[1] Minter oversaw reconstructions including the Nottingham Exchange and Sadler's Wells Theatre; and new constructions of the Duchess Theatre (1929), the BBC's Broadcasting House, the LCC cottage estate at Roehampton (1935); and the Fleet Air Arm headquarters, Lee-on-Solent, His postwar structures included the Bracken House in the City of London (original headquarters of the Financial Times) and the wind tunnel at RAE Bedford.
[1] Minter was most passionate about his work on the restoration of St George's Chapel in Windsor Castle and with Hector Bolitho, authored a book about the project in 1925, The King's Beasts.
The restoration included the replacement of The King's Beasts, the 41 effigies originally erected on the pinnacles of St. George's by Henry VII.
[1] Wren, who recognized the effigies added structural integrity to the roof, had suggested replacing them with carved stone pineapples (in vogue at the time), but it was never done.
Minter's involvement began with his father, who generously offered to cover the costs of the effigies, which were carved in the firm's own building yard.
He was also a member of the Council for King Edward's Hospital Fund, a delegate to the British Commonwealth Relations Conference in Sydney in 1938, and a liveryman in Worshipful Company of Glaziers.