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Sam Scorer

Hugh Segar "Sam" Scorer FRIBA FRSA (2 March 1923 – 6 March 2003) was an English architect who worked in Lincoln, England and was a leading pioneer in the development of hyperbolic paraboloid roof structures using concrete. He also was involved in architectural conservation and research into the work of local 19th-century architects, as well as founding an art gallery in Lincoln, now known as the Sam Scorer Gallery. He held the rare distinction of having two of his buildings listed within his lifetime.

Sam Scorer
Born2 March 1923
Died6 March 2003 (aged 80)
Lincoln, England
NationalityEnglish
Alma materCorpus Christi College, Cambridge
Architectural Association
OccupationArchitect
PracticeDenis Clarke Hall & Partners; Clarke Hall, Scorer & Bright; Scorer & Hawkins (now Scorer Hawkins Architects)
BuildingsSt John the Baptist's Church, Ermine, Lincoln (Grade II*)
Markham Moor petrol station (Grade II)
Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms (Grade II)
DesignHyperbolic paraboloid structures and architectural conservation

The Usher Gallery in Lincoln has an exhibition "Sam Scorer: A Life in 14 Buildings" until January 2024.[1]

Life edit

He was brought up in Lincoln, one of five children. His father was a senior partner in a firm of solicitors and later became clerk to Lindsey County Council. His mother was a lecturer at Bishop Grosseteste College, a teacher training college. His great uncle was the Lincoln architect William Scorer. A brother was Richard S. Scorer. Between 1936 and 1941 he attended the independent Repton School in south Derbyshire, where he became head boy and excelled at drawing.

He read Mechanical Sciences at Corpus Christi College, Cambridge in 1941, and enjoyed painting as well. In 1942 he was commissioned into the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and met his wife in Canada, when training to be a Fleet Air Arm pilot. He served as a fighter pilot until 1945 but was invalided out of service, having crashed while attempting to land on a moving aircraft carrier in the Baltic Sea.

Combining his interest in artwork and mechanical design, he decided to become an architect. He entered the Architectural Association School of Architecture (AA) in the second year in 1946, and graduated in 1949.

He married Anne Humphrey in 1943 in Kingston, Ontario. They had a son and a daughter (who died in April 1986). He lived on Gibraltar Hill in Lincoln. He died in Lincoln County Hospital in March 2003, aged 80.

Away from architecture he was a motor-racing enthusiast, attending many of Europe's grand prix circuits. He owned a succession of fast cars, such as a Lotus Elan and various Jaguars, all with his personalised number plate of 'EVL 1'. He held life memberships of the National Trust, the Victorian Society and Reform Club and took an interest in Liberal politics.[2][better source needed]

Career edit

 
St John the Baptist's Church, Ermine, Lincoln, built in 1963
 
St John the Baptist interior

He worked for a year as assistant to George Grey Wornum. In 1950, he began work for Denis Clarke Hall (son of Edna Clarke Hall). With Clarke Hall he designed three schools in Lincolnshire in the 1950s:

  • William Farr School, Welton (1952)[dubious ]
  • Lacey Gardens Junior School, Louth (1953)[3]
  • Riddings Comprehensive School, Enderby Road, Scunthorpe (1958 with extensions in 1965–70. Two-storey blocks with the classroom block linked to the service block by a vestibule. The kitchen is screened with a heavily rusticated or embossed wall. Vertical emphasis is provided by a watertower with glazed cistern.[4]

From 1954, his architectural practice, Denis Clarke Hall, Scorer & Bright was based at 7 Lindum Terrace in Lincoln. Scorer was the Chairman of the RIBA East Midlands planning committee. He was the first Chairman of the East Midlands Group of the Victorian Society. In 2000 he founded The Gallery, now known as the Sam Scorer Gallery, in Lincoln.

Hyperbolic paraboloid structures edit

 
Brayford Pool restaurants – formerly Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms

Thin shell concrete roofs were invented in Germany around the 1920s, as a means of achieving large spans with limited materials and at low cost. The strength of the roof lies in its shape, and the way it carries the loads by the forces exerted in the planes of the shell, rather than by the weight of their materials. The first shell roofs were simple barrel vaults. The earliest is Wythenshawe Bus Garage, Manchester, built 1939–42. After the Second World War, the form was taken further. One of the first engineers to specialise in concrete shell techniques in Britain was the German refugee of Hungarian-Jewish origin, Kalman Hajnal-Kónyi, who arrived in London in 1936, and who worked with Sam Scorer. Scorer became fascinated by the possibilities of shell roofs as a student, and designed a hyperbolic paraboloid roof in 1956 for a water tower in Ilkeston, Derbyshire. Félix Candela in Mexico was experimenting with ‘anticlastic’ or shells with double curvatures of opposing convexity and concavity, from which the hyperbolic paraboloid emerged. The form was particularly appropriate for developing countries because of its simple materials and low cost. The rationing of steel in the post-war period in Britain also was reason for the popularity of these designs. The 'hypar', as it is sometimes known, enjoyed a brief fashion, seen in buildings such as the Commonwealth Institute of 1960–2 and also the Wrexham Swimming Baths of 1964. Examples of Scorer's Work are:

  • Lincolnshire Motor Company garage and showrooms, later used as the headquarters of the Lincolnshire Library service. Designed 1958, built 1959 by Sam Scorer of Denis Clarke Hall, Scorer & Bright; engineer Hajnal-Kónyi. Reinforced concrete construction to main former garage, with steel frame and concrete floors to circular corner block and curtain wall elevation to block facing Lucy Tower Street which has flat roof. Rear former garage, has a reinforced concrete hyperbolic paraboloid shell roof, supported on columns to provide a clear unobstructed area. Circular front showroom (now Prezzo) used to display cars. A listed building since 2000.[5]
  • Former petrol station at Markham Moor, Nottinghamshire. This same type of design was used for a petrol station (became a Little Chef restaurant in 1989 but is now a Starbucks' café) at Markham Moor on the south-bound A1/A57 near Retford, designed in 1959.[6] The shell canopy was designated Grade II listed on 27 March 2012.[7]
  • In 1962 he designed the St John the Baptist Church in Ermine, Lincoln. Its aluminium roof is the shape of a hyperbolic paraboloid and the building has a hexagonal floor plan and concrete walls. It has been a Grade II* listed building since 1995.[8]

Architectural work by Scorer edit

 
Barclays Bank, Cornhill, Lincoln
 
7 Gibraltar Hill, Lincoln, home of Sam Scorer. Built 1955
 
Sam Scorer Gallery, Drury Lane, Lincoln
  • William Farr Church of England Comprehensive School (1952) Welton.
  • Lacey Gardens Junior School (1953) Louth.[9]
  • House and Summerhouse for E. W. Scorer (1955) Lincoln.
  • 7 Gibraltar Hill (1955) Lincoln. His own house.
  • Extension to the Gartree Secondary Modern School (1956 and 1960) Tattershall, Lincolnshire.
  • Scunthorpe Steelworks. Laboratory for Richard Thomas and Baldwins (1958) Redbourn Works. Described by Pevsner and Harris as "an interesting structure with fifteen concrete mushroom pillars. Hence the roof comes down in lobes"[10] This included murals and designs for Plyglass panels by Tony Bartl. The building appears to have been demolished by 1989.[11]
  • Riddings Comprehensive School (1958), Scunthorpe. The classroom block linked by a vestibule to the dining room and gym. The kitchen and ancillary rooms are screened by an effective, very heavily rusticated or embossed wall. A tall watertower provides vertical emphasis[12]
  • Charnos factory (1959) Ilkeston. Lingerie factory featuring a tank tower that is thought to incorporate the first concrete hyperbolic paraboloid structure in the UK.
  • Petrol station (1959–60) Markham Moor, on the A1.
  • Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms (1959–61), Brayford Pool, Lincoln. From about 1974 Lincolnshire Libraries headquarters and store. Now restaurants.
  • St John the Baptist (1963), Ermine Estate, Lincoln.[13]
  • Lindum House, Montagu Road, Canwick. Converted into a house for Peter and Kari Wright, in 1969–70. Described as a "former Command Post, barely visible from the kerbside, nestling within an undulating 0.4-acre plot. Only its distinctive triangular ecclesiastical spire window peaks above the horizon. Internally the property has an expansive principal 31 ft (approx) reception room, kitchen/breakfast room, four bedrooms and bathroom".[14]
 
Waterside House, offices of the Environment Agency
  • Barclays Bank (1968–70). Corner of the High Street with the Corn Hill, Lincoln. Tinted glass facades. By Clarke Hall, Scorer & Bright.[15]
  • Lucy Tower car-park (1973–74), Brayford Pool, Lincoln.
  • Sports Centre (1974), North Hykeham, Lincoln.
  • The Welding Institute, (1975) Abington, Cambridgeshire. Probably the Richard Weck building on Granta Park, a steel and plate glass structure with internal and external murals by Tony Bartl. This may have been recently demolished (2012–14), as, despite being in a conservation area, its significance was not appreciated.
 
House on Spring Hill, Lincoln, designed by Sam Scorer
  • Waterside House (1978–9), Waterside North, Lincoln. Environment Agency Building. Red brick on a concrete frame, with recessed mortar joints, detailed with curves and chamfers.[16]
 
Damon's Diner 1987, Swallowbeck, Lincoln
  • 1980s Designed two houses on Spring Hill, Lincoln for the building contractor, Richard Lucas Ltd.
  • Southern Outfall Pumping Station (1987) Cleethorpes.
  • Damon's Restaurant (1987–8) Swallowbeck on the junction with the Lincoln Western by-pass.[17] An American burger bar. The up-turned roof structure represents ribs of beef.
  • Roman Villa (1990s). House. Lincoln.
  • Damon's Motel (1993) Swallowbeck.
  • Sam Scorer Gallery, Drury Lane, Lincoln, (2000).

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Sam Scorer: A Life in 14 Buildings". Lincoln Museum & Usher Gallery. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
  2. ^ Personal knowledge, Dr Nina Baker.
  3. ^ "Antram" (1985), pg.541
  4. ^ Antram, (1989), pg.634
  5. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1392689)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 13 November 2023.
  6. ^ Martin Wainwright Preservation bid for innovative 1950s motorway cafe, The Guardian, 5 January 2004. Retrieved 11 December 2011.
  7. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1402678)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  8. ^ Historic England. "Details from listed building database (1388800)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 September 2015.
  9. ^ Lacey Gardens Junior School
  10. ^ Pevsner N. & Harris J. (1964) The Buildings of Lincolnshire, Penguin, London pp.359
  11. ^ "Antram" (1989) omits mention of building.
  12. ^ Pevsner N & Harris (1964) The Buildings of Lincolnshire, Penguin, London pp.359
  13. ^ Information as to how St John the Baptist on the Ermine Estate came to be designed.
  14. ^ Sold by Rightmove in 2013
  15. ^ Antram pg 524
  16. ^ Antram pg 523
  17. ^ Antram pg 529

References edit

  • Times Obituary, 9 April 2003, page 30

Literature edit

  • Antram N (revised), Pevsner N & Harris J, (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press.

Architectural writing edit

  • Kaye D. and Scorer S. (with Introduction and Gazetteer by David Robinson), Fowler of Louth: The Life and Works of James Fowler, Louth Architect 1828–1892, Louth Museum 1992.
  • Scorer S. (introduction), (1990) The Victorian Facade: William Watkins and son, architects, Lincoln 1858–1918 Lincolnshire College of Art and Design. ISBN 0951634003. Booklet to accompany exhibition at the Usher Gallery, Lincoln.

External links edit

  • Scorer Hawkins Architects
  • Sam Scorer Gallery
  • His death in Architects Journal
  • ; Karolina Szynalska (2010)
  • Yesterday’s Church of Tomorrow; St. John the Baptist, Ermine Estate by Karolina Szynalska
  • Flickr group of his buildings
  • Blog description of several buildings, including Damon's restaurant

News items edit

  • Listed structure in May 2012
  • Markham Moor restaurant in 2009

scorer, hugh, segar, scorer, friba, frsa, march, 1923, march, 2003, english, architect, worked, lincoln, england, leading, pioneer, development, hyperbolic, paraboloid, roof, structures, using, concrete, also, involved, architectural, conservation, research, i. Hugh Segar Sam Scorer FRIBA FRSA 2 March 1923 6 March 2003 was an English architect who worked in Lincoln England and was a leading pioneer in the development of hyperbolic paraboloid roof structures using concrete He also was involved in architectural conservation and research into the work of local 19th century architects as well as founding an art gallery in Lincoln now known as the Sam Scorer Gallery He held the rare distinction of having two of his buildings listed within his lifetime Sam ScorerFormer petrol station 1960 61 Markham Moor Notts Born2 March 1923Lincoln EnglandDied6 March 2003 aged 80 Lincoln EnglandNationalityEnglishAlma materCorpus Christi College Cambridge Architectural AssociationOccupationArchitectPracticeDenis Clarke Hall amp Partners Clarke Hall Scorer amp Bright Scorer amp Hawkins now Scorer Hawkins Architects BuildingsSt John the Baptist s Church Ermine Lincoln Grade II Markham Moor petrol station Grade II Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms Grade II DesignHyperbolic paraboloid structures and architectural conservation The Usher Gallery in Lincoln has an exhibition Sam Scorer A Life in 14 Buildings until January 2024 1 Contents 1 Life 2 Career 2 1 Hyperbolic paraboloid structures 3 Architectural work by Scorer 4 Notes 5 References 6 Literature 6 1 Architectural writing 7 External links 7 1 News itemsLife editHe was brought up in Lincoln one of five children His father was a senior partner in a firm of solicitors and later became clerk to Lindsey County Council His mother was a lecturer at Bishop Grosseteste College a teacher training college His great uncle was the Lincoln architect William Scorer A brother was Richard S Scorer Between 1936 and 1941 he attended the independent Repton School in south Derbyshire where he became head boy and excelled at drawing He read Mechanical Sciences at Corpus Christi College Cambridge in 1941 and enjoyed painting as well In 1942 he was commissioned into the Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve and met his wife in Canada when training to be a Fleet Air Arm pilot He served as a fighter pilot until 1945 but was invalided out of service having crashed while attempting to land on a moving aircraft carrier in the Baltic Sea Combining his interest in artwork and mechanical design he decided to become an architect He entered the Architectural Association School of Architecture AA in the second year in 1946 and graduated in 1949 He married Anne Humphrey in 1943 in Kingston Ontario They had a son and a daughter who died in April 1986 He lived on Gibraltar Hill in Lincoln He died in Lincoln County Hospital in March 2003 aged 80 Away from architecture he was a motor racing enthusiast attending many of Europe s grand prix circuits He owned a succession of fast cars such as a Lotus Elan and various Jaguars all with his personalised number plate of EVL 1 He held life memberships of the National Trust the Victorian Society and Reform Club and took an interest in Liberal politics 2 better source needed Career edit nbsp St John the Baptist s Church Ermine Lincoln built in 1963 nbsp St John the Baptist interior He worked for a year as assistant to George Grey Wornum In 1950 he began work for Denis Clarke Hall son of Edna Clarke Hall With Clarke Hall he designed three schools in Lincolnshire in the 1950s William Farr School Welton 1952 dubious discuss Lacey Gardens Junior School Louth 1953 3 Riddings Comprehensive School Enderby Road Scunthorpe 1958 with extensions in 1965 70 Two storey blocks with the classroom block linked to the service block by a vestibule The kitchen is screened with a heavily rusticated or embossed wall Vertical emphasis is provided by a watertower with glazed cistern 4 From 1954 his architectural practice Denis Clarke Hall Scorer amp Bright was based at 7 Lindum Terrace in Lincoln Scorer was the Chairman of the RIBA East Midlands planning committee He was the first Chairman of the East Midlands Group of the Victorian Society In 2000 he founded The Gallery now known as the Sam Scorer Gallery in Lincoln Hyperbolic paraboloid structures edit nbsp Brayford Pool restaurants formerly Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms Thin shell concrete roofs were invented in Germany around the 1920s as a means of achieving large spans with limited materials and at low cost The strength of the roof lies in its shape and the way it carries the loads by the forces exerted in the planes of the shell rather than by the weight of their materials The first shell roofs were simple barrel vaults The earliest is Wythenshawe Bus Garage Manchester built 1939 42 After the Second World War the form was taken further One of the first engineers to specialise in concrete shell techniques in Britain was the German refugee of Hungarian Jewish origin Kalman Hajnal Konyi who arrived in London in 1936 and who worked with Sam Scorer Scorer became fascinated by the possibilities of shell roofs as a student and designed a hyperbolic paraboloid roof in 1956 for a water tower in Ilkeston Derbyshire Felix Candela in Mexico was experimenting with anticlastic or shells with double curvatures of opposing convexity and concavity from which the hyperbolic paraboloid emerged The form was particularly appropriate for developing countries because of its simple materials and low cost The rationing of steel in the post war period in Britain also was reason for the popularity of these designs The hypar as it is sometimes known enjoyed a brief fashion seen in buildings such as the Commonwealth Institute of 1960 2 and also the Wrexham Swimming Baths of 1964 Examples of Scorer s Work are Lincolnshire Motor Company garage and showrooms later used as the headquarters of the Lincolnshire Library service Designed 1958 built 1959 by Sam Scorer of Denis Clarke Hall Scorer amp Bright engineer Hajnal Konyi Reinforced concrete construction to main former garage with steel frame and concrete floors to circular corner block and curtain wall elevation to block facing Lucy Tower Street which has flat roof Rear former garage has a reinforced concrete hyperbolic paraboloid shell roof supported on columns to provide a clear unobstructed area Circular front showroom now Prezzo used to display cars A listed building since 2000 5 Former petrol station at Markham Moor Nottinghamshire This same type of design was used for a petrol station became a Little Chef restaurant in 1989 but is now a Starbucks cafe at Markham Moor on the south bound A1 A57 near Retford designed in 1959 6 The shell canopy was designated Grade II listed on 27 March 2012 7 In 1962 he designed the St John the Baptist Church in Ermine Lincoln Its aluminium roof is the shape of a hyperbolic paraboloid and the building has a hexagonal floor plan and concrete walls It has been a Grade II listed building since 1995 8 Architectural work by Scorer edit nbsp Barclays Bank Cornhill Lincoln nbsp 7 Gibraltar Hill Lincoln home of Sam Scorer Built 1955 nbsp Sam Scorer Gallery Drury Lane Lincoln William Farr Church of England Comprehensive School 1952 Welton Lacey Gardens Junior School 1953 Louth 9 House and Summerhouse for E W Scorer 1955 Lincoln 7 Gibraltar Hill 1955 Lincoln His own house Extension to the Gartree Secondary Modern School 1956 and 1960 Tattershall Lincolnshire Scunthorpe Steelworks Laboratory for Richard Thomas and Baldwins 1958 Redbourn Works Described by Pevsner and Harris as an interesting structure with fifteen concrete mushroom pillars Hence the roof comes down in lobes 10 This included murals and designs for Plyglass panels by Tony Bartl The building appears to have been demolished by 1989 11 Riddings Comprehensive School 1958 Scunthorpe The classroom block linked by a vestibule to the dining room and gym The kitchen and ancillary rooms are screened by an effective very heavily rusticated or embossed wall A tall watertower provides vertical emphasis 12 Charnos factory 1959 Ilkeston Lingerie factory featuring a tank tower that is thought to incorporate the first concrete hyperbolic paraboloid structure in the UK Petrol station 1959 60 Markham Moor on the A1 Lincolnshire Motor Company showrooms 1959 61 Brayford Pool Lincoln From about 1974 Lincolnshire Libraries headquarters and store Now restaurants St John the Baptist 1963 Ermine Estate Lincoln 13 Lindum House Montagu Road Canwick Converted into a house for Peter and Kari Wright in 1969 70 Described as a former Command Post barely visible from the kerbside nestling within an undulating 0 4 acre plot Only its distinctive triangular ecclesiastical spire window peaks above the horizon Internally the property has an expansive principal 31 ft approx reception room kitchen breakfast room four bedrooms and bathroom 14 nbsp Waterside House offices of the Environment Agency Barclays Bank 1968 70 Corner of the High Street with the Corn Hill Lincoln Tinted glass facades By Clarke Hall Scorer amp Bright 15 Lucy Tower car park 1973 74 Brayford Pool Lincoln Sports Centre 1974 North Hykeham Lincoln The Welding Institute 1975 Abington Cambridgeshire Probably the Richard Weck building on Granta Park a steel and plate glass structure with internal and external murals by Tony Bartl This may have been recently demolished 2012 14 as despite being in a conservation area its significance was not appreciated nbsp House on Spring Hill Lincoln designed by Sam Scorer Waterside House 1978 9 Waterside North Lincoln Environment Agency Building Red brick on a concrete frame with recessed mortar joints detailed with curves and chamfers 16 nbsp Damon s Diner 1987 Swallowbeck Lincoln 1980s Designed two houses on Spring Hill Lincoln for the building contractor Richard Lucas Ltd Southern Outfall Pumping Station 1987 Cleethorpes Damon s Restaurant 1987 8 Swallowbeck on the junction with the Lincoln Western by pass 17 An American burger bar The up turned roof structure represents ribs of beef Roman Villa 1990s House Lincoln Damon s Motel 1993 Swallowbeck Sam Scorer Gallery Drury Lane Lincoln 2000 Notes edit Sam Scorer A Life in 14 Buildings Lincoln Museum amp Usher Gallery Retrieved 13 November 2023 Personal knowledge Dr Nina Baker Antram 1985 pg 541 Antram 1989 pg 634 Historic England Details from listed building database 1392689 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 November 2023 Martin Wainwright Preservation bid for innovative 1950s motorway cafe The Guardian 5 January 2004 Retrieved 11 December 2011 Historic England Details from listed building database 1402678 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 8 May 2012 Historic England Details from listed building database 1388800 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 27 September 2015 Lacey Gardens Junior School Pevsner N amp Harris J 1964 The Buildings of Lincolnshire Penguin London pp 359 Antram 1989 omits mention of building Pevsner N amp Harris 1964 The Buildings of Lincolnshire Penguin London pp 359 Information as to how St John the Baptist on the Ermine Estate came to be designed Sold by Rightmove in 2013 Antram pg 524 Antram pg 523 Antram pg 529References editTimes Obituary 9 April 2003 page 30Literature editAntram N revised Pevsner N amp Harris J 1989 The Buildings of England Lincolnshire Yale University Press Architectural writing edit Kaye D and Scorer S with Introduction and Gazetteer by David Robinson Fowler of Louth The Life and Works of James Fowler Louth Architect 1828 1892 Louth Museum 1992 Scorer S introduction 1990 The Victorian Facade William Watkins and son architects Lincoln 1858 1918 Lincolnshire College of Art and Design ISBN 0951634003 Booklet to accompany exhibition at the Usher Gallery Lincoln External links editScorer Hawkins Architects Sam Scorer Gallery His death in Architects Journal Sam Scorer A lesser known architect of the twentieth century Karolina Szynalska 2010 Yesterday s Church of Tomorrow St John the Baptist Ermine Estate by Karolina Szynalska Flickr group of his buildings Blog description of several buildings including Damon s restaurant News items edit Listed structure in May 2012 Markham Moor restaurant in 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sam Scorer amp oldid 1188844929, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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