•
Broughton Place (country house in the style of a 17th-century Scottish tower house in
Broughton, Peeblesshire with decorative reliefs by architectural sculptor
Hew Lorimer) (1938) •
Dinnington High School, Rotherham. House bases and block complex (c. 1954) • Gribloch (country house near Kippen,
Stirling) (1938–39) • Kilsyth Academy,
Kilsyth (opened 1954, designed 1930) • St Ninian and St Martin Church,
Whithorn, Wigtownshire. (
unrealised) • Sea and Ships Pavilions for
Festival of Britain (1951) •
Duncanrig Secondary School,
East Kilbride, Greater Glasgow (1953) •
Basildon Town Centre is a planned town centre developed during the creation of the town of
Basildon, Essex. • Bannerfield Housing Estate, Selkirk, Scottish Borders, 1947-1962 •
St Paul's Church, Wordsworth Avenue,
Sheffield •
Sydenham School,
Sydenham, London (1956) • Agricultural Science Building,
University of Nottingham,
Sutton Bonington campus (1956–58) • The churches of St Oswald, Tile Hill – St Chad, Wood End – St John the Divine, Willenhall. Built simultaneously in Coventry (1957) • Thurso High School
Thurso, Scotland (1957) • The Chadwick Physics Laboratory (1957–9),
University of Liverpool • St. Hugh's Church,
Eyres Monsell Estate,
Leicester (1955–58) • Campus development plan at the
University of Nottingham (1957–60) including Chemistry Building, Physics and Mathematics Building, Mining and Fluid Mechanics Laboratory, Pope Building, Coates Building •
St Catherine of Siena, Richmond in Sheffield (1959) •
Thorn EMI House, 5 Upper St. Martin's Lane, London (1959) (Spence's original exterior was demolished in the 1990s; reborn as Orion House with a full-height floor plate addition and re-skinned elevations. A metal sculpture by Geoffrey Clarke for the original façade (incorporating allusions to electric lamp filaments) has been remounted onto the added lift and service riser.) • Great Michael Rise and Laverockbank Crescent, social housing developments in
Newhaven, Edinburgh • Erasmus Building, Friars Court,
Queens' College, Cambridge (1959–1960) • Froude Building, Highfield Campus,
University of Southampton (1959–1966) • 9 and 10 St Andrew Square,
Edinburgh (1956–62) • Swiss Cottage Leisure Centre (originally 'Swimming Baths'), London (1962–4) (demolished in 1999) •
Swiss Cottage Library (1962–1964), Grade II Listed Building since 1997. • Spence House, near
Beaulieu, Hampshire (designed 1961, for Spence's own use and listed Grade II) •
Coventry Cathedral, completed 1962 • The initial campus design at the
University of Sussex (1960s) including Falmer House (1962, now a Grade I
listed building) • Nuffield Theatre, Highfield Campus,
University of Southampton (1964) •
St Aidan's College,
University of Durham (1964) • The
Beehive, the executive wing of the
New Zealand Parliament Buildings Wellington, New Zealand (1964) •
Worshipful Company of Salters Hall, 1976. Spence died weeks before opening. •
Trawsfyndd Nuclear Power Station (1965) •
Edinburgh University Main Library •
Glasgow Airport (1966) (Spence's original façade was covered over in 1989 when an extension was built to house new check-in desks. The original structure can now be seen only from the check-in hall, departure gates and runway.) • British pavilion,
Expo 67 (1967) •
St Matthew's Church,
Southcote,
Reading (1967) • Newcastle Central Library (1968) – demolished in 2007 • 65 – 103 Canongate, social housing developments in
The Canongate, Edinburgh • Civic Centre,
Sunderland (1970) - demolished in 2022 •
Hyde Park Barracks, London (1970) • Sturmer Way, London (1970) •
British Embassy, Rome (1971) •
Glasgow Royal Infirmary redevelopment – Phases 1 & 2 (1971–82) – now known as the Queen Elizabeth Building and University Block •
Kensington and Chelsea Town Hall (1972–6), including chambers, offices, and public areas •
Aston University Library (1975) (Sir Basil Spence, Glover and Ferguson). Extended and remodelled in 2010 •
50 Queen Anne's Gate (the former Home Office building), London (1976) • The Sydney Jones Library (1976) at the University of Liverpool ==See also==