in Suffolk, rebuilt in the 1880s to the design of Balfour & Turner Balfour's first years of architectural practice consisted of small projects for family and friends. These included the restoration of
Inveraray Castle for his father-in-law the Duke of Argyll, an extension to his brother
Arthur's
hunting lodge Strathconan House in
Ross-shire, and the church of St Mary Magdalene in the hamlet of Hatfield Hyde. The church, which is now in
Welwyn Garden City, was originally known as Hyde Chapel. Built as a
chapel of ease within the parish of Hatfield for Balfour's uncle the Marquis of Salisbury, it became the parish church of Hatfield Hyde in 1928. In 1885, Balfour began a professional partnership with
Hugh Thackeray Turner, which lasted until Balfour's death. Balfour had been a member of the
Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings since his undergraduate days in Cambridge, and Turner was the Society's secretary. Together the two men were engaged to rebuild
Ampton Hall in Suffolk, which had been destroyed by fire Their design, in a restrained
Jacobean style, was Balfour's only major
country house commission. , who employed Eustace Balfour as surveyor of the
Grosvenor Estate Work was scarce after
Ampton's completion in 1889, and in 1890 Balfour applied for the post of surveyor for the
1st Duke of Westminster's
Grosvenor Estate, to succeed
Thomas Cundy. He seemed unlikely to be selected, but Frances made a direct approach to the Duke (who was also her uncle), and he got the job. Balfour's social standing appears to have been a significant factor in his appointment. He was the son-in-law of a Duke, nephew of a Marquess, and his wife was the sister-in-law of
Queen Victoria's 4th daughter
Princess Louise (who had married her oldest brother
John in 1871). Balfour had a strong sense of social class, and Frances Balfour later described the 1st Duke of Westminster as having run the estate "not as today on commercial lines, but more as a Principality". Even so, his brother
Gerald's wife Lady Elizabeth Balfour noted that when the surveyor called on the Duke in his professional role he was "never offered a chair and never expected one". The post involved a lot of design work for Balfour, who seems to have been able to take whatever commissions he wanted, often delegating them to Turner. In the 1890s, Balfour and Turner appear to have been the most prolific designers of private houses on the estate, and in 1892 Balfour was made a
Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects. Their own work included most of the wholly redeveloped Balfour Place in Mayfair, formerly known as Portugal Street and renamed for the architect. Balfour also supervised projects which were contracted to other designers. The Duke favoured the domestic revival style of architecture, and particularly insisted on red brick for dwelling houses. Balfour, who deplored the previously fashionable
Gothic revivalism, laid down strict architectural guidelines, sometimes even redesigning the work of others. , Harrow, a Balfour & Turner design which was moved from its original location in Davies Street, London Balfour and Turner also designed
Aldford House on
Park Lane, an "ornate but stunted" free-standing stone mansion for the
diamond magnate Alfred Beit which was replaced in 1932 by a modernist apartment block designed by
Val Myer. Their other most notable work was St Anselm's Church in Davies Street, believed to have been mostly Turner's work, which was regarded as eccentric. Using an
arts and crafts-style blending of influences, it had a plain frontage with a basilican interior, and some gothic tracery. When its demolition was planned in 1938, it was dismissed by
H. S. Goodhart-Rendel as "a purely personal record of Thackeray Turner's particular tastes". However, the building was not in fact demolished. Instead, it was dismantled and reconstructed in altered form at Uppingham Avenue in the north-west London suburb of
Belmont as the church of St Anslelm Belmont. The parish describes it as "a genuinely recycled building". Balfour held the surveyor's post until 1910, when he was succeeded by
Edmund Wimperis. His second decade in the role was less significant than the first, because the death in 1899 of the 1st Duke brought the estate a bill for £600,000 in
death duties (equivalent to £ in ). The resulting financial pressure meant that little rebuilding occurred until 1906, and when it resumed Balfour's influence was diminished. He had little affinity with the hedonistic young
Hugh Grosvenor, 2nd Duke (grandson of the 1st), who
Edwin Lutyens and others had persuaded to adopt a less rigid architectural policy. == Volunteer ==