Welch, Cachemaille-Day & Lander was an architectural partnership formed in London, England in 1928 by Herbert Arthur Welch (1889-1953), Nugent Francis Cachemaille-Day (1896-1976), and Felix James Lander (1897-1960). The three partners had met whist working for Louis de Soissons (1890-1962) in Welwyn Garden City.
During its seven-year history the practice designed large number of buildings throughout suburban London and the South East, including houses, shops, hotels and churches. They designed the much-admired Crawford's Advertising office building at 233 High Holborn, London in 1930.
The partnership was dissolved in 1935 when Cachemaille-Day left to set up his own practice. Lander and Welch continued as Herbert A. Welch & Felix J. Lander.
Cachemaille-Day, N. F. ‘Ecclesiastical architecture in the present age’. RIBA Journal vol. 40, 1932–33, pp. 825–838
Hill, Anthony. ‘N. Cachemaille-Day a Search for Soething More’. The Thirties Society Journal no.7, 1991 pp.20-27
Yatol, Roger Shuff. ‘A Moderne Home for a Modern Woman. Marion Brownlie Blackwell and 1 The Ridings, Ealing’. Journal of the Decorative Arts Society 1850 to the Present vol. 44, 2020 pp. 46-69 [Discusses a Modernist house designed by Herbert A. Welch, Felix James Lander and Nugent Francis Cacheaille Day of Welch, Cachemaille-Day & Lander for client Marion Brownlie Blackwell in 1933]