C.A._"Peter"_Bransgrove_(1914-1966)_Architect.jpg
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Summary
Description C.A. "Peter" Bransgrove (1914-1966) Architect.jpg |
English:
Black and white head and shoulders photograph of Charles Alfred "Peter" Bransgrove. Peter Bransgrove was born in Kingston, Surrey, England on 7th April 1914. He studied at the School of Architecture at the Regent Street Polytechnic in London and at the Royal Academy of Architecture, also in London. During the Second World War he was stationed in Bangalore, India as a "Sapper" (Royal Engineers) Captain, where he was involved in defusing bombs. In 1947 he was employed as an architect for the Tanganyika Groundnut Scheme. When the scheme ended in 1948, he opened the first independent architectural practice in Dar es Salaam, C. A. Bransgrove & Partners. He worked on many projects and buildings, mostly in Dar es Salaam but also in other parts of Tanganyika, Kenya and Uganda. His design style was a climate-driven version of the Modernist movement. He died in Nairobi Hospital on 26th January 1966, aged 51.
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Date | |
Source | Family photograph album |
Author | George William Baker CBE VRD (c1917-1996), Head of Government Information Services, Tanganyika [VRD: Volunteer Reserve Decoration] |
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