Powell & Moya was an architectural partnership formed in London, England in 1946 by Michael Powell (1916-1971), his brother Philip Powell (1921-2003), and Hidalgo Moya (1920-1994), all three were graduates of the Architectural Association Schools in London. Michael Powell left the practice in 1950 to join London County Council Architects as Assistant Housing Architect.
In 1961 Robert Henley and Peter Skinner entered the partnership. They were joined by John Cantwell and Bernard Throp in 1976, and the practice became Powell, Moya & Partners
In 1946 Powell & Moya won a competition-winning commission to rebuild a large area of war-damaged housing in Pimllico, London. The project was developed in stages and eventually completed in 1962. Subsequent projects by the practice included Chichester Festival Theatre in Chichester, Sussex (1950–61); the Skylon at the South Bank, London for the Festival of Britain (1951); Mayfield School in West Putney, London (1956); Wexham Park Hospital in Slough, Berkshire (1958–66); Princess Margaret Hospital in Swindon, Wiltshire (1961-72); Wycombe General Hospital in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire (1966-75); Cripps Building, St John’s College, Cambridge (1967); Blue Boar Quad, Christ Church, Oxford (1968); with Takaki and Dodd, the British Pavilion, Expo 70 in Osaka, Japan (1970); Plumstead Manor School in Woolwich, London (1973); Wolfson College, Oxford (1974); Museum of London (1976); dining rooms at Eton College (1974–76); headquarters of London and Manchester Assurance in Exeter, Devon (1978); National Westminster Bank at Shaftesbury Avenue, London (1982); the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre, Broad Sanctuary, London (1986); and the redevelopment of the Great Ormond Street Hospital in London (1990-94).
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See also:
British Listed Buildings - 45 listed buildings by Powell & Moya [Link below]
Historic England - 47 entries on Powell & Moya [Link below]
UK Modern House - 12 buildings by Powell & Moya [Link below]
RIBApix! - over 700 images of work by Powell & Moya [Link below]
‘Chichester Festival Theatre’. Architects’ Journal vol. 136, no. 1§, 1962 pp. 25-40
Clifford, H. Dalton. ‘A house that surveys the Weald’. Clifford, H. Dalton. ‘A house that surveys the Weald’.
Levey, Michael. ‘3 new art galleries’. Architectural Design vol. 38, October 1968n pp. 483-489 [Discusses a new art gallery designed by Powell & Moya for Christ Church College, Oxford]
‘Cripps Building, St John’s College, Cambridge’. Architectural Review [London] vol. 142, no. 847, 1967 pp. 181-188
Hanson, Brian. ‘Powell and Moya’ in Macmillan Encyclopedia of Architects Volume 3. Edited by Adolf K. Plakzek. New York and London: Macmillan and Free Press, 1982 p. 469
Harwood, Elain. Mid-Century Britain. Modern Architecture 1938-1963. London: Batsford, 2021
Hitchcock, Henrry-Russell. ‘Pimlico’. Architectural Review [London] vol. 114, no. 681, 1953 pp. 176-184 [Housing at Churchill Gardens, Pimlico, London designed by Powell & Moya]
Mills, Edward David. The New Architecture in Britain 1946-1953. London: The Standard Catalogue Co., 1953 [Discusses two houses in Chichester, Sussex designed by Powell & Moya pp. 55-62]
Powell, Kenneth. Powell & Moya. London: RIBA Publishing, 2
Powell, Kenneth. ‘Powell & Moya: the first fifty years’. Architects’ Journal 4 July 1966 pp. 27-58
Powell Moya and Partners. London : Powell Moya, 1989.
Powell, Philip. ‘Architects’ approach to architecture’. Royal Institute of British Architects vol. 73, March 1966 pp. 116-127 [Dscusses Churchill Gardens in Pimlico, London designed by his practice Powell & Moya]
Powell, Philip. ‘'No visible means of support': Skylon and the South Bank’. The Journal of the Twentieth Century Society [Festival of Britain Special Issue] no.5, 2001 pp. 82-86
Webb, Michael. Architecture in Britain Today. London: Country Life, 1969