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  1. Robert Lewis Roumieu (1814 – 1877) otherwise R.L. Roumieu, was a 19th-century English architect whose designs include Milner Square in Islington and an idiosyncratic vinegar warehouse at 33–35 Eastcheap in the City of London.

  2. Hugh Roumieu Gough FRIBA (1843–1904) was an English architect who practised mainly in the London area.

  3. Feb 15, 2021 · Roumieu and Gough the classicists. The earliest building to be executed by the partnership was built in c. 1837 on a site just off Upper Street in the centre of what at that date was in the process of rapid transformation from a village to an inner suburb of London.

  4. The puzzle deepens when one looks at Roumieu's earlier work. His architectural practice (generally in partnership with Gough) was largely con-fined to Islington, Hackney, and other London suburbs: genteel middle-class areas, such as Mr. Pooter was later to inhabit. One would not have thought this the clientele to support architectural craziness.

  5. Feb 19, 2016 · By the time the move to restore it began, with the coming of the railways and the spreading out of London's population, it needed to be radically rebuilt. This work was carried out by the Huguenot architect R. L. Roumieu and his partner A. D. Gough in 1847-48.

  6. Saint Gregory Gilbert Boulton (1865–1936) and Hugh Roumieu Gough (1843–1904)

  7. Alexander Dick Gough (3 November 1804 – 8 September 1871) was an English architect who practised in London, where much of his work may be found. He was a pupil of Benjamin Dean Wyatt, and worked in partnership with Robert Lewis Roumieu between 1837 and 1848.