in
North Oxford, now the Oxford Centre for Mission Studies In November 1850, having been appointed architect to the
diocese of Oxford by Bishop
Samuel Wilberforce, he left London, and moved to
Wantage, where he had already designed a vicarage, and was working on some schools. In May 1852 he went to live in Beaumont Street, Oxford. He designed the
parish church of SS Philip and James in the city, and another at Summertown, as well as restoring many others. Street built or restored 113 churches in the diocese of Oxford. However, his only work for the
university was the reordering of
Jesus College Chapel. His son Arthur Edmund Street suggested that: Possibly my father's very decided adherence to the earlier phase of Gothic, and the eagerness with which he argued that Oxford already had enough of debased types, and should revert to the purity of the early forms, may have frightened the authorities. Early in his career, he advocated the idea that architects should have a practical involvement with the decoration of their buildings, and painted murals at Boyne Hill church himself. However, with his increasing amount of business, he soon realised the difficulties of such an approach. He remained in Oxford until late in 1855, when he moved back to London, taking a house in Montagu Place,
Bloomsbury. At around this time he entered the competition to design the new cathedral at
Lille, winning second prize, behind a design by
Henry Clutton and
William Burges. He came second to Burges in another competition, to design the
Crimea Memorial Church in
Constantinople, but eventually received the commission. He also submitted, unsuccessfully, Gothic schemes for the new Foreign Office in Whitehall, and for a projected rebuilding of the
National Gallery.
Gothic Revival Street was an active member of the
Ecclesiological Society. From an early age he had been interested in the principles of
Gothic architecture, and made frequent tours to study and draw Gothic architecture across Europe. He was an exceptional draughtsman, and in 1855 he published a very careful and well illustrated work on
The Brick and Marble Architecture of Northern Italy, and in 1865 a book on
The Gothic Architecture of Spain. These works inspired the wider use of constructional
polychromy by British architects, sometimes mocked as "The Streaky Bacon Style". At St James the Less, in Thorndike Street, Westminster (1858–61), Street used red brick, with black brick decoration both inside and out, and gave the church a tall, square campanile-like tower, its roof based on a
Genoese model.
Charles Locke Eastlake, writing in 1872, saw this as a prime example of the "revolt from [English] national style" that was occurring amongst Gothic Revival architects at this time, at least in part inspired by
John Ruskin's enthusiasm for the medieval architecture of Northern Italy, and by the publication of
Viollet-le-Duc's exhaustive ''Dictionnaire raisonné de l'Architecture Française du XIe au XVIe Siècle'': Here the whole character of the building, whether we regard its plan, its distinctive features, its external or internal decoration is eminently un-English. Even the materials used in its construction and the mode by which it is lighted were novelties. The detached tower with its picturesquely modelled spire, its belfry stage rich in ornamental brick-work and marble bosses, the semicircular apse and quasi-transepts, the plate tracery, the dormers inserted in the clerestory, the quaint treatment of the nave arcade, the bold vigour of the carving, the chromatic decoration of the roof—all bear evidence of a thirst for change which Mr. Street could satisfy without danger, but which betrayed many of his contemporaries into intemperance. Street was commissioned by
Alexander Lindsay, 25th Earl of Crawford in 1867 to design several aspects of the extension work undertaken at
Dunecht House, Aberdeenshire. These included the Library and a Chapel. In 1868 Street was made Diocesan Architect of
Ripon, in addition to the similar posts which he already held in the dioceses of
York and Oxford, and to which Winchester was subsequently added. He was also appointed Architect to York Minster at around this time, and, later on, to
Salisbury and
Carlisle Cathedrals. == Works ==