Peter Ware

From the Independent obit, March 1999:

PETER WARE was one of the West Country's most eminent architects. He was a leading member of the generation of conservationists who acted in time to save the region's historic building stock in the Sixties and Seventies, and a versatile designer too of modern edifices.

...

Among his less prominent jobs was the transformation of the threatened 18th-century Hope Chapel in Hotwells into a flourishing community centre. One of its most successful activities became an annual pantomime. Ware, in Edwardian bathing costume or silly hat, dancing the tango with a dummy or being fired from a mock cannon, was a staple of the cast. He greatly enjoyed a bit of clowning and a good laugh.

Until he and his wife Marie moved out of Hotwells in 1996, to be nearer to their horses and woodland, Ware remained a faithful participant in the minutiae of neighbourhood affairs, chairing the Dowry Square Garden Committee, and was always on hand with technical advice on houses, keenly interested in local planning matters.

From wander: Cliftonwood and a Secret Garden
Taken: Thu 3 December 2020 12:26
Rating: ★★

GPS Coordinates: 51.45086, -2.62037
Location: Hotwells

Peter Ware
From the Independent obit, March 1999:


  PETER WARE was one of the West Country's most eminent architects. He was a leading member of the generat...