| LUTYENS | English architect, designer of the Cenotaph |
| PAXTON | Joseph _, English architect, designer of the Crystal Palace, finished in 1851 (6) |
| MEMORIAL | Foreign currency note found on top of the Cenotaph? |
| PERRONET | Jean-Rodolphe ?, 18th-century French architect; designer of the Pont de la Concorde across the River Seine in Paris (8) |
| PIANO | Renzo ___, Italian architect; designer of The Shard in London (5) |
| UTZON | Jorn ?, Danish architect; designer of the Sydney Opera House |
| ROGERS | British architect; designer of the Lloyd's Building and Millennium Dome in London (7,6) |
| RICHARD | British architect; designer of the Lloyd's Building and Millennium Dome in London (7,6) |
| PUGIN | Augustus _, 19th-century architect; designer of much of the interior of the Palace of Westminster (5) |
| NASH | Surname of the architect, designer of Regent Street Marble Arch etc (4) |
| MONUMENT | From the Latin meaning "remind", a commemorative structure such as the Cenotaph in Whitehall; or, a building of historical importance (8) |
| EDWIN | British architect who designed the Cenotaph on Whitehall and most of New Delhi (5,7) |
| EDWINLUTYENS | British architect who designed The Cenotaph on Whitehall (5,7) |
| WARMEMORIAL | Tepid individual was part of failing morale at the cenotaph (3,8) |
| DONKEYJACKET | Footwear once supposedly controversial at the Cenotaph (6,6) |
| TONE | Old revolutionary buried up in the cenotaph (4) |
| ROSSI | Architect/designer Aldo |
| MACKINTOSH | Charles Rennie ___, Scottish architect, designer, and painter (10) |
| ASLAPONTHEBACK | Congratulations for Kenny primarily after reconstruction of balsa cenotaph (1,4,2,3,4) |
| ATOMBOMB | Weapon of mass destruction mobilised mob behind a cenotaph (4,4) |