Royal Mint The former Royal Mint, Tower Hill (1807–12). The main building was designed by the previous architect to the Mint James Johnson, but the design was modified by Smirke, who oversaw its execution. The long stone
façade with a ground floor of
channelled rustication, the two upper floors have a broad
pediment containing the
Royal Arms supported by six Roman Doric attached columns. The end bays are marked by four Doric
pilasters; the Greek Doric
frieze and lodges are probably by Smirke. The building contained an apartment for the Deputy Master of the Mint, the Assay Master, and Provost of the Moneyers as well as
bullion stores and Mint Office.
Covent Garden Theatre The second incarnation of the Covent Garden Theatre (now the Royal Opera House), built in ten months in 1808–1809. It had a symmetrical façade with a tetrastyle portico in the centre, and was the first building in London to use the Greek Doric order. The portico was flanked by four bays, the end bays being marked by pilasters with a statue in a niche between. The three bays on each side of the portico had arches on the ground floor and windows above these and a single carved relief above designed by
John Flaxman. The main entrance hall, behind the three doors in the portico, was divided into three aisles by square Doric piers. To the south was the grand staircase, rising between walls, the flight was divided into two sections by a landing, the upper floor had four Ionic columns each side of the staircase that supported a barrel vault over it. The horseshoe-shaped
auditorium was on five levels, and seated 2,800 people, in addition to those in the many private boxes. The building was destroyed by fire in 1857.
Lansdowne House Lansdowne House, (1816–19) interiors, notably the sculpture gallery, central part of room has a shallow
barrel vault with plain coffering;
antae mark off the part circular ends of the room.
London Ophthalmic Hospital Smirke's London Ophthalmic Hospital in
Moorfields (1821–2) moved in 1898 to a nearby site as
Moorfields Eye Hospital.
General Post Office The General Post Office building in St Martins-le-Grand in the
City of London (1825–29; demolished c. 1912). This was the first purpose built
post office in England. Its main facade had a central hexastyle Greek Ionic portico with pediment, and two tetrastyle porticoes, without pediments, at each end. The main interior space was the large letter-carriers' room, with an elegant iron gallery and a
spiral staircase. Bloomsbury (1823–46). This is Smirke's largest and best-known building. Having previously designed a temporary gallery for the
Elgin Marbles following their acquisition by the British Museum in 1816, his role as architect to the Office of Works also led Smirke to be invited to redesign the museum in 1821. The core design dates from 1823, and stipulated a building surrounding a large central courtyard (or quadrangle) with a grand south front. Given the limited funds—which were granted by parliament on an annual basis—and the need to retain the Museum throughout the rebuilding programme, the work was divided into phases, and was subject to various changes before its completion over 25 years later. In particular, Smirke was forced to abandon plans for a much grander quadrangle with interior porticoes, while from the early 1840s modified the severity of the original design (such as sculpture designed by
Richard Westmacott). The building is constructed of brick with the visible facades cased in massive slabs of
Portland stone, which is also used for architectural elements and string courses along the sides of the building. The first part to be constructed was the "King's Library" of 1823–1828, which forms the east wing. The north section of the west wing, the "Egyptian Galleries" followed 1825–1834. The north wing, housing the library and reading rooms, was built in 1833–1838. The southern part of the west wing and south front were built in 1842–1846 following the demolition of the Townley Gallery and then of
Montague House itself. Following Smirke's retirement in 1846, his brother
Sydney Smirke continued to work on the building, adding galleries in the style of the original building, while also building the Round Reading Room in the centre of the quadrangle whose original purpose was superseded. Sydney Smirke also added polychromatic decoration in Greek Revival style to replace the plainer interiors designed by his brother, especially in the entrance hall and sculpture galleries. The main feature of the south front is the great
colonnade of 44
Greek Ionic columns. The columns are 45 feet high and five feet in diameter; their
capitals are loosely based on those of the temple of Athena Polias at
Priene and the bases on those of the temple of Dionysus at
Teos. Many of the mouldings in turn derive from the
Erechtheion in Athens, including the main doorway from the colonnade. At the centre of the colonnade is an
octastyle portico, two columns deep; the colonnade continues for three more columns before embracing the two wings to either side. Beyond the facade Smirke built two smaller wings (the Residences), decorated across the front with Doric pilasters. The Residences originally contained houses for the principal officers of the Museum who were expected to live on site, such as the Principal Librarian (
Director of the museum) and heads of departments (or Keepers). These buildings frame the main building and forecourt without dominating it, while also screening the backs of the buildings in the adjacent streets. The major surviving interiors are the entrance hall with the Great Stair – in the form of an
Imperial staircase– rising to the west, and the "King's Library". This, built to house 65,000 books, is 300 feet long, 41 feet wide and 31 feet high, the centre section being slightly wider, with four great Aberdeen granite columns with
Corinthian capitals carved from Derbyshire alabaster. The only major interior to survive in the north wing is the "Arched Room" at the west end. The "Egyptian Gallery" matches the "King's Library" but is much plainer in decoration. File:SIMPSON, W. after WALKER, E.publ1852 edited.jpg|British Museum, 1852 File:British Museum (front).jpg|Entrance portico, British Museum File:L-british-museum-london.png|Plan of the British Museum File:BM, Main Floor Main Entrance Hall ~ South Stairs.6.JPG|Main Staircase,
Discobolus of
Myron (the Discus-Thrower) File:BM; 'MF' RM1 - The King's Library, Enlightenment 1 'Discovering the world in the 18th Century ~ View South.jpg|King's Library, British Museum File:British Museum Room 1 Enlightenment.jpg|Bookcases in the King's Library, British Museum File:BM, AES Egyptian Sculpture (Room 4), View North.4.JPG|Egyptian Gallery, British Museum
The Inner Temple Smirke's works at the Inner Temple included his only Gothic buildings in London. They included the
library (1827–8) and the remodelling of the Great Hall in 1819 (which burnt down and was rebuilt by Sydney Smirke in 1868). Nearly all Smirke's work was destroyed in the 1940–1941
London Blitz and has been rebuilt to a completely different design, the only major survival being the Paper Buildings of 1838, in a simple classical style.
Former Royal College of Physicians The
Royal College of Physicians and Union Club building (1824–27) in
Trafalgar Square (now Canada House) The building is much altered, the north front though retains Smirke's hexastyle Ionic portico, and the east front (to Trafalgar Square) still has his portico
in antis. The building is of
Bath Stone. There were several extensions and remodellings during the 20th century.
Lancaster House Smirke was first involved with the design of Lancaster House in 1825, was dismissed and then brought back in 1832. He added the top floor, and designed the interiors apart from the State Rooms. His involvement ceased in 1840.
Somerset House The east wing of Somerset House, and the adjacent
King's (formerly Smirke) Building of
King's College London, on the Strand (1829–31). The Thames front follows the design of the original architect Sir
William Chambers being a mirror image of the west wing, the building stretches back toward the Strand by 25 bays of two and half stories, the centre five bays with giant attached Corinthian columns and end three bays are of three full stories and also the end bays have Corinthian pilasters, and general being plainer than the facades by Chambers.
Carlton Club Carlton Club (1833–6) was rebuilt 1854–1856 by Sydney Smirke, bombed in 1940 and later demolished. File:Microcosm of London Plate 100 - New Covent Garden Theatre Microcosm edited.jpg|Covent Garden Theatre, burnt and rebuilt File:Lancaster House London April 2006 032.jpg|Lancaster House File:Herbert Railton - The Inner Temple Library.jpg|Inner Temple Library File:King's1.jpg|King's College London, east wing of Somerset House File:London - Inner Temple.jpg|Paper Buildings, Inner Temple
The Oxford and Cambridge Club The Oxford and Cambridge Club building in
Pall Mall (1835–38). It is of seven bays, the ground floor is
rusticated with round headed windows, the first floor is of banded rustication and the windows framed with square or half pillars, the building is of brick covered with
stucco. The first floor windows have
carved relieves above them, the entrance porch is of a single storey with Corinthian columns. The interiors are in Smirke's usual restrained Greek revival style.
No. 12 Belgrave Square Belgrave Square: Smirke designed No. 12 Belgrave square, built 1830–1833 for
John Cust, 1st Earl Brownlow.
London churches For Smirke's London churches see Church Architecture below. ==Public buildings outside London==