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British Architecture

From medieval cathedrals to the Shard — a tour through 800 years of British buildings.

British architecture spans medieval cathedrals (Durham, Salisbury, York Minster), Tudor and Stuart palaces (Hampton Court, the Banqueting House in Whitehall), the classical squares of Georgian Bath and Edinburgh, the Gothic revival of the Houses of Parliament, the engineering of Victorian railway stations and modern landmarks such as the Shard, the Gherkin and the Tate Modern.

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Sir Christopher Wren designed St Paul's Cathedral after the Great Fire of London. Sir Norman Foster designed the Gherkin, the Reichstag dome in Berlin and London's City Hall. Lord Rogers was responsible for the Pompidou Centre in Paris and the Lloyd's building in the City of London. Robert Adam was the most influential British classical architect of the eighteenth century.

You may be asked who designed St Paul's Cathedral (Wren), or which architect designed the Gherkin (Foster).

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