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  2. Aug 14, 2003 · Cedric John Price (born 1934 in Stone, Staffordshire) was a rarity in the architectural profession - having had a profound influence on architectural thinking through teaching and projects, rather than completed buildings.

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      Cedric John Price (born 1934 in Stone, Staffordshire) was a...

  3. Jan 5, 2018 · Indeterminacy, learning, change, adaptability, progress, creativity, these shibboleths of technological architecture all, to an extent, originate with Price. Postwar society was changing so fast, why couldn’t the built environment keep up?

  4. www.moma.org › artists › 7986Cedric Price - MoMA

    He studied at the Architectural Association in London from 1955 to 1957 when he received his diploma. Price worked for the partnership of Maxwell Fry, Jane Drew, Lindsay Drake and Denys Lasdun between 1957 and 1958. In 1960 Price established his architectural firm, Cedric Price Architects.

  5. In the autumn of 1957 Price was offered his first full-time architectural job by the firm of Fry, Drew, Drake and Lasdun. He established his own practice, Cedric Price Architects, in 1960, which operated from premises at 38 Alfred Place in London until 2002.

    • Life
    • Fun Palace
    • Potteries Thinkbelt
    • Non-Plan

    Price was born in Stone, Staffordshire as the son of the architect A.G. Price. He studied architecture at Cambridge University, St. John's College, graduating in 1955, and the Architectural Association School of Architecture in London. From 1958 to 1964 he taught part-time at the AA and at the Council of Industrial Design. He later founded 'Polyark...

    Before starting his own office in 1960, he was associated with Maxwell Fry and Denys Lasdun. The most enduring project in Price's early years as an independent architect was the Fun Palace, a 1961 proposal for a vast, shed-like entertainment warehouse. Developed with the theatre producer Joan Littlewood, the Fun Palace was a cultural goods yard, a ...

    In 1964 Price worked on a vast urban design project dubbed the 'Potteries Thinkbelt', devised in direct response to the decline of north Staffordshire's local ceramics industry, subsequent high unemployment and ravaged infrastructure. In its place Price suggested the establishment of a vast educational centre, 108 square miles of loosely linked 'ca...

    Typical of Price's provocations was Non-Plan, a 1969 broadside at the urban planning system that had so visibly failed during the Modernist period. Price and his collaborator Paul Barker suggested that planning controls should be abolished, a combination of extreme libertarianism and anarchy that did nothing to endear him to the architectural estab...

  6. Nov 10, 2014 · Price completed relatively little and never achieved stratospheric success, but his iconoclastic, eccentric and forward-thinking vision of architecture and its relationship with people shaped modern thinking and influenced a generation of architects and designers.

  7. Aug 10, 2003 · Ced­ric Price re­cei­ved his un­der­gra­duate de­gree in ar­chi­tec­ture from Cam­bridge Uni­ver­sity in 1955 and his di­ploma from the Ar­chi­tec­tu­ral As­so­cia­tion in Lon­don in 1957. His work has been pu­blis­hed in many jour­nals and mo­dern ar­chi­tec­tu­ral his­to­ries.

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