Wood is known for designing many of the streets and buildings of Bath, such as
St John's Hospital, (1727–28),
Queen Square (1728–36),
Prior Park (1734–41),
The Royal Mineral Water Hospital (1738–42) the
North (1740) and
South Parades (1743–48),
The Circus (1754–68), and other notable houses, many of which are
Grade I listed buildings. In 1716 the architect William Killigrew was commissioned to rebuild the St John's Hospital, which had been founded around 1180, by Bishop
Reginald Fitz Jocelin making it among the oldest
almshouses in England. Construction continued after 1727 with John Wood, the Elder undertaking the building, as his first work in Bath, when he was aged 23. however the ostentatious decoration is not a style he uses elsewhere in Bath. Wood, in his "Essay towards the future of Bath", says — while Mr.Allen was making the Addition to the North Part of his House in Lilliput Alley he new fronted and raised the old Building a full Story higher; it consists of a Basement Story sustaining a double Story under the Crowning; and this is surmounted by an Attick, which created a sixth Rate House, and a Sample for the greatest Magnificence that was ever proposed by me for our City Houses. , Bath
Queen Square was Wood's first speculative development. Wood lived in a house on the square.
Numbers 21–27 make up the north side, which was described by
Nikolaus Pevsner as "one of the finest
Palladian compositions in England before 1730". The west side (numbers 14 – 18 and 18A, 19 and 20) was designed by
John Pinch in 1830 and differs from Wood's original design as the central block is in Neo-Grecian style. 16–18 is now occupied by the
Bath Royal Literary and Scientific Institution. The south side (numbers 5–13) which was originally left open is now occupied by a hotel. In 1742, Wood was commissioned to build a home for the mayor of Bath
Ralph Allen, on a hill overlooking the city of Bath. This building is Grade I listed and has housed
Prior Park College since 1830. There is a fine
pediment, in Bath stone, on 1860 building depicting the
parable of the Good Samaritan. North Parade was part of a wider scheme to build a Royal Forum, including
South Parade,
Pierrepont and
Duke Streets, similar to
Queen Square, which was never completed. Wood designed the
facade, of Bath Stone, after which a variety of builders completed the work with different interiors and rear elevations.
Wood Street was built in 1778 and has been designated as a Grade I
listed building. The street was designed by John Wood, the Elder and built by
Thomas Baldwin in the same style as the adjacent Queen Square. His final masterpiece was the
Circus, built on Barton Fields outside the old city walls of Bath, although he never lived to see his plans put into effect as he died less than three months after the first stone was laid. It was left to his son,
John Wood, the Younger to complete the scheme to his father's design. Wood's inspiration was the Roman
Colosseum, but whereas the
Colosseum was designed to be seen from the outside, the Circus faces inwardly. Three classical
Orders, (Greek
Doric,
Roman/Composite and
Corinthian) are used, one above the other, in the elegant curved facades. The
frieze of the
Doric entablature is decorated with alternating
triglyphs and 525 pictorial emblems, including serpents, nautical symbols, devices representing the arts and sciences, and
masonic symbols. The
parapet is adorned with stone acorn
finials. He demonstrated how a row of town houses could be dignified, almost palatial. The uses of uniform facades and rhythmic proportions in conjunction with classical principles of unerring symmetry were followed throughout the city. ==Architecture outside Bath==