Sir Evan Owen Williams was an English engineer and architect, known for being the principal engineer for the original Wembley Stadium, and later Gravelly Hill Interchange as well as a number of key modernist buildings, including the Express Building in Manchester and the D10 and D6 Buildings at the Boots Factory Site in Nottingham.
Boots D10 Building in Nottingham, built 1930–32 (Grade I listed in 1971)
Express Building, Manchester, built 1936–39, considered Williams finest architectural work (Grade II* listed in 1974)
Palace of Industry Building in London, first major public building in Britain where concrete was used for the exterior
The original Wembley Stadium was a football stadium in Wembley, London, best known for hosting important football matches. It stood on the same site now occupied by its successor and by its predecessor, Watkin's Tower.
The Twin Towers of Wembley Stadium (2002)
Postcard depicting the "British Empire Exhibition" in 1924
Aerial view of Wembley Stadium, 1991
The Royal Box in April 1986. Trophy presentations took place here.