Born in
Tynemouth he moved to
Edinburgh in 1897 when his father, Dr William Pope Mears (1855–1901), was appointed to a lecturing post in the Anatomy Department of
Edinburgh University. His mother,
Isabella Bartholomew LDCPE (1853–1936), was one of the first licensed physicians in Scotland and an early Taoist author. The family lived at Woodburn House on Canaan Lane in the
Morningside district of Edinburgh. He trained as an architect, initially under
Hippolyte Blanc (1896–1901), and then, in 1903, under
Robert Weir Schultz (1860–1951). In 1906, after tours of England and the Continent, he returned to Scotland and worked under
Ramsay Traquair (1874–1952). In 1908 he became an assistant to the pioneer planner
Patrick Geddes (1854–1932), working on the Civic Survey of Edinburgh for the first ever Town Planning Exhibition (1910). He worked with Geddes and his daughter Norah on the creation of a Scottish National Zoological Garden 1913–14 which became
Edinburgh Zoo. In 1915 he married Norah Geddes, making
Patrick Geddes his father-in-law. In World War I he served with Geddes' son Alasdair in the Kite Balloon section of the
Royal Flying Corps and, importantly, invented the modern parachute (and quick release buckle) whilst serving as a Major in this role. Mears taught architecture at
Edinburgh College of Art on a part-time basis from 1918. In 1925, he began lecturing on planning and, in 1932, founded a one-year postgraduate diploma course in
Town and Country Planning. He was elected an Associate of the
Royal Scottish Academy in 1936, became full academician in 1943 and served as its President 1944–1950. The University of Edinburgh conferred an
honorary doctorate (
LLD) on him in 1945, and he was made a
Knight Bachelor in the
1946 New Year Honours. He also advised the Department of Health on Housing in Scotland. Frank Mears died in
Christchurch, New Zealand whilst visiting his son, Kenneth Patrick Geddes Mears (1916–2001). His body was returned to
Edinburgh for cremation. A memorial plaque is placed to his memory on the south side of
Warriston Crematorium above a plaque to his other two sons both of whom died young: Alastair Mears (1918-1939) and John M. Mears (1921–1949). ==Hebrew University of Jerusalem==