Amon Wilds

Amon Wilds
Born1762
Lewes, England
Died12 September 1833 (aged 70–71)
Brighton, England
NationalityEnglish
OccupationArchitect
BuildingsCastle Place, Lewes;
Holy Trinity Church, Brighton;
The Temple, Brighton;
Union Chapel, Brighton
ProjectsExtension to All Saints Church, Lewes;
Regency Square;
Kemp Town;
Brunswick estate
Amon Wilds was involved in the design of Arundel Terrace, the first part of Kemp Town to be completed.
Wilds built The Temple for Thomas Read Kemp.
Ammonite capitals on a building in Old Steine, Brighton
Amon Wilds's gravestone in St Nicholas' Churchyard

Amon Wilds (1762 – 12 September 1833) was an English architect and builder. He formed an architectural partnership with his son Amon Henry Wilds[note 1] in 1806 and started working in the fashionable and growing seaside resort of Brighton, on the East Sussex coast, in 1815. After 1822, when the father-and-son partnership met and joined up with Charles Busby, they were commissioned—separately or jointly—to design a wide range of buildings in the town, which was experiencing an unprecedented demand for residential development and other facilities.[1] Wilds senior also carried out much work on his own, but the description "Wilds and Busby" was often used on designs, making individual attribution difficult. Wilds senior and his partners are remembered most for his work in post-Regency Brighton, where most of their houses, churches and hotels built in a bold Regency style remain—in particular, the distinctive and visionary Kemp Town and Brunswick estates on the edges of Brighton, whose constituent parts are Grade I listed buildings.[2][3]


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