English architect Alison Smithson (1928-1993) formed an architectural partnership with her husband Peter, and is often associated with the Brutalist style.
Smithson was born in Sheffield, South Yorkshire. While studying architecture at Durham University (1939-1942), she met Smithson, who she married in 1949. Together, they joined the architecture department of the London County Council before establishing their own partnership in 1950.
Their style draws heavily on influences from Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, leaning towards minimalism. They were associated Team 10 and its 1953 revolt against old Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM) philosophies, arguing instead for 'streets in the sky' where inhabitants could live and work, and with the Independent Group (an off-shoot of the Institute of Contemporary Arts}.
Their projects included:
- Hunstanton Secondary School, Norfolk (1949-1954)
- The House of the Future exhibition (at the 1956 Ideal Home Show)
- The Economist Building, Piccadilly, London (1959-1965)
- Garden building, St Hilda's College, Oxford (1968)
- Robin Hood Gardens housing complex, Poplar, east London (1969-1972)
- Buildings at the University of Bath, including the School of Architecture and Building Engineering (1988)
Alison Smithson died in 1993.