Charles Herbert Aslin
{{Short description|English architect}}
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{{Use British English|date=April 2017}}
Charles Herbert Aslin CBE {{Post-nominals|post-noms=PPRIBA}} (15 December 1893 – 18 April 1959) was a British architect.
He was born in Ecclesfield, Sheffield, the son of steelworker Arthur William and Louisa Aslin and educated at Sheffield Central School and Sheffield University. During the First World War he served in the Army Pay Corps and the Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry before being made a captain in the Royal Artillery. {{cite web|url= http://users.whsmithnet.co.uk/ceedeebeegermantranslators/chas/bground.html|title= The Background to The Charles Herbert Aslin Society|accessdate= 2 September 2013|url-status= dead|archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20080820061337/http://users.whsmithnet.co.uk/ceedeebeegermantranslators/chas/bground.html|archivedate= 20 August 2008|df= dmy-all}}
After the war he was admitted to the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) as an associate, becoming a fellow in 1932. He took a post in the city architect's department in Sheffield, and in 1922 was appointed as borough engineer in Rotherham, where he designed the new municipal offices. After a few years as a lecturer at Sheffield University he became an associate of the Institution of Civil Engineers and was appointed deputy county architect of Hampshire.
file:Exeter bridge (geograph 2377798).jpg
In 1929 he became the Borough Architect for Derby responsible for the planning of major changes in the layout of the town under the title of Central Improvement Plan (CIP). In that role he is credited with the design of several major buildings both within the CIP and also elsewhere in the town, including the original 1933 Bus Station, Police Station/Magistrates' Courts, Council House, Riverside Gardens, Exeter Bridge, Exeter Place Apartments and the former Covered Market.
After the Second World War he moved to become county architect of Hertfordshire County Council, where he introduced the concept of pre-fabricated construction techniques to meet an urgent demand for new schools. Over 100 such schools were built over the next decade to his C20 pre-fabricated design. {{cite web| url = http://www.answers.com/topic/charles-herbert-aslin#ixzz2djRIVzuM|title= Oxford Dictionary of Architecture & Landscaping:Charles Herbert Aslin|publisher= Oxford Dictionary of Architecture & Landscaping| accessdate = 2 September 2013}}
In 1945, he was elected to the council of R.I.B.A. and elected president for 1954–56. He retired in 1958 and died in Hertford in 1959. He had married Ethel Fawcett Armitage, with whom he had one daughter.
Works
- Exeter Bridge, Derby (1931)
- Derby Bus Station (1933, closed 2005, demolished 2006)
- Derby Magistrates Court and Police Station (empty since 2004)
- Derby Council House
- Exeter House, Derby
- Queen Street Swimming Baths, Derby
Gallery of architectural work
File:Derby 023.JPG|Council House, Derby
File:Exeter Bridge.jpg|Exeter Bridge, Derby
References
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- {{cite ODNB|url = http://oxfordindex.oup.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/30478|title= Aslin, Charles Herbert (1893-1959), architect|chapter= The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography|year= 2004|pages= ref:odnb/30478|doi= 10.1093/ref:odnb/30478|accessdate = 2 September 2013}}
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Category:20th-century English architects
Category:Presidents of the Royal Institute of British Architects
Category:Architects from Yorkshire
Category:British Army personnel of World War I
Category:Royal Army Pay Corps soldiers
Category:Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry soldiers
Category:Royal Artillery officers
Category:Associates of the Royal Institute of British Architects