[1] In 1825 Buckler began rebuilding Costessey Hall, Norfolk, for Lord Stafford.
His work there was described by Charles Locke Eastlake, writing in 1872, as "one of the most important and successful instances of the [Gothic] Revival in Domestic Architecture".
The new buildings formed an irregular picturesque group, with stepped gables, angle turrets and richly moulded chimney-shafts, exhibiting, according to Eastlake "a knowledge of detail and proportion far in advance of contemporary work".
[2] Buckler did a lot of work in Oxford, carrying out repairs and additions to St Mary's Church, and Oriel, Brasenose, Magdalen, and Jesus colleges.
[5] Buckler's writings included the text accompanying his father's engravings of Views of the Cathedral Churches of England and Wales (1822).