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  • image SM volume 75/34

Reference number

SM volume 75/34

Purpose

[12] Design, as built, for two of the waiting rooms

Aspect

Plan with laid out wall elevations

Scale

bar scale

Inscribed

Plan and Sections of one of the Waiting Rooms, The Bank of England

Hand

Soane office and Soane

Notes

This drawing shows the built design of the two waiting rooms that are positioned near the Court Room. The room is essentially a square with shallow barrel-vaulted end bays. The end bays have apsidal ends and are ornamented with semicircular-headed panels. The centre of the room, measuring 11 by 11 feet, has a four-armed starfish ceiling around an oculus. The semicircular lunette on the north wall is an external window.

Level

Drawing

Digitisation of the Drawings Collection has been made possible through the generosity of the Leon Levy Foundation

If you have any further information about this object, please contact us: drawings@soane.org.uk

Sir John Soane's collection includes some 30,000 architectural, design and topographical drawings which is a very important resource for scholars worldwide. His was the first architect’s collection to attempt to preserve the best in design for the architectural profession in the future, and it did so by assembling as exemplars surviving drawings by great Renaissance masters and by the leading architects in Britain in the 17th and 18th centuries and his near contemporaries such as Sir William Chambers, Robert Adam and George Dance the Younger. These drawings sit side by side with 9,000 drawings in Soane’s own hand or those of the pupils in his office, covering his early work as a student, his time in Italy and the drawings produced in the course of his architectural practice from 1780 until the 1830s.


Browse (via the vertical menu to the left) and search results for Drawings include a mixture of Concise catalogue records – drawn from an outline list of the collection – and fuller records where drawings have been catalogued in more detail (an ongoing process).