Derek Walker

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Derek Walker
Born (1929-06-15)June 15, 1929
Blackburn, Lancashire
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Nationality British
Alma mater Leeds Art School
Occupation Architect
Known for Milton Keynes Chief Architect
Notable work Royal Armouries Museum, Leeds
Spouse(s)
  • Jill Messenger
  • Second wife (name unknown)
  • Eve Happold (2003-15)
Children Matthew Walker, Alex Walker

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Derek John Walker (15 June 1929 – 11 May 2015) was a British architect primarily associated with urban planning and leisure facilities architecture through his firm Derek Walker Associates.

Career

After completing his national service, Walker went on to study architecture at Leeds Art School, it was here he met his first wife Jill Messenger. He then studied planning at the University of Pennsylvania before returning to the UK in 1960 to set up an architectural practice in Leeds.[1]

From 1970 to 1976, Walker was Chief Architect and planner of the new town Milton Keynes,[2] and ran the architecture course at Royal College of Art between 1984 to 1990.[1]

He recruited a team and over seven years produced a landscaping strategy for the 'new city', eleven village plans, the structure for the programme for producing 3000 houses per year with supporting community, leisure, retail and sporting and cultural facilities.

Amongst many buildings possibly the most celebrated was the Central Milton Keynes Shopping Centre.[3][4] At the time of its opening in 1979 it was a unique concept for 1,000,000 sq ft (93,000 m2) of retail space with a plan generated around covered landscaped streets. The team for this complex included Stuart Mosscrop, Christopher Woodward and Syd Green.[5]

In 1980, Walker was involved with Norman Foster and Frank Newby in a controversial scheme to expand the Whitney Museum in New York City using air rights purchased from nearby properties to build a mixed-use skyscraper which would include a new wing for the museum. When a furore developed, the museum denied it had solicited the team.[6]

Walker was the architect for the Royal Armouries Museum in Leeds, a GB£42.5million project which opened to the public in 1996.[7]

Academic Posts

Personal life

Derek Walker was born on 15 June 1929 in Blackburn, Lancashire,[8] however he and his family moved to Leeds, West Yorkshire when he was very young.

Walker was married to the artist Jill Messenger, and had two sons.[9] He was married secondly and his third wife Eve Happold.[10]

Walker was a lifelong sports fanatic, with a passion for cricket and a supporter of Leeds United FC.[citation needed]

Notable projects

Derek Walker Associates

Milton Keynes Development Corporation

Publications

  • The Great Engineers: The Art of British Engineers 1837–1987. ISBN 0-85670-917-4.
  • Happold: The Confidence to Build. ISBN 0-419-24060-8.
  • Animated Architecture.
  • Derek Walker Associates "'The View from Great Linford' Monograph" ISBN 978-1-85490-282-5
  • 'Los Angeles Profile Architectural Design Magazine with USC 1982"
  • Structural Engineering Design in Practice. With Roger Westbrook.
  • The Royal Armouries The Making of a Museum. With Guy Wilson ISBN 0-948092-26-2.
  • New Towns (Architectural Design, No 111). With Maggie Toy.
  • AD Milton keynes 1.2.3 Volumes Profiles Architectural Magazine 1973-4-5.
  • The Architecture and Planning of Milton Keynes.

References

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External links

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  1. 1.0 1.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
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  3. 3.0 3.1 N. Pevsner and E. Williamson, Buckinghamshire, 2nd edition, Penguin Books (Buildings of England), 1994, ISBN 0-14-071062-0, page 494.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Milton Keynes shopping centre becomes Grade II listed – The Guardian, 16 July 2010
  5. Early housing in Milton Keynes Milton Keynes City Discovery Centre
  6. The Whitney Museum repulses Norman Foster's first assault on New York, 1980.
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