Derek Wilson | |
Birth Name: | Derek John Wilson |
Birth Date: | 4 July 1922 |
Birth Place: | New Zealand |
Death Place: | Wellington, New Zealand |
Children: | 3 sons |
Spouse: | Diana June Townsend |
Significant Buildings: | Calvert House Maunsell Beach House Wilson House Marine Research Facilities |
Derek John Wilson (4 July 1922 – 10 June 2016) was a New Zealand architect. He was active in Wellington. He was also known as an environmentalist, and published several works.
Wilson grew up on a coastal sheep station owned by the Riddiford family at Tora, Wairarapa,[1] where his father Clement Henry Wilson was the manager. His mother was Ida Agnes Wilson (née Clarkson). Wilson was the oldest of three children: his sister Joan and his brother Godfrey, who became an Anglican bishop.
Wilson was educated at Wanganui Collegiate School.[1] During World War II, he trained as a pilot in Florida for the Fleet Air Arm.
Wilson trained as an architect at Auckland University College.
After graduating, Wilson left New Zealand and worked in London for Ramsey, Murray, White and Ward (the firm of two New Zealand ex-pats Keith Murray and Basil Ward), as well as for Sir Hugh Casson and the London County Council.
Returning to New Zealand, he settled in Masterton and then moved to Wellington to join forces with William Toomath to set up Toomath and Wilson. Toomath and Wilson were later joined by Don Irvine and Grahame Anderson in 1972, forming the firm Toomath Wilson Irvine Anderson Ltd.
Wilson's design for the Calvert House, in Stokes Valley, was awarded an NZIA Bronze medal. Other work of note includes the Maunsell beach-house[2] at Riversdale Beach, the Wilson house in Khandallah, St Matthew's Church in Brooklyn, Wellington, and his Marine Research Facilities at Wellington's Greta Point (now NIWA) (1980). All are well known as important works in Wellington's architectural history.
He was a member of the Wellington Architectural Centre, including as President (1963) and Committee Member (1961–62, 1964).
A recent book, "Four Architects", celebrates Wellington architecture and includes several of Wilson's designs.[3]
Wilson was also an active advocate for environmental and anti-nuclear issues, and published on both topics.
In 1984, Wilson became the founding co-ordinator of Architects Against Nuclear Arms and was also a member of the Pacific Institute of Resource Management and the National Consultative Committee on Disarmament and Abolition.
Perhaps his most significant published work in this area is a 2001 book titled "Five Holocausts".[4]
Wilson was married to Diana June Townsend. They had three sons and six grandchildren. One of his sons, Martin James Wilson (1959–2022), was an environmentalist, musician and festival organiser.[5]
Wilson died in Wellington on 10 June 2016.[6]