T. P. Figgis
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
T. P. (Thomas Phillips) Figgis was a British architect working in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. His work included private houses as well as public buildings.
Some of his best-known works are the original station buildings for the City & South London Railway (C&SLR, now part of London Underground's Northern Line) which opened in 1890. Figgis designed the stations at Stockwell, Oval, Kennington, Elephant and Castle and Borough. When the C&SLR was extended, he later designed a station at Clapham North and the station and C&SLR's offices at Moorgate. Most of Figgis's buildings for the C&SLR have been replaced or substantially altered; only Kennington (with minor alterations) and Moorgate remain.
Other railway buildings he designed included the four new stations on the Meon Valley Railway.
He undertook several commissions for the Presbyterian Church of England, including St. Columba's Church, Oxford (now a United Reformed Church), an extension to St. Paul's Church, Isle of Dogs, and St. Ninian's Church, Golders Green.

