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Tributes paid to Plymouth architect Ian Potts after death aged just 66

Co-founder of architecture practice ADG was responsible for some of South West's most eye-catching buildings

Plymouth architect Ian Potts

A Plymouth architect who was responsible for some of the South West’s most eye-catching buildings has died at the age of 66 after a courageous battle against illness.

Ian Potts was one of the founders of Plymouth-based ADG and worked on the design of many outstanding buildings including Plymouth’s Fish Market, the Peninsula School of Dentistry, Rick Stein’s Cookery School in Cornwall, and the training facility for the GB sailing squad at the London 2012 Olympics.

Tributes have flooded in from family members and colleagues, with Zillah Potts, Ian’s wife of 44 years, saying: “We thought we would be everything we needed for one another, but he was 100 times more than I would have ever needed.”

Ian was born in Manchester but moved to Cornwall, and came to Plymouth to study architecture in the 1970s. He met Zillah through a mutual friend. Both shared a strong Christian faith, and two weeks after their meeting he told her he felt God had put them together and he proposed to marry her.

Nine months later they were wed. They had four children and 15 grandchildren, and Ian spent his final days surrounded by his loved ones at the 12th Century Plympton farmhouse he converted from dereliction to a warm and stylish family home.

Zillah said: “I am blessed tha Ian has been the love of my life, and that is all down to God.”

Ian formed ADG with Marc Nash, Phil Burgess and Alec Macleod in 1985 and the firm went on to become one of the South West’s leading architectural practices responsible for many prominent Plymouth buildings including the University of Plymouth’s Sherwell Centre, Plymouth Foyer, the Azure apartment complex on the Hoe, the Berkeley Square building in the city centre, the Gaia Spa at Boringdon Hall Hotel, and the £13million STEM Centre at City College Plymouth. Elsewhere in the South West, ADG worked on Padstow’s Waterfront, including St Petroc’s Hotel.

Ian retired as a director at the end of 2017, but just weeks later was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma and although he was given the all clear after treatment in 2018 it was the start of a long period of illness.