The firm designed the high altar of the church of St John Cantius and St Nicholas Catholic Church in Broxburn, West Lothian in caen stone and marble.[2]
There are reputedly about a hundred buildings by the firm in Australasia, built from the mid-1850s onwards, for the Roman Catholic Church. All but one are in Australia; the singular example in New Zealand is the 1894 Bishop's Palace in Saint Mary's Bay, Auckland, commissioned by Dom John Edmund Luck OSB (1840–1896), the fourth Bishop of Auckland (in office: 1882–1896). John Luck had been a monk of St Augustine's in Ramsgate, Kent, England – that monastery was funded by the Reverend Alfred Luck, John's father, and built by Edward Welby Pugin in 1861, near the Luck family house formerly the home of (and designed by) A. W. Pugin and its neighbour the Pugin-designed St Augustine's Church, Ramsgate. John Luck joined the Benedictine novitiate in 1861; he became Bishop of Auckland in 1882.[3]
References
^"Pugin & Pugin". Dictionary of Scottish Architects. 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2017.