John Vanbrugh created many disparate works, and this is a list of many of the notable ones.
- Castle Howard, c. 1699 (west wing designed by Sir Thomas Robinson only completed in early 19th century).
- The architect's own house in Whitehall, 1700–1701, known as "Goose-Pie House", demolished 1898.
- The Orangery, Kensington Palace, 1704: probably a modification by Vanbrugh to a design by Hawksmoor.
- Haymarket Theatre, 1704–05, has been completely rebuilt since and is now known as His Majesty's.
- Blenheim Palace, 1705–1722, stable court never completed.
- Grand Bridge, Blenheim, 1708–1722.
- Kimbolton Castle, 1708–1719, remodelled the building.
- Demolished part of Audley End and designed new Grand Staircase, 1708.
- Claremont House, 1708, then known as Chargate (rebuilt to the designs of Henry Holland in the 18th century).
- Kings Weston House, 1710–1714.
- Grimsthorpe Castle, 1715–1730, only the north side of the courtyard was rebuilt.
- Eastbury Park, 1713–1738, completed by Roger Morris who amended Vanbrugh's design (demolished except for Kitchen Wing).
- Cholmondeley Castle 1713 Vanbrugh prepared a design to rebuild the house, but it is believed not to have been executed
- The Obelisk, Castle Howard 1714
- Morpeth Town Hall, 1714. (Front renewed and back replaced in 1869–70.)
- The Belvedere, Claremont Landscape Garden, 1715.
- Vanbrugh Castle, 1718–19, the architect's own house in Greenwich. Additionally, houses for other members of Vanbrugh's family (none of which survived beyond 1910).
- Stowe, Buckinghamshire, c.1719, added north portico, also several temples and follies in the gardens (the surviving follies are: the Wolfe Obelisk (c.1720), relocated 1759; the Rotunda (1720–21) dome altered; the Lake Pavilions (c.1719) altered) up until his death.
- The Temple, Eastbury Park (early 1720s) demolished
- Robin Hood's Well, Yorkshire C.1720
- The Dairies (east house), c.1720
- Seaton Delaval Hall, 1720–1728.
- Lumley Castle, 1722, remodelling work.
- Pyramid Gate, Castle Howard 1723
- Walled Kitchen Garden, Claremont (c.1723)
- Newcastle Pew, St George's Church, Esher, 1724.
- The Bagnio (water pavilion), Eastbury Park (1725) demolished
- Temple of the Four Winds, Castle Howard, 1725–1728.
Attributed works include:
- Completion of State rooms, Hampton Court Palace, 1716–1718.
- Ordnance Board Building, Woolwich, 1716–1720.
- Chatham Dockyard Great Store House 1717, now demolished, Vanburgh or Hawksmoor were possibly involved in the design
- Berwick Barracks, 1717–1721.
- The Brewhouse, Kings Weston House (c.1718)
- Chatham Dockyard Main gate 1720, is possibly by Vanburgh or Hawksmoor
- Loggia, Kings Weston House (c.1722)
Gallery of architectural work
Vanbrugh's architectural work- Castle Howard, north front
- Castle Howard, north front
- Castle Howard, south front
- Castle Howard, south front
- Great Hall, Castle Howard
- Antique Passage, Castle Howard
- Great Obelisk, Castle Howard
- The Temple of Four Winds, Castle Howard
- Pyramid Gate, Castle Howard
- Blenheim Palace, north front
- North portico, Blenheim Palace
- Blenheim Palace, from the south-west
- Blenheim Palace, view north along the chapel colonnade
- Entrance to Kitchen court, Blenheim Palace
- Kitchen court, Blenheim Palace
- South front, Blenheim Palace
- North front, Blenheim Palace
- East front, Blenheim Palace
- Plan of Blenheim Palace, the colonnade enclosing the courtyard was never built
- Great Hall, Blenheim Palace
- Saloon, Blenheim Palace
- Grand Bridge, Blenheim Palace
- Kimbolton Castle
- Seaton Delaval Hall, north front
- Seaton Delaval Hall, north front
- East wing, Seaton Delaval Hall
- Seaton Delaval Hall, from the south-west
- Seaton Delaval Hall, from the south-east
- Great Hall, Seaton Delaval Hall
- Stables, Seaton Delaval Hall
- Belvedere, Claremont
- South front, Kings Weston House
- East front, Kings Weston House
- Loggia, Kings Weston House (attributed to Vanbrugh)
- The Brewhouse, Kings Weston House (attributed to Vanbrugh)
- Grimsthorpe Castle, from the north
- Grimsthorpe Castle, detail of the north front
- Eastbury House, Doset, the surviving kitchen wing
- Lumley Castle
- Vanburgh Castle, Greenwich
- North portico, Stowe House
- Western Lake Pavilion, Stowe
- Wolfe Obelisk, Stowe
- Rotunda, Stowe
- Morpeth Town Hall, Northumberland
- Robin Hood's Well, Yorkshire
- Ordnance Board Building, Woolwich Arsenal, London (attributed to Vanbrugh)
- Chatham Dockyard gateway (possibly by Vanbrugh)
- Newcastle Pew, St. George's Church Esher
Notes and references
- "The Castle Howard Story: The Building of Castle Howard". Castle Howard. Archived from the original on 15 April 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
- Beard, p. 70.
- The London Encyclopaedia, ed. Ben Weinreb and Christopher Hibbert, rev. ed. (London: Macmillan London, 1993; ISBN 0-333-57688-8), pp. 311, 438.
- Beard, p. 71
- "Her Majesty's (London)". Theatre's Trust. Retrieved 9 June 2010.
- "Blenheim Palace". World Heritage Sites. UNESCO. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
- Sherwood and Pevsner, p. 473.
- Saumarez Smith, The Building of Castle Howard, p.96.
- John Julius Norwich, The Architecture of Southern England (London: Macmillan London, 1985; ISBN 0-333-22037-4), p. 208.
- Geoffrey Tyack and Steven Brindle, Blue Guide Country Houses of England (London: Black, 1994; ISBN 0-393-31057-4), p.468.
- Norwich, The Architecture of Southern England, p. 27.
- Tyack and Brindle, Blue Guide Country Houses of England, pp. 315–16.
- Norwich, The Architecture of Southern England, p. 182.
- page 141, The Work of Sir John Vanbrugh, Geoffrey Beard, 1986, Batsford Books, ISBN 0-7134-4679-X
- page 132, The Building of Castle Howard, Charles Saumarez Smith, 1990, Faber and Faber, ISBN 0-571-14238-9
- John Grundy et al., Northumberland (London: Penguin, 1992; ISBN 0-14-071059-0), pp. 73, 397.
- Tyack and Brindle, Blue Guide Country Houses of England, pp. 468–69.
- Beard, p. 56.
- Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner, London 2 South (London: Penguin, 1983; ISBN 0-14-071047-7), p. 273.
- pages 13, 24 & , Stowe Landscape Gardens, 1997, Jonathan Marsden et al, National Trust 1997
- Norwich, The Architecture of Southern England, p. 69.
- page 117, Vanburgh, Kerry Downes, 1977 A. Zwemmer Ltd, ISBN 0-302-02769-6
- page 46 ,Sir John Vanbrugh Storyteller in Stone, Vaughan Hart, 2008, Yale University Press
- "The Dairies (east house)". National Heritage List for England. Historic England. Retrieved 7 January 2025.
- Grundy et al., Northumberland, pp. 73, 561–63.
- Beard p. 66
- page 134, The Building of Castle Howard, Charles Saumarez Smith, 1990, Faber and Faber, ISBN 0-571-14238-9
- page 235 ,Sir John Vanbrugh Storyteller in Stone, Vaughan Hart, 2008, Yale University Press
- Norwich, The Architecture of Southern England, p. 618.
- page 27, The Country Houses of Sir John Vanbrugh: From the Archives of Country Life, Jeremy Musson, 2008, Aurum
- Saumarez Smith, The Building of Castle Howard, pp. 144–46.
- Cherry and Pevsner, London 2 South, p. 494.
- The attribution is described as plausible in Bridget Cherry and Nikolaus Pevsner, London 2 South, p. 287.
- ^ page 164, The Work of Sir John Vanbrugh, Geoffrey Beard, 1986, Batsford Books, ISBN 0-7134-4679-X
- pages 153-154, English Homes, Period IV - vol.II, The work of Sir John Vanbrugh and his School 1699-1736, H. Avery Tipping and Christopher Hussey, 1928, Country Life
- page 177,Sir John Vanbrugh Storyteller in Stone, Vaughan Hart, 2008, Yale University Press
- Described as a misattribution in Grundy et al., Northumberland, pp. 74, 178–79. Grundy et al. attribute the design to Hawksmoor, saying that this was probably modified in execution by Andrews Jelfe.