I've long had a theory (more of a notion) that 1958 is the year that design reached its apogee, but setting a date merely begs the question that the date is the culmination of anything. I escaped briefly to the library a while back and took a series of cropped cellphone pics, kept in a folder titled Vassar 1958 Vogue and transferred to the computers and external drives that've passed through in the following 10 years.
Among the notably post-1958 images: a modernist cabana for a sailing club, designed by B. et N. Westwood Piet et Associés Architectes, Club Nautique a Desborough Grande, found in an archive of 1960s French architecture magazines. Assuming the architecture was French since then, with a little research and with the aid of Google Translate, it turns out that it's a British project and that B. and N. are Bryan and Norman (an avid sailor), post-war architects in a practice that apparently included Jan Piet in the sixties. There is an informative brief history by Norman's son here on the last page of the PDF.
The raw translation of the French on the accompanying images is as follows:
1. Overview taking the opposite bank of the Thames on the slight construction that integrated well, for its shape and colors (natural brick, varnished wood, white woodwork), in a green setting.
A. Cut (section)
B. Ground floor plan (reserve and changing rooms)
C. Upstairs plan (club and bar)