxquels est ajoutée une descr. de leurs temples, de leurs maisons, de leurs jardins, etc.'' (London) 1757
★ ''A treatise on civil architecture in which the principles of that art are laid down and illustrated by a great number of plates accurately designed and elegantly engraved by the best hands'' (London) 1759
★ ''Plans, Elevations, Sections and Perspective Views of the Gardens and Buildings at Kew in Surry'' (London) 1763
★ ''A dissertation on oriental gardening.'' (London) 1772
Main works
★
Roehampton Villa (largely extant including interior ceilings), now called Parkstead House, for
William Ponsonby, 2nd Earl of Bessborough. Also designed two garden temples (one to be re-erected by 2008), similar to those at the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
[1]
★ The Pagoda, in Pagoda Gardens,
Blackheath, London is attributed to Chambers. A three-storey house built as a pavilion (c. 1775) for the
Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, it features a gabled Chinese-style roof with dramatic upturned corners.
Caroline of Brunswick lived here after her separation from her husband, the
Prince Regent, in 1799.
★
Somerset House in London, his most famous building, which absorbed most of his energies over a period of two decades (1776–1796)
★ The
gilded state coach that is still used at
coronations.
★ The
Dunmore Pineapple, a
folly in
Dunmore Park near
Falkirk, is often attributed to Chambers.
★ For
James Caulfeild, 1st Earl of Charlemont, he designed
Charlemont House and the
Casino at Marino, as well as the Chapel and Theatre in
Trinity College, Dublin.
★ He is also associated with
Gothic additions to
Milton Abbey in
Dorset and the planning of the nearby rural village of
Milton Abbas, sometimes considered the first planned settlement in England. This work was carried out in collaboration with
landscape gardener Capability Brown in 1780 for
Joseph Damer, the
Earl of Dorchester, who wanted to relocate the existing village further away from his home at the Abbey.
External links
★ William Chambers,
A Dissertation on Oriental Gardening (London, 1772)
References
1. http://www.parksteadhouse.co.uk/history.htm