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Sainsbury and Wing
At the same time the African and Oceanic collections that had been temporarily housed in 6 Burlington Gardens were given a new gallery in the North Wing funded by the Sainsbury family-with the donation valued at £ 25 million.
* Sainsbury Wing, National Gallery, London ; United Kingdom ( 1991 )
The Sainsbury Wing, an extension to the west by Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown, is a notable example of Postmodernist architecture in Britain.
* The Dulwich Picture Gallery designed by Soane in 1811 is the archetype for modern art galleries from the Sainsbury Wing at London's National Gallery to the new Getty Center in California.
In 1985 he and his two brothers provided funds to construct a new wing of the National Gallery, London at a cost of around £ 50 million, which opened in 1991 as the Sainsbury Wing.
Sainsbury and his two brothers funded an extension to the National Gallery at a cost of around £ 50 million, which opened in 1991 as the Sainsbury Wing.
In 1984 Charles, Prince of Wales famously described the proposed Sainsbury Wing extension to the National Gallery in London as a " monstrous carbuncle on the face of a much-loved and elegant friend ", a term now widely used to describe architecture, particularly modernist architecture, unsympathetic to its surroundings.
A significant example of postmodernism is Robert Venturi's Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery.

Sainsbury and London
* 2001, J Sainsbury headquarters, Holborn Circus, London, UK
Certainly, Bertrand Russell seems to have espoused such a view in his early philosophical career ( Sainsbury, R. M., Russell, London 1979 ).
When the Company listed on the London Stock Exchange on 12 July 1973, as J Sainsbury plc, his family at the time kept control with an 85 % stake.
Newsquest on 8 August 2007 started offering users of its Greater London titles ' websites downloadable supermarket coupons, which could be redeemed against at supermarkets including Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury ’ s and Morrisons for money off a range of goods from cranberry products to canned pet food.
* 2009 – Japan in Late Victorian London: The Japanese Native Village in Knightsbridge and ' The Mikado ', 1885, Sainsbury Institute, 2009 ISBN 954-592-115-3
From one store in Holborn, London, opened at 173 Drury Lane in 1869, Sainsbury built a chain of grocery stores which numbered 128 when he died in 1928.
Campaign for Better Transport acknowledges the following organisations as sponsors of its charitable trust: Department for Transport, Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, Freshfield Foundation, George W Cadbury Charitable Trust, Gumby Corporation, Hillcote Trust, KeyMed Ltd, London Councils, Merseytravel, Polden Puckham Charitable Foundation, Sainsbury Family Charitable Trusts and Steel Charitable Trust.
* 1961, the Sainsbury Scholarship, London.

Sainsbury and Hall
These included Edward John " Johnny " Jackett ( 1878 – 1935 ), Charlie Mitchell ( 1885 – 1957 ), who looked after Tuke's boats, Willie Sainsbury, Tuke's eldest nephew, Leo Marshall, Georgie and Richard Fouracre, George Williams – younger son of close neighbours, Maurice Clift – nephew of a family friend, Ainsley Marks, Jack Rowling ( also spelled " Rolling "), Freddy Hall, Bert White and Harry Cleave.

Sainsbury and ),
The latest of these include the Earl building, Sainsbury Building ( which won the Civic Trust Award in 1984 ), Linbury Building, Canal Building, Ruskin Lane Building ( for undergraduates ), and the Franks Building ( for graduates ).
J Sainsbury plc, Asda, KKR ( the company which sold Safeway to Argyll in 1986 ), Trackdean Investments Limited ( controlled by Philip Green, owner of BHS and Arcadia ), and Tesco all said they were considering making offers.
It had only a few farmsteads, the odd house, an allotment field ( now under the Sainsbury ’ s store ), the Municipal Borough of Banbury council ’ s small reservoir just south of Easington farm and a water spring lay to the south of it.
* Mark Sainsbury ( philosopher ) ( born 1943 ), United Kingdom philosopher
* Mark Sainsbury ( New Zealand ), New Zealand current affairs presenter
David John Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Turville, FRS ( born 24 October 1940 ), is a British businessman and politician.
Between 1996 ( the year he rejoined Labour ) and 2006 ( when he stood down as a government minister ), Sainsbury donated £ 16 million pounds to the Labour Party, usually in batches of £ 1 million or £ 2 million each year.
Although the October election turnout was very low ( 2. 5 % of eligible to vote taking part ), Lord Sainsbury won the election with 52 % of the votes ( 2893 votes out of 5558 ) and was confirmed to the position on 16 October 2011.
Lord Sainsbury joined Sainsbury's in 1950 ( the year the first self-service store opened in Croydon ), working in the grocery department.
Tuke's sister and biographer, Maria Tuke Sainsbury ( 1861 – 1947 ), was born there.
* John James Sainsbury ( 1844 – 1928 ), co-founder of the major UK supermarket chain Sainsbury's
* John Benjamin Sainsbury ( 1871 – 1956 ), eldest son of John James Sainsbury and Sainsbury's chairman 1928-1956
* John Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Preston Candover ( born 1927 ), great-grandson of John James Sainsbury and Sainsbury's chairman 1969-1992
Eddie Stride ( Rector ), Eric Elstob ( Chair of The Friends of Christ Church and benefactor ), Howard Kenward, Derek Stride and Hosten Garroway ( Wardens ), The Hon Simon Sainsbury ( benefactor ), English Heritage and the Heritage Lottery Fund.

Sainsbury and designed
The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall designed by Norman Foster to house the art collection of Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury, and " Sportspark ", a multi-sports facilities built in 2001 thanks to a £ 14. 5 million grant from Sport England Lottery Fund.
The Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts was designed by Norman Foster, Baron Foster of Thames Bank | Norman Foster to house the art collection of Robert Sainsbury | Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury, whose daughter attended the university
* Sainsbury Centre at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, England, designed by Norman Foster.

Sainsbury and by
The site is now occupied by a large shared Sainsbury / M & S supermarket complex ( originally a SavaCentre opened on 28 February 1989 with of sales area, making it the largest hypermarket in the UK at the time of its opening ).
A takeover of Safeway by Sainsbury, Asda or Tesco was " expected to operate against the public interest, and should be prohibited ".
Frankland retired in 1982 and was succeeded by Dr Alan Borg who had previously been at the Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts.
At more or less the same time, a bequest of tribal art and 20th century painting and sculpture, by artists such as Francis Bacon and Henry Moore, from Sir Robert and Lady Lisa Sainsbury resulted in the construction of the striking Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts at the western end of the main teaching wall, one of the first major works of architect Norman Foster.
This status was again referred to in the presentation by Lord Sainsbury of the second reading leading up to the new United Kingdom Companies Act 2006.
The new building was opened on 14 September 2012 by the College Visitor and Chancellor of the University, the Lord Sainsbury of Turville.
The Trust is operated by Lord Sainsbury of Preston Candover and his wife Anya Linden, a former dancer with the Royal Ballet.
** Two World Systems Englished by T. Sainsbury, 1661
The system was first used in the early 1970s by J. Sainsbury to identify all of its products on supermarket shelves for its product restocking system.
The organ, built by Johannes Klais of Bonn, was named " The Sainsbury Organ " in recognition of the generosity of the Sainsbury family who made a highly significant contribution to the appeal.
From 1992 to 1997, he served as the Chairman of Sainsbury's ( a supermarket chain established by his great-grandfather John James Sainsbury in 1869 ).
On his retirement as Chairman, to avoid any conflict of interest, David Sainsbury placed his then 23 % stake in Sainsbury's into a " blind " trust, to be administered by lawyer Judith Portrait.
When David Sainsbury announced his intention to give away £ 1billion to charity in 2005, his 23 % stake got sold down, eventually to 12. 9 % by early 2007.

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