| HAWKSMOOR | Architect who worked with Vanbrugh and designed six London churches (9) |
| PUGIN | Augustus, architect who worked with Charles Barry on the Houses of Parliament in London (5) |
| EDWIN | ___ Lutyens, architect who worked with gardener Gertrude Jekyll (5) |
| KEWGARDENS | Stop 6: London botanical attraction, and a neighborhood in Queens, NY |
| PETER | And 6 London department store that moved to 4-6 King's Road in 1877 (5,5) |
| POTBOILER | Product of a hack writer, usually a work produced to a formula, in a hurry and designed to earn mone |
| KNELLER | Artist who painted the Hampton Court Beauties series and portraits of Kit-Cat Club members including Joseph Addison, Richard Steele, John Vanbrugh and Robert Walpole (7) |
| CASTLEHOWARD | Stately home near York, designed in 1699 by John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor (6,6) |
| CASTLE | --- Howard, a mansion near York, designed in 1699 by John Vanbrugh and Nicholas Hawksmoor (6) |
| WREN | English architect who designed more than fifty London churches (1632-1723) |
| LUTYENS | Edwin ___; architect who worked on many projects with Gertrude Jekyll (7) |
| VANBRUGH | John -; architect and dramatist who wrote The Provoked Wife and designed Blenheim Palace with Nicholas Hawksmoor (8) |
| GIBBS | Architect who wrote an influential pattern book and designed Radcliffe Camera, St Martin-in-the-Fields, parts of Stowe, Ditchley Park, and, with Colen Campbell, Houghton Hall (5) |
| NEWTOWNS | A planned urban community created in a rural or undeveloped area and designed to be self-sufficient with its own housing and education and commerce and recreation (3,5) |
| GAUDI | Antonio, Spanish architect who worked mainly in Barcelona (5) |
| LORIMER | Exponent of the Arts and Crafts style of architecture who restored a number of historic houses and castles and designed Ardkinglas House; or, a maker of metal bridle parts (7) |
| STOWE | Designed by architects including John Vanbrugh, James Gibbs, William Kent and Robert Adam, the historical country seat of the Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos (5) |
| ADMIRALTYARCH | London landmark commissioned by Edward VII in 1910 in memory of his mother Queen Victoria and designed by Aston Webb (9,4) |
| LANDSEER | Admired by Queen Victoria, artist who specialised in paintings of dogs including Newfoundlands and designed the grand lions at the base of Nelson's Column in London (8) |
| SPRY | Florist who wrote 13 books including Garden Notebook and designed the flowers for the Queen's wedding and coronation (4) |