Adams, Holden & Pearson originated as Adams & Holden, an architectural partnership formed in London, England in 1907 by Harry Percy Adams (1865-1930) and Charles Henry Holden (1875-1960). The name of the firm changed when in 1913 when Lionel Godfrey Pearson (1879-1953) joined the partnership. The partnership was dissolved in 1940
Architectural projects by Adams, Holden & Pearson included Oscar Wilde's Tomb at Pere‑Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, France (1912); interiors for the passenger ships SS Caldedonia SS Cameronia SS Tuscania (1922); Clapham Common underground station in Clapham, London (1924); Clapham South underground station in Clapham, London (1924); Tooting Bec underground station in Tooting, London (1926); Balham underground station in Balham, London (1926); Piccadilly Circus Underground Station at Piccadilly Circus, London (1928); London Transport Headquarters at 55 Broadway, London (1927-29); Senate House, University of London in Bloomsbury, London (1930-37); Sudbury Town Underground Station at Sudbury, London (1931); Arnos Grove Underground Station in Arnos Grove, London (1931-32); National Library of Wales in Aberystwyth, Wales (1935-37)
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See also Historic England [link below]. See also entries on Charles Holden, Harry Percy Adams and Lionel Godfrey Pearson