, where he summarised the aim as "No contrivance – clarity is all". In 1990,
Sir Wilfrid Newton, chairman of the MTR, left Hong Kong to become chairman of
London Regional Transport, which Paoletti joined him in London as commissioning architect for the new stations as part of the
Jubilee Line Extension. There had been plans to extend the London Underground's
Jubilee line for many years. The final route for the extension involved eleven stations:
Westminster,
Waterloo,
Southwark,
London Bridge,
Bermondsey,
Canada Water,
Canary Wharf,
North Greenwich,
Canning Town,
West Ham and
Stratford, plus a new depot at Stratford. Since the 1930s, London Underground's architects had designed the surface buildings, but the sub-surface spaces were designed by civil engineers and only fitted out by the architects. Paoletti hired different architects to design each station, while maintaining that all should share an "underlying philosophy and essential elements." His own in-house architect team coordinated the work of the various architect teams, as well working on
Waterloo and
Canada Water stations. == Recognition ==