Frank Kenneth Milne | |
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Born | Adelaide, South Australia, Australia | 18 July 1885
Died | 3 October 1980 Adelaide, South Australia | (aged 95)
Occupation | Architect |
Spouse | Hazel Muir Fotheringham |
Children | Lance Milne |
Practice | F. Kenneth Milne & Evans F. Kenneth Milne, Evans & Russell F. Kenneth Milne, Dawkins & Boehm Others |
Buildings | South Australian Brewing Co. Woodards House Arbury Park (later Raywood) Sunnyside, North Adelaide, his own residence Ozone Marryatville remodelling |
Frank Kenneth Milne (18 July 1885 – 3 October 1980), usually referred to as F. Kenneth Milne, was an Australian architect based in Adelaide, South Australia. He was regarded as one of the leading architects in the state in 1920, and continued to design buildings even in retirement. He went into partnership with a series of other architects over the course of his career, including John Richard Schomburgk Evans,[a] Charles Alexander Russell, and Rolfe Vernon Boehm. He is also known for his work as a cinema architect, having been the appointed architect for Ozone Theatres in the 1930s.
He and his wife established the Kenneth and Hazel Milne Travelling Scholarship at the University of Adelaide in 1958. Several of his designs survive today, with many heritage-listed, including Woodards House in Waymouth Street, Adelaide, the remodelled Regal Theatre in Kensington Park, and his own home in Stanley Street, North Adelaide.
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