Educated at Dr Pinckney's School at East Sheen and at
Eton College, where he rowed in the school eight against Westminster, Currey was articled to the architect
Decimus Burton for five years. He then worked for five years at the office of William Cubitt (1791–1863) and Company of Gray's Inn Road, London. His first medical works were for the Surrey Lunatic Asylum, and soon after, in 1847, he was appointed as the architect and surveyor to the governors of
St Thomas' Hospital, a post he held until his death. In this post, he designed the new hospital, built in the 'pavilion style', which opened on the
Albert Embankment by
Westminster Bridge in 1871, including a teaching hospital and a nursing school to a design approved by
Florence Nightingale. He was also the architect and surveyor to
Coram's
Foundling Hospital and to the
Magdalen Hospital in London. Other notable works include the hotel at
London Bridge Station, 1861–62, a grand 250-room terminus hotel built at a cost of £111,000, later turned into offices for the
LBSCR in 1892 and demolished after bomb damage in 1941 He was a Fellow of the
RIBA from 1856 and served as its vice-president in 1874–77 and 1889–93. He was also a fellow of the
Surveyors' Institute (now the
RICS) and an associate of the
Institution of Civil Engineers. In 1859, he was appointed by the
7th Duke of Devonshire to replace his former architect, James Berry. Currey held the position for 40 years. ==Work at Buxton==