David Mocatta

Mocatta at 32 Brunswick Square in Bloomsbury where he remained until 1846, before moving to 57 Old Broad Street in the City of London.

His synagogue in Ramsgate for Moses Montefiore (1833) was possibly the first in England to be designed by a Jewish architect.

[5] He was elected a Fellow of the Institute of British Architects (later the RIBA) in 1836,[3] and was an early member of its council.

Mocatta also designed balustrades and a set of eight Italianate pavilions to ornament John Urpeth Rastrick's Ouse Valley Viaduct for the L&BR.

[5] Mocatta House, a modern office development in Trafalgar Place, Brighton is named after him.

Mocatta's station at Brighton (1841)
Synagogue and tomb of Moses Montefiore in Ramsgate