Richard Gibson Kyle (1820–1903), known professionally as Gibson Kyle, was an English architect practising in and around Newcastle upon Tyne. His father was a Northumberland journeyman mason and contractor-builder. Kyle was articled to his uncle John Dobson and worked with him on local projects such as Newcastle railway station, some of the Quayside buildings, and the King Street-Queen Street block which was the site of a major fire in 1867.
Gibson Kyle
Lowford Bridge, designed by Gibson Kyle snr
Buildings by Dobson and Kyle on Quayside, Newscastle
Newcastle Central Station in 1850
John Dobson was a 19th-century English neoclassical architect. During his life, he was the most noted architect in Northern England. He designed more than 50 churches and 100 private houses, but he is best known for designing Newcastle railway station and his work with Richard Grainger developing the neoclassical centre of Newcastle. Other notable structures include Nunnykirk Hall, Meldon Park, Mitford Hall, Lilburn Tower, St John the Baptist Church in Otterburn, Northumberland, and Beaufront Castle.
Portrait of John Dobson c. mid-1820s, by William Dixon
The grade I listed Beaufront Castle, overlooking the Tyne Valley, designed by Dobson 1835–1841
St Thomas the Martyr, Newcastle, by John Dobson
Newcastle railway station, by John Dobson but with a later portico by Thomas Prosser