In the 1880s, Fowler designed the Metropole Hotel (now the
Corinthia Hotel London) in
Northumberland Avenue, London, with fellow architect
James Ebenezer Saunders (1829–1909), both having been appointed by the
Metropolitan Board of Works. The hotel opened in 1885. He was a member of the
Metropolitan Board of Works (MBW, the predecessor of the
London County Council) for Lambeth Vestry from 1868 until his resignation in 1888. Fowler was considered to be a "pillar" of the MBW, and was chairman of the movement to abolish tolls for bridges across the Thames, for which he had done "important and useful work". He was found guilty of corruption, and forced to resign. Rumours circulated that Saunders had exploited his position as an MBW member to obtain commissions for architectural work. The
Financial News had hinted that his role as an architect on the
London Pavilion and the Metropole and Grand Hotels in Northumberland Avenue were "simply because of his position" at the MBW. Fowler and Saunders were both members of the Building Acts Committee and both were on its five-man theatres subcommittee. Despite years of rumours, it took a Royal Commission, the Herschell Commission, to remove them, and they expressed shock that both men refused to admit that they had "behaved reprehensibly". Fowler "made himself out to be unbelievably naive". ==Death==