Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
Picture taken in the Durham Street Auditorium\nMorita was awarded the Albert Medal in 1982 for his contribution to the development of communications
1851 Great Exhibition
Image used to illustrate an article entitled 'Knowledge on-line' by John Ashworth in the Journal
Image used to illustrate text from lecture entitled 'Spokeshaves, spanners and computers' by Luke Hughes 3/11/1999
Copy print from an album presented to the Society in 1951 by Miss Ethel Symonds of St Albans, through the agency of Mr W G Ardley. Photographs in album taken during and after Lieutenant General Sir F Roberts advance to Kabul, Afghanistan. Album sold 1989/90.
Presented to the Society by Sir Selwyn Selwyn-Clarke, member of council and Chairman of Commonwealth Section Committee in 1969
Nina Edge and Jeremy Waygood were appointed to produce designs for this new school in Cardiff by holding participatory workshops with the children, staff and other members of the school community. Edge and Waygood collaborated with South Glamorgan County Council's architects on the treatment of perimeters, entrances, elevations and planting. The school project was completed in 1995. Although designs were completed and fees paid, the artist's ideas were not incorporated into the building. Client: Mount Stuart Primary School. Award value £4,000.
Alexander Beleschenko designed a series of stained glass windows for the Mottisfont Court Offices in Tower Street, Winchester. Hampshire County Council Architects brought in Beleschenko and other artists to work with them on the design of the offices. The project recognises the dichotomy of putting a modern office block into a medieval city by presenting an Arts and Crafts/Post Modern brick exterior to the street, while allowing the modern interior to be expressed on the rear elevation through a sheer glass and steel facade. Client: Hampshire County Council Architects Department. Award value £5,000.\n\n
Correspondence, applications and submissions, details of entries and arrangements for trials. Includes some diagrams and a photograph of a generator