Robin Boyd

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House designed in 1954 by Boyd at Bedford Street, Deakin, Canberra. The house is typical of the post-war Melbourne regional style of architecture: long unbroken roof line, wide eaves, extensive windows.

Robin Boyd (3 January 1919 – 16 October 1971) was an influential Australian architect, writer, teacher and social commentator. He, along with Harry Seidler, stands as one of the foremost proponents for the International Modern Movement in Australian architecture.

Boyd was born into the prominent Boyd artistic dynasty in Australia, with many relatives being painters, sculptors, architects or other arts professionals. He was the younger son of the painter Penleigh Boyd, and his own son, named after his grandfather Penleigh, is an architect. Boyd's first commission, in fact, was a backyard studio for his cousin, the painter Arthur Boyd.

Boyd first came to notice in the late 1940s for his promotion of inexpensive, functional, partially prefabricated homes incorporating modernist aesthetics. Most of his architectural output was residential. In 1953 he joined forces with Frederick Romberg and Roy Grounds to form what would become a significant Melbourne firm, and through the 1950s and 1960s Boyd developed a number of important houses in the regional style, including a 1952 house for Australian historian Manning Clark.

For many years from 1947 he was director of the The Age Small Homes Service and influenced many people with his popular weekly articles on the subject. He was also lecturer in architecture at the University of Melbourne, and visiting professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1956-57.

Among his nine books are Australia's Home (1952), the first substantial history of Australian domestic architecture, and The Australian Ugliness (1960), a popular and outspoken criticism of prevailing establishment tastes in both architecture and popular culture.

He was awarded the RAIA Gold Medal by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects in 1969.

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