Christopher John Woodbridge [commonly known as Christopher J. Woodbridge] was born in Fulham, Middlesex [now London], England on 28 March 1898. Nothing is known about his training as an architect. He was active as an architect in England between c.1920 and the 1950s. For a number of years, he was employed by the Ministry of Works and in 1954 designed the Post Office at St. Andrews Cross in Plymouth, Devon. A house in Hillingdon, Middlesex, by him is discussed in The £1,000 House by Randal Phillips (London: Country Life, 1928 pp. 56-58). Woodbridge was a talented draughtsman. Several examples of his measured architectural drawings are illustrated in Shop Fronts. A Selection of English, American and Continental Examples, edited by Frederick Chatterton (London: The Architectural Press, 1927).
Woodbridge's address was given as 23 Chaldon Road, Fulham, London in 1911; 45 Kenyon Street, Fulham, London in 1923; “Fiesole,” Long Lane, Hillingdon, Middlesex in 1928; and Lincott, Warwick Road, Stratford-on-Avon, Warwickshire in 1939. He died in 1963. His death was registered in Wandsworth, London