Architects' Co-Partnership



The Architects' Co-Partnership (ACP) is a firm of English architects, founded in 1939 as the Architects' Cooperative Partnership by recent graduates of the Architectural Association School of Architecture. It encouraged teamwork, and set out to be a practice in which all members would be equal.

Its notable buildings include:
 * Brynmawr rubber factory (Michael Powers, 1946–52, with Ove Arup), the first post-war building to receive listed status
 * Danegrove Primary School (1949–50)
 * Dunelm House, Durham (Richard Raines and Michael Powers, 1966)
 * "Beehives", St John's College, Oxford (Michael Powers, 1958–60), the first modern student accommodation at the University of Oxford
 * St Paul's Cathedral School, London (Leo de Syllas and Michael Powers, 1962–7)
 * University of Essex, Colchester (Kenneth Capon, 1964)
 * Wolfson Building, Trinity College, Cambridge (1968–72)
 * Levi Strauss & Co. UK HQ and distribution centre, Northampton (1999)