Holford was heavily involved with the development of post-World War II
British town planning and was largely responsible for drafting the
Town and Country Planning Act 1947.
Cambridge – the Holford-Wright Report In 1948 Holford was appointed by
Cambridgeshire County Council as
consultant to prepare a plan for
Cambridge. In 1950 Holford, along with H Myles Wright produced a report for Cambridgeshire County Council titled "Cambridge Planning Proposals". Holford recommended that Cambridge should not grow. The number of residents should be capped at 100,000 and new
manufacturing should not be allowed to develop with the boundaries of the
county town. Holford's restrictive strategy only unraveled in the early 1980s when 260 small
high tech companies had been established in Cambridge. Much of the report's road proposals were never completed. This included his proposal to build a
ring road around
Cambridge, only sections of which were ever built. These sections include Perne Road, Brooks Road and Barnwell Road. At
Cambridge railway station the report proposed a new footbridge linking East Cambridge directly to the railway station, with a proposed car park and bus stop on a site off Rustat Road opposite the current station. Despite numerous calls over the decades, an eastern entrance to Cambridge railway station has never been built.
Clarendon House Holford designed significant individual buildings, including Clarendon House in
Cornmarket Street, Oxford, which was built in 1956–57 for
F.W. Woolworth. Sir
Nikolaus Pevsner commended Clarendon House in Oxford as one of the best recent buildings in the city's main shopping streets and showing
"how this kind of job can be done tactfully and elegantly." Eton College Holford undertook at least three commissions for
Eton College: Villiers House (under construction 1960), Farrers House (1959) and the ceiling of
Eton College Chapel (1957).
Berinsfield In 1960 Holford redesigned part of the former
RAF Mount Farm, Oxfordshire to form the new village of
Berinsfield. The redesign has been criticized as little more than a huge
council estate.
Piccadilly Circus From 1961 Holford presented a series of plans to solve road traffic congestion at
Piccadilly Circus, some of which included a raised
piazza for pedestrians above the ground-level traffic. This concept was kept alive for the rest of 60s, before eventually being terminated by
Sir Keith Joseph and
Ernest Marples in 1972. The key reason given was that Holford's scheme only allowed for a 20% increase in traffic, whereas the Government wanted 50%.
Paternoster Square Holford is noted for his
redevelopment plan of the area around
St Paul's Cathedral. London had been devastated by aerial bombardment in
the Blitz. However, only part of Holford's concept plan was carried out between 1961 and 1967, foremost the
Paternoster Square development between St Paul's churchyard and Newgate Street. St Paul's churchyard and Newgate Street immediately north of one of the capital's prime tourist attractions was widely considered grim and an embarrassment. A redevelopment competition was launched in 1986 and after numerous changes in plans and architects, the new Paternoster Square was completed in 2003.
Brasília and Durban Holford was a sought-after consultant outside the UK. In 1957 he was part of the committee selecting
Lúcio Costa's plan for
Brasília. Between 1965 and 1968 he produced reports on the development of
Durban in South Africa.
Canberra In the mid-1950s the
Robert Menzies Government of Australia asked Holford to report on the planning and development of
Canberra, which had become disorganised due to the
Great Depression, World War II and post-war economic stringency. His report led to the creation of the
National Capital Development Commission (NCDC), which controlled Canberra's development 1957–89, when the city as it exists today was created. He also advised extensively on Canberra's planning and this advice was largely accepted by the NCDC and led to the evolution of Canberra into a city of car-based suburbs based on the
British New Town concept. William Holford and Partners worked with English landscape architect
Sylvia Crowe on the design of
Commonwealth Gardens in 1964. One unfortunate legacy is the NCDC's acceptance of his recommendation that the proposed new
Parliament House be built on the banks of
Lake Burley Griffin, rather than on
Capital Hill. In 1978 the
Parliament of Australia decided that Parliament House would be built on
Capital Hill as proposed by its original planner
Walter Burley Griffin. The use of the area that the Parliament House was to occupy under the Holford plan has never been fully resolved. ==References==