Milner Square, Islington Roumieu and Gough's Milner Square, Islington, has been taken as "an early example of his [Roumieu's] talent for strangeness and distortion."
33–35 Eastcheap In 1868 Roumieu designed 33–35 Eastcheap in the City of London as a vinegar warehouse for
Hill, Evans & Co at a cost of £8,170. It has been seen as "crazy and dazzling" and as one of the
City of London's most original commercial
façades.
Ian Nairn characterised it as "truly demoniac, an Edgar Allan Poe of a building", arguing that it should be preserved "not as an oddity, but as a basic part of human temperament, and one which doesn't often get translated into architecture". Stamp and Amery praise the originality with which "the high
gables broke through the standard
cornice line and the confident canopies gave tremendous vigour to the façade. Describing it as "the
City's masterpiece of polychromatic
Gothic self-advertisement", Pevsner notes itsRed brick with blue brick bands...dressed in Tisbury stone with Devonshire marble columns, all organized into a frenzy of sharp gables, a shaft resting on top of a gable, others starting on
corbels. Strictly symmetrical...twin three-bay outer sections narrow as they rise, exposing a recessed centre with a
dormer in the steep roof." The roofline is accentuated with iron foliage
finials. Above the two lights of the central Gothic window Roumieu placed an animal carving in a medallion, depicting a wild boar peeping out from long grass. This alludes to the celebrated
Boar's Head tavern in Eastcheap which features in Shakespeare's Henry IV plays as the scene of drunken revelry between Young Prince Hal and
Falstaff.
List of other works Roumieu's other work included: • Islington Literary and Scientific Institution (1837, with AD Gough). Now the
Almeida Theatre. • Group of Italianate villas at Tollington Park, Islington (with AD Gough). • St Michael's Church, Bingfield Street,Islington (1863–4). •
St. Mark's Church (1864–6) and Parsonage,
Royal Tunbridge Wells. • French Protestant Hospital (
French Hospital), Victoria Park,
Hackney (1866). Described in John Timbs'
Curiosities of London as "in the pure French domestic style of the early sixteenth century". • Hillside, Brookshill, Harrow Weald (1868). Commissioned by Thomas Francis Blackwell, of the Crosse and Blackwell company, for his daughter-in-law and her children. The main house was reduced to ruins by fire in the 1950s, although Roumieu's coach and stables survive. • Restoration and additions to "Franks", Kent and of Kensworth Church,
Hertfordshire. • Manor Park Estate, Streatham, London. • Prudential Assurance office, Ludgate Hill,
City of London. • Chambers in 10 Old Broad Street, City of London. • Victoria Wharf, Upper Thames Street, City of London. • Woodall's Carriage Factory, Orchard Street, London. • Additions to Itchel Manor House, Itchel, Hampshire and to
Whitbourne Hall, near Worcester. • "The Lymes", Stanmore,
Middlesex. • "The Cedars," Harrow Weald, Middlesex. • Additions to "The Priory" (
Sir James Knight Bruce), Roehampton, and "The Priory," Wimbledon • Several warehouses for the vinegar-makers
Crosse & Blackwell, and stables for the same firm in Crown Street, Soho, London (Crown Street was later absorbed into the new Charing Cross Road). Roumieu was also surveyor to the Gas, Light and Coke Company's Estate at Beckton, the French Hospital Estate, St Luke's, and several other estates in and near London. ==Family==