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Encyclopedia > Erno Goldfinger
The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. The correct title is Ernő Goldfinger.

Ernő Goldfinger, 1902 - 1987, Hungarian born architect and designer of furniture, and a key member of the architectural Modern Movement in England. His name was also the inspiration for the name of James Bond's opponent in the 1959 book Goldfinger (and the 1964 film of the same name).


Born in Budapest, Hungary in 1902, in 1921 Ernő moved to Paris after the collapse, following World War I, of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. In 1923 he went to study at the École nationale supérieure des beaux arts, and in the following years got to know many other Paris based architects including Auguste Perret, Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier. In 1929, before finishing his course, Goldfinger established a partnership and worked on a number of interior designs and an extension to a holiday home at Le Touquet.


Goldfinger and his new wife, Ursula Blackwell, moved to a flat in Highpoint I, England, in 1934. Before World War II, Goldfinger built only his own house (and two others) at 1-3 Willow Road in Hampstead, north London, and another at Broxted, Essex. His own house, 2 Willow Road, is now in the care of the National Trust.


(As he was a neighbour of Goldfinger, it has been suggested that it was author Ian Fleming's dislike of the Willow Road houses that prompted him to name the James Bond adversary and villain: Goldfinger.)


After the War (appropriately, as a supporter of communism), Goldfinger was commissioned to build new offices for the Daily Worker newspaper and the headquarters of the British Communist Party. He also built Alexander Fleming House at Elephant and Castle in south-east London for the Ministry of Health.


In an attempt to solve the huge shortage of housing in the country following World War II, in which nearly one in three houses had been destroyed or damaged, the British Government began to see high-rise buildings as a solution, and Goldfinger rose to prominence in England as a designer of tower blocks.


Among his most notable buildings of the period were Balfron Tower, 27-floor high (north of the Blackwall Tunnel, in Poplar in the east London Borough of Tower Hamlets), and the adjacent seven-storey Carradale House. These served as models for the design of the similar 31-floor Trellick Tower (in North Kensington; started 1968, completed 1972). Although Goldfinger enjoyed living in his own buildings, they were unpopular both amongst the public and many post-modernist architects.


Towards the end of the 20th century Goldfinger's work has become a little more appreciated. Trellick Tower is now a grade II* listed building, and the few privately owned flats within are popular; Balfron Tower and Carradale House are also listed grade II*.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
Ernö Goldfinger / Designing Modern Britain - Design Museum : Architect (1902-1987) - Design/Designer Information (2686 words)
Goldfinger even planned to add a pub to Trellick, only to convert that space into the office where he would work for the last five years of his career.
Goldfinger’s early British projects were modest ones, such as a shop and exhibitions for the toy makers Paul and Marjorie Abbatt, while a more ambitious scheme to modernise Seaford on the Sussex coast was unrealised.
Goldfinger’s resurrection was marked by his inclusion with the Smithsons in This Is Tomorrow, a ground-breaking 1956 exhibition of the emerging pop movement in art, design and architecture at the Whitechapel Art Gallery in London.
ErnÅ‘ Goldfinger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (756 words)
Ernő Goldfinger (November 11, 1902 – November 15, 1987) was a Hungarian-born architect and designer of furniture, and a key member of the architectural Modern Movement after he had moved to the United Kingdom.
In the early 1930s Goldfinger met and married Ursula Blackwell, heiress to the Crosse and Blackwell fortune.
Goldfinger consulted his lawyers when the book was published in 1959 (which prompted Fleming to threaten to rename the character 'Goldprick') but eventually decided not to sue; Fleming's publishers agreed to pay his costs and gave him six free copies of the book.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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