Sir Edwin Lutyens: Presented By: Chandrika Rajaram
Sir Edwin Lutyens: Presented By: Chandrika Rajaram
PRESENTED BY:
CHANDRIKA RAJARAM
INTRODUCTION
• Sir Edwin Landseer Lutyens was a British Architect who adapted Traditional
architectural styles during his era.
• He has been referred to as “the greatest British Architect” of his time.
• He has a key role in designing and building the Central Part of Delhi which was maned
as Lutyens’ Delhi after his name.
• He also designed The India Gate and Rashtrapati Bhawan and many other buildings in
India, London and Ireland.
EARLY LIFE AND PRACTICE
• He was born in London and grew up in Thursley, the son of Charles
Henry Augustus Lutyens and Mary Theresa Gallwey.
• Studied at South Kensington School of Art, London from 1885 to 1887.
Then joined Ernest George and Harold Peto architectural practice.
• There he met Sir Herbert Baker
• He began his own practice in 1888, with his first project as a private
house at Crooksbury, Farnham, Surrey.
• He met the garden designer and horticulturist Gertrude Jekyll.
• With this, began their professional partnership that led to the designing
of many Lutyens Country Houses.
• The “Lutyens-Jekyll” garden overflowed with hard shrubbery and
herbaceous planting with an architecture of stairs and balustraded traces
DESIGN PRINCIPLES
• Lutyens’ controlling sense of proportion and organizational principles
eventually led him to explore the harmony, strength and repose of classical
design.
• He began to incorporate a strong sense of balance, symmetry, and order in his
designs.
• Lutyens viewed the manipulation and organization of the classical vocabulary as
a great intellectual game to be played by the architect to create unique, individual
designs
WORKS
• Initially, his designs were all Arts and Crafts style in France, but during the early
1900s his work became more classical in style.
• He built many war memorials, Hampstead Garden Suburb in London, new Roman
Catholic Cathedral.
• He also designed the Rashtrapati Bhawan, The India Gate, Baroda House, Bikaner
House, Hyderabad House, Patiala House, Jaipur House, Janpath and Rajpath
NEW DELHI
MUGHAL GARDENS
The Mughal gardens are situated at the back of Rashtrapati Bhawan, incorporated with
both Mughal and British Landscaping techniques and feature a great variety of flowers.
Two channels running North to South and East to West divide the garden into square
grids.
There are six lotus fountains at the crossings of these channels rising up to a height of
3.7m.
There are two longitudinal strips of garden, at a higher level of each side of the main
garden.
Roses are the key flowers here.
DOMES
MUGHAL GARDENS
APPRECIATION