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Weston Williamson + Partners (WW+P) is a British architectural firm formed in 1985 and based inLondon,Manchester,Melbourne,Sydney,Perth,Toronto,Riyadh,Shenzhen andHong Kong.
Company type | Limited Liability Partnership |
---|---|
Industry | Architecture |
Headquarters | London,Manchester,Melbourne,Sydney,Perth,Toronto,Riyadh,Shenzhen andHong Kong |
Number of employees | 200+ |
Website | https://wwparchitects.com/ |


History
editWeston Williamson was established in 1985 by Andrew Weston and Chris Williamson, who met whilst studying architecture atLeicester Polytechnic School of Architecture with Steve Humphreys, who joined the practice in 1991.[citation needed] In 2008, Rob Naybour became a fourth director.[citation needed]
In 2013 Weston Williamson became an LLP forming WestonWilliamson+Partners with the introduction of nine new partners.[citation needed] In 2022 WestonWilliamson+Partners was acquired by Egis Group, forming part of their Architecture Line.[citation needed]
In July 2024, it was announced that Chris Williamson would be President of theRoyal Institute of British Architects, serving for two years from September 2025.[1]
Projects
editWestonWilliamson+Partners has worked on a number of projects internationally including schemes forTransport for London such as thePaddington andWoolwich stations on theElizabeth Line,[citation needed] and theJubilee line extension atLondon Bridge,[citation needed] projects related toHS2 and theDocklands Light Railway, plus work forMelbourne Metro Rail Authority and the Dubai and Malaysian transport authorities. Other projects include the Oliver Morris House inBrixton,[citation needed] and theNew England Biolabs laboratories inBoston.[citation needed]
- Melbourne Metro Tunnel[2]
- Paddington and Woolwich Elizabeth line stations
- Paddington Integrated Project[3]
- Docklands Light Railway Extension to London City Airport[4]
- Docklands Light Railway Extension to Woolwich[4][dead link]
- East London Line Stations atHoxton andDalston Junction railway station
- Jubilee line station at London Bridge[4][5]
- Pudding Mill Lane Station
- Perth Forrestfield Airport Link
- Paddington Crossrail[6]
- Miami Metromover[7]
- HS2 Old Oak Common[8]
- Barking Riverside Station[9]
References
edit- ^RIBA Elections 2024 - results (2 July 2024), RIBA. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
- ^"Metro Tunnel Project".
- ^"Transport Briefing subscriber log in".www.transportbriefing.co.uk.
- ^abcPuckett, Katie."Weston Williamson on how to get on board transport infrastructure projects".[dead link][dead link]
- ^Edwards, Brian (1997),"Part One:Perspectives on station architecture",The Modern Station: New Approaches to Railway Architecture, Taylor & Francis,ISBN 0-419-19680-3 (electronic pages are unnumbered - see Suburban stations section "The Jubilee Line extension")
- ^Bloomfield, Ruth."Paddington Crossrail images revealed".[dead link][dead link]
- ^"Weston Williamson on track with Miami railway".[dead link][dead link]
- ^Rogers, David (2014)."Weston Williamson lands High Speed 2 station | News | Building Design".bdonline.co.uk. Retrieved12 October 2014.
- ^"Barking Riverside".Weston Williamson + Partners. Retrieved2022-10-15.