David Rock (born in Sunderland, 1929 - 15 November 2025) was an English architect, graphic designer, illustrator and painter, who was twice RIBA vice-president (1986-87 and 1995-97) and RIBA president from 1997 to 1999.
From school, Rock went to the Newcastle University School of Architecture, Planning and Landscape (then part of Durham University) from 1947 to 1952, [1] leaving with a first-class honours. [2] He studied under Lord Holford and Peter Smithson who described him as "the most naturally gifted and talented architect he'd ever met". [3] He then worked for Basil Spence for five years. [2]
He joined Grenfell Baines & Hargreaves in 1959 as Associate Partner to open its first London office; this office initially operated out of Rock's flat in Earls Court. Rock was responsible for expanding BDP's London office during the 1960s, [2] becoming an equity partner in 1964.
He resigned from BDP in 1971 and went into partnership with another former BDP architect, John Townsend, [2] an expert on bürolandschaft. In 1972, Rock Townsend opened Workspace, developing the idea of multidisciplinary working by providing office space for small design businesses; [2] [4] a former Sanderson wallpaper factory in Chiswick, west London was converted into the Barley Mow Centre, providing workspaces for craftspeople, designers and architects. [2] In the 1980s, Rock Townsend designed the postmodern Angel Square development in Islington [2] (partially demolished in the 2020s). [5]
Rock was a supporter of the radical architecture group Archigram in the 1960s and 1970s. He nominated them for the RIBA Royal Gold Medal, which they received in 2002, [6] describing the group as "a necessary irritant". [7]
Rock left Rock Townsend in 1993, and, after two separate terms as RIBA vice-president (1986-87 and 1995-97), was RIBA president between 1997 and 1999. [2] During his presidency, he oversaw the handover of over one million items from the RIBA archive to the V&A, [2] and chaired the Stirling Prize panel that awarded the 1998 Building of the Year title to the Imperial War Museum Duxford in Cambridgeshire. [8]
Chair of the Scottish Society of Architect Artists, [4] an exhibition of Rock's paintings, including early student and postgraduate drawings through to more recent works, was held at the Eleven Spitalfields Gallery in east London in 2022. [2] [9]