Thomas Saunders
Thomas Saunders qualified in 1956 as a chartered architect - Associate Royal Institute of British Architects (ARIBA). In 1961 he set up practice at home as Thomas Saunders Architect. Two years later he moved to rooms over a shop in East London and engaged a secretary, two day-release students and a graduate working for his Part 3 exam at the local School of Architecture in Walthamstow. The principal invited him to fill the vacant post for teaching the two hours a week, Part 3 Professional...See more
Thomas Saunders qualified in 1956 as a chartered architect - Associate Royal Institute of British Architects (ARIBA). In 1961 he set up practice at home as Thomas Saunders Architect. Two years later he moved to rooms over a shop in East London and engaged a secretary, two day-release students and a graduate working for his Part 3 exam at the local School of Architecture in Walthamstow. The principal invited him to fill the vacant post for teaching the two hours a week, Part 3 Professional Practice, which included Business Management in the new 1963 curriculum. He continued for the next four years. He was elected a Fellow of the RIBA in 1967. The practice expanded and was renamed The Thomas Saunders Partnership (TTSP) when Saunders promoted four senior managers to full partnership. By 1982 it had developed into an international practice, with offices in London, Paris, Dubai and Kuwait. The 130 staff included the four partners managing the individual design teams, interior specialists, graphics designers, an office manager running the administration department and a separately managed PR/marketing unit. TTSP was one of the first practices to install CAD. As the Senior Partner, Saunders realised he had promoted himself to a level of incompetence: he was no longer a hands-on practising architect. Robert Townsend's book Up the Organization advocated all chairmen and CEOs to leave after five years in the job, as the enthusiasm wanes, in order to allow others to rise up the business. Having read Joseph Campbell's quote, 'The real killer in life is when you find yourself at the top of the ladder and realise it is leaning against the wrong wall,' Saunders knew he had to explore new challenges. In 1984 he resigned, severed all connections with the practice, and left it in the capable hands of the four remaining partners. (TTSP continues to be a thriving international practice in 2019.) He set up a company as an independent consultant acting as client representative and project director. He also served on the board of City Merchant Developers Limited. He studied for an Advanced Certificate in environmental design and crime prevention and, in 2005, as a newly elected RIBA Client Design Advisor (CDA), a Russian developer appointed him to review a major housing development near Moscow's city centre. He is a professional remote viewer, field dowser and trainer. Thomas Saunders Consultants Limited was closed in 2017. For much of his professional life, Saunders has explored the bonds linking architecture, the human experience, health, the authentic Tarot, the natural world and perennial teachings. His writings and seminars deliver presentations based on the design principles of Plato's seven liberal arts, of Vitruvius and the esoteric mystery school teachings. They aim to recover the perennial, covert, esoteric wisdom of the arts and sciences that have been taught throughout the ages. Goethe's dictum, 'Architecture is frozen music', prompted him to research the fundamental principles of design, geometry and the structure of a building based on harmonic ratios, musical intervals and proportional volumes. These he found to resonate with the same harmonic ratios in human bodies to create a life-enhancing environment. His journey also led him to the profound symbolic language of the archetypes in the Tarot's authentic form and its teachings about the human psyche, human nature and life's journey from naivety to wisdom. The culmination of various aspects of health hazards and the esoteric studies resulted in the publication of his book The Boiled Frog Syndrome - Your Health and the Built Environment in 2001. (Also published in Portuguese in Brazil). This led to a commission to write a peer-reviewed... See less