T. P. Figgis
T. P. (Thomas Phillips) Figgis (1858–1948) was a British architect who worked in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He designed both private houses and public buildings. He was the second son of Thomas Gilbert Figgis from Dublin and his wife Margaret Phillips.
One of his best-known projects was the original station buildings for the City & South London Railway, which opened in 1890. He designed the stations at Stockwell, Oval, Kennington, Elephant and Castle, and Borough. When the line was extended, he also designed Clapham North and the Moorgate station and offices. Most of these early C&SLR buildings have been replaced or altered; only Kennington (with minor changes) and Moorgate survive.
Figgis also designed four new stations on the Meon Valley Railway. He did several church commissions for the Presbyterian Church of England, including St Columba's Church in Alfred Street, Oxford (now a United Reformed Church), an extension to St Paul’s Church in the Isle of Dogs, and St Ninian’s Church in Golders Green (now a Hindu temple).
He was the architect of Stotfold, a listed Arts & Crafts house built in 1907 in Bickley, Kent.
This page was last edited on 3 February 2026, at 20:51 (CET).