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Edward Middleton Barry




Among his most significant contributions to London’s architectural scene is the Theatre of the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden . The previous theatre (built by Robert Smirke in 1809 ) was destroyed in a fire in 1857 . Edward Barry was commissioned to design the new "Royal Italian Opera" as it was then known, completing it for its official opening on 15 May 1858 . He also designed the adjacent Floral Hall, a stunning glass and cast iron structure, heavily influenced by The Crystal Palace used in the Great Exhibition Of 1851 . The Covent Garden work was hugely influential in Barry’s appointment to design the Royal Opera House in Valletta , Malta (1866), which is now destroyed.

His other projects included:


Towards the end of his life, Barry began working with his eldest brother Charles Barry (junior) . Among the projects jointly attributed to them are new chambers at Inner Temple , London (completed in 1879), and the design of the Great Eastern Hotel at London’s Liverpool Street Station , completed in 1884, after Edward's death.

From 1873 until he died, Barry was professor of architecture at the Royal Academy ; he remodelled the top of Burlington House’s central staircase in 1876.