Following the deaths of her mother in 1896 and father in 1899, Taylor was forced to find work to help support herself and her two younger sisters. She eventually found a position as a clerk in the Parramatta architectural practice of Francis Ernest Stowe, an acquaintance of her father's. Inspired by the example of
draftspeople in the same office who were earning far more than herself, she enrolled in night classes at the
Sydney Technical College where she became the first woman to complete final year studies in architecture in 1904. However she was not accepted at this time, and she later claimed to have been "blackballed" by a groundswell of hostility from the all-male membership who did not wish to admit a woman member. After the Institute had a reorganisation and dropped their entrance exam, she eventually became their first woman to be associate member having "
practised as an architect and at present is serving in an advisory capacity to architects as well as assisting in the production of "The Building Magazine"". She was admitted as a full member in 1923. In April 1907, Taylor married Sydney-born artist, inventor, and craftworker
George Augustine Taylor at St Stephen's
Presbyterian Church in Sydney. They were both passionate about architecture and
town planning, amongst many other interests and activities. Max Freeland described them as "possibly the most amazing couple in Australia's history". Within a few months of their wedding George and Florence Taylor had established a publishing company, Building Publishing Co. Ltd that specialised in building industry journals, spearheaded by
Building magazine, three journals of which Florence edited:
Harmony,
Young Australia and the
Australian (later
Commonwealth)
Home. Taylor's personal assistant was Mary Emily Haworth (1901–1998). Journalist John Canner (1882–1978) also worked on "Building Ltd" where he met and later married Mary Haworth. For some years following their marriage the Taylors lived in Bannerman Street,
Cremorne, in a house designed by the innovative architect,
Henry Austin Wilshire, before moving to an apartment on Loftus Street, Sydney, where their publishing business was also located. In 1913 they were founding members of the Town Planning Association of New South Wales, and Florence served as its secretary for many years. Following her husband's sudden death,
drowning in his bath associated with an
epileptic seizure in 1928, Taylor maintained their publishing business and while forced to close eight of their eleven journals, she maintained
Building (later
Building, Lighting and Engineering) (1907–72),
Construction (1908–74) and the
Australasian Engineer (1915–73), editing them herself and expanding significantly after World War II. She continued to produce town plans and also travelled to Asia, the Americas and Europe bringing back ideas on town planning which informed her writings and speeches. She published a book about her town plans in 1959, authored by her employee J.M. Giles,
Fifty years of town planning with Florence M. Taylor. Taylor was appointed an Officer of the
Order of the British Empire in 1939 and elevated to a
Commander of that order in 1961. ==Retirement and death==