These include the re-building and extension of Nymans Manor in West Sussex, although Evill was replaced by Walter Tapper after a disagreement with the owner, Leonard Messel.
[6][7] Clive Aslet, the architectural writer, describes the combined result as "a Victorian house transformed into a medieval romance".
Bullen, Crook, Hubbuck and Pevsner, in their Hampshire: Winchester and the North volume of the Buildings of England series, describe Romans as being "in his master's Surrey style".
[22][23] Work in the West and Wales included the reconstruction of Shirenewton Hall in Monmouthshire,[24] and a house, Ivy Rock, at Tidenham, Gloucestershire.
[27] Hyde and Pevsner, in their Cumbria volume of the Buildings of England, note the Arts and Crafts design of the house, a style that Evill favoured.