Obituary
Léon Krier
obituary
Visionary
architect appointed master-planner by King Charles for his model new town of
Poundbury in Dorset
Oliver
Wainwright
Wed 25 Jun
2025 17.44 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2025/jun/25/leon-krier-obituary
A colonnade
of doric columns flanks the entrance to the neoclassical Waitrose building in
Poundbury, Dorchester, in Dorset, facing on to the congested car park of Queen
Mother Square. Across the plaza stands a creamy yellow palazzo, crowned with a
royal crested-pediment, and a Palladian hotel named the Duchess of Cornwall. A
gigantic brick campanile rises above the Royal Pavilion from a triumphal stone
arch, looming over the square.
“It was
supposed to be the magistrates court,” the town’s master-planner, Léon Krier,
told me in 2016, on a tour of the then Prince Charles’s model village. “But it
ended up as luxury flats. I suppose that’s the spirit of our time. After all,
the master-planner is not the master of the game.”
Krier, who
has died aged 79, was one of the most influential town planners of his
generation, but not always in the way he intended. He was a leading figure of
the New Urbanism movement, advocating a return to traditional, walkable
neighbourhoods and compact, human-scale development, railing against modernism
as the “perpetrator of sprawl”. And yet his work often led to car-reliant
dormitory towns, exclusive gated communities, and the very suburban sprawl he
despised.
Poundbury is
Krier’s most substantial built legacy, a project that was widely ridiculed when
it began in the 1980s, but which time has vindicated in many ways. Set in 200
hectares of the Duchy of Cornwall in Dorset, the plan was modelled on an
18th-century English village, with narrow, winding streets, lined with
traditional terraced homes, leading to public squares, where grander classical
buildings would indicate their civic function.
Critics
compared it to Marie Antoinette’s “hameau” in Versailles, a pretend rustic
hamlet where the haughty queen played at being a peasant. The Observer slammed
it as “fake, heartless, authoritarian and grimly cute,” decrying its
“counterfeit design and cack-handed pastiche.”
Yet unlike
so many lifeless developer-built estates, it combined industrial space, stores
and small workshops among the housing, now employing 2,600 people in 250
businesses. It has worked: house prices are up to a quarter higher than the
surrounding area, while 35% of the homes are affordable, scattered throughout
the development, rather than corralled into separate blocks.
Far from
being an anachronism, Poundbury’s principles of mixed-use, low-rise
high-density have been widely taken up, forming the basis of the present
government’s new towns plan – if, perhaps, without the classical fancy dress.
Krier was
born in Luxembourg to Jean, a tailor who specialised in bishops’ robes, and his
wife, Emma (nee Lanser). As a child he had dreams of becoming a professional
pianist, but eventually followed his elder brother, Robert, by studying
architecture at the University of Stuttgart, where he developed an enthusiastic
interest in the work of Albert Speer, architect of the Nazi regime. He dropped
out in 1968, after only a year.
Many years
later, in 1985, Krier wrote a book on Speer that brought him notoriety and
condemnation, but he always insisted that architecture could be separated from
the ideology of the regime it serves. “You can accuse almost every decent
building in the past of being built by a regime which you don’t agree with,” he
said. “If your clients are evil people, but they let you build what you think
is right, you should do it. These evil people will leave something behind which
is going to better serve mankind.”
Having
dropped out from his studies, Krier sent his portfolio of drawings to the
architect James Stirling in London, who spotted the talent in this confident
young draughtsman and hired him.
Together
they worked on a project for Olivetti headquarters in Milton Keynes, and a
competition for the Siemens headquarters in Munich. Both were unrealised, but
Krier’s neoclassical proclivities had a great influence on Stirling as he
shifted towards postmodernism, incorporating historical motifs and playful
touches in his work.
However,
after three years with Stirling, Krier decided to move into teaching
architecture and urbanism at the Architectural Association from 1974 to 1976,
where Zaha Hadid was one of his students, and then at the Royal College of Art
in 1977.
Something of
a lone voice in the 70s, he saw modernism as an aberration, a “totalitarian
ideology” responsible for the “garbage culture” of the North American city,
which he saw as “a place of damnation”. He published his fiery proclamations in
pithy texts, illustrated by witty cartoons, but his work mostly remained on
paper, in the world of hypothetical plans – in part thanks to his stubborn
refusal to compromise.
“I can only
make architecture,” he said, “because I do not build.” He thought that
“accepting compromises means losing. I have seen it in all my friends who
build.”
That changed
when Krier met the then Prince of Wales. Their first encounter, at an
exhibition of Krier’s unrealised vision for Spitalfields market in 1986, led to
several invitations to Highgrove. At one such meeting, two years into sharing
their passions for traditional architecture, Charles had a brainwave. “We were
sitting in the garden at the palace,” Krier told me. “Then HRH banged the
table, pointed at me, and said: ‘How can I build Krier Town?’”.
Though Krier
generally approved of the results, he thought some of the first Poundbury
buildings were “ghastly”, criticising the architects for getting their columns
upside down and chastising the builders for making most of the homes with
concrete blocks, not load-bearing stone, as he had wished. As the
master-planner he had little control over such things. Begun in 1993, the
project is due to be completed by late 2028, when it will be home to around
6,000 people.
Krier might
have longed to revive the golden age of European city building, but his most
receptive audience was found in Florida. There he master-planned Seaside, a
resort community of white picket fences where The Truman Show was filmed, and
where he built a house for himself, styled like a Greek temple perched atop a
clapboard villa.
His other
completed buildings in Florida included a town hall for Windsor, a luxury
golf-themed gated community in North Beach, styled like a huge dovecot, and an
architecture centre for the University of Miami, crowned with art deco-ish
turrets. He also realised an archaeology museum in Portugal, a plan for the
city centre of Alessandria in Italy, and an exclusive extension to Guatemala
City, called Cayalá, advertised as a place “where the rich can escape crime”.
Many more
elaborate visions came to nought. In 1987 Krier concocted a utopian “academic
village” in Tenerife, called Atlantis, commissioned by a pair of German art
gallerists. Inspired by Persian, Greek and Roman architecture, dotted with
pyramids, obelisks and conical spires, it was to be a place, said Krier, where
“meritorious individuals who excel in their fields of science, humanities,
arts, ecology, crafts, philosophy, farming” would be invited to live. It never
left the realm of the evocative renderings painted by his first wife, Rita
Wolff.
More
recently Britain narrowly missed out on a final Krier confection when his
£2.3bn scheme for the site of Fawley power station on the Solent, near
Southampton, was abandoned last year, on grounds of viability. He had once
hoped to top the power station’s defunct 200-metre high chimney with a
classical capital, to make it the largest Tuscan column in the world. Sometimes
such flights of fancy prove impossible without the patronage of a prince.
Krier is
survived by his second wife, Irene Stillman (nee Pérez-Porro), whom he married
in 2021. His brother Robert died in 2023.
Léon Ernest Krier, town planner, born 7 April
1946; died 17 June 2025

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