What did Augustus Charles Pugin and Augustus Pugin stone plaque do at 106 Gt Russell Street?

106 Gt Russell StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# 106 Great Russell Street At 106 Great Russell Street, in the heart of Bloomsbury, the elder Augustus Charles Pugin and his prodigious son Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin shared a home that became a crucible of architectural revolution during the early nineteenth century. It was within these walls that young Augustus Welby—born here in 1812—grew up surrounded by his father's collections of Gothic sketches and architectural drawings, absorbing the principles of medieval design that would later transform Victorian architecture. The younger Pugin, who would go on to become the driving force behind the Gothic Revival movement, likely first glimpsed the possibilities of his life's work in these rooms, watching his French-trained father labor over designs while the British Museum loomed just across the street. Though Augustus Charles Pugin died in 1832 when his son was merely twenty, the foundation laid at Great Russell Street—a place of artistic intensity and Gothic passion—proved enduring enough to sustain a revolution that would reshape England's cities and cathedrals for generations to come.

Location

106 Gt Russell Street

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