Patty Hopkins
Patricia Ann Hopkins, Lady Hopkins, , is an English architect and joint winner, along with her husband Sir Michael Hopkins, of the 1994 Royal Gold Medal for Architecture.
Early life
Hopkins was born in Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, to Shelagh and Denys Wainwight. Both parents were doctors, and on her father's side her grandfather was an architect and grandmother a general practitioner.Hopkins was educated at Wycombe Abbey boarding school in Buckinghamshire. After considering a career in science, she opted to take the entrance exam to enrol at London's Architectural Association, in 1959 becoming one of five women out of 60 students. At age 20 she married fellow AA student, Michael Hopkins in Newcastle-under-Lyme, after which they lived in Suffolk until 1970 before moving to North London.
Career
After graduating from the Architectural Association, Hopkins set up her own practice.In 1976 she set up an architectural practice Hopkins Architects with her husband. Notable is the couple's own home, which they built themselves in Hampstead, London, to be used as a flexible live-work space, an office for their business for the next eight years and a home for themselves and their three children. The house had transparent glass walls and an exposed steel frame with a lack of internal walls. Together they continued to create buildings using innovative new materials, for example using lightweight fabric for the Mound Stand at Lord's Cricket Ground.
In 1994 Patty and Michael Hopkins were jointly awarded the Royal Institute of British Architects Royal Gold Medal for Architecture, with the medal citation saying "What best characterises the work of Michael and Patricia Hopkins is an equal appeal to ordinary people and to architects." Patty Hopkins had a major role in the new Glyndebourne Opera House project, completed the same year.
She became an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Institute of Architects in Scotland in 1996 and the American Institute of Architects in 1997. She gave the keynote speech to the Women in Architecture luncheon at the Langham Hotel in 2014.
On her work as a woman architect Hopkins said in 2011 "When I was younger, older men would be rather patronising. You still find certain clients uncomfortable with women architects, but I can't say it exercises me. I'm not a feminist. I'm an architect, trying to concentrate on my work."
Hopkins was appointed Officer of the Order of the British Empire in the 2024 New Year Honours for services to architecture.