Niven & Wigglesworth was an architectural partnership formed by David Barclay Niven (1864-1942) and Herbert Hardy Wigglesworth (1866-1949) in London, England, in 1893. In 1900 Harold Falkner (1875-1963) became a partner in the firm which was renamed Niven, Wigglesworth & Falkner. Although Falkner left the business in 1903, the title of the firm remained unchanged until 1909 when it reverted to Niven & Wigglesworth.
The practice had offices at 34 Mecklenburgh Square, London from c.1893 to 1902; 9 Barton Street, London in 1894-95; Gwydir Chambers, 104 High Holborn, London from c.1900 to 1919; and 7 John Street, Bedford Row from 1921 to 1927. The partnership was dissolved in 1927
Lynch House, Clarendon Road, Sevenoaks, Kent (1893); Interior of Carisbrook Castle ship for the Castle Line (1895); Teith View, Doune, Perthshire (1895); Nethercliffe, Walton on Thames, Surrey (1895); 3 houses for J. G. Hardy, Walton on Thames, Surrey (1898); Hillington, Walton on Thames, Surrey (1899); Willingdon House, Station Avenue, Walton-on-Thames, Surrey (1899); Piper's Hill, Byfleet, Surrey (1900); British Sailors' Society Hostel, corner of Commercial Road and Beccles Street, Stepney, London (1901); 54 Harley Street, London (1904); Salvation Army hostel, Garford Street, Poplar, London (19050; Office building, 19-21 Hatton Garden, Holborn, London (1907); Ottershaw Park, Ottershaw, near Chertsey, Surrey (1910); Swedish Church, Harcourt Street, Marylebone, London (1910); Dunfold Lodge, Woring, Surrey (1914); and Hambro's Bank, 41 Bishopsgate, City of London (1926)
Service, Alastair. Edwardian Architecture. A Handbook of Building Design in Britain 1890-1914. London: Thames & Hudson, 1977