Architecture

Gervase Wheeler

Format: Hardback
Pages: 136
ISBN: 9780819571458
Pub Date: 15 Jan 2012
Illustrations: 62 illus.
Description:
Gervase Wheeler was an English-born architect who designed such important American works as the Henry Boody House in Brunswick, Maine; the Patrick Barry House in Rochester, New York; and the chapels at Bowdoin and Williams colleges. But he was perhaps best known as the author of two influential architecture books, Rural Homes (1851) and Homes for the People (1855). Yet Wheeler has remained a little known, enigmatic figure.
Manufacturing a Socialist Modernity Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 480
ISBN: 9780822944041
Pub Date: 10 Apr 2011
Series: Russian and East European Studies
Description:
Eastern European prefabricated housing blocks are often vilified as the visible manifestations of everything that was wrong with state socialism. For many inside and outside the region, the uniformity of these buildings became symbols of the dullness and drudgery of everyday life. Manufacturing a Socialist Modernity complicates this common perception.
Capturing value increase in urban redevelopment Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 451
ISBN: 9789088900594
Pub Date: 01 Mar 2011
Imprint: Sidestone Press
Illustrations: 62 b/w illus
Description:
Everyone would agree that urban development, especially when involving the building of residential areas, should be accompanied by sufficient and good public infrastructure and facilities. We all want neighbourhoods with the necessary roads, green areas, social facilities, affordable housing and public spaces of high quality. At the same time, nowadays, governments are facing severe cuts in public expenditure.
Deciding about Design Quality Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 338
ISBN: 9789088900532
Pub Date: 15 Jan 2011
Imprint: Sidestone Press
Description:
In the past few years the image of tender procedures in which Dutch public clients selected an architect has been dominated by distressing newspaper headlines. Architects fear that the current tender culture will harm the quality of our built environment due to a potential lack of diversity, creativity and innovation in architectural design. Due to potential risks clients often allow legal requirements to overrule their actual wishes.
Drawing Toward Home Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 240
ISBN: 9780884483281
Pub Date: 17 Jun 2010
Illustrations: 190 illus. (129 colour)
Description:
As the center of domestic life, the house is perhaps the most important building type in a democratic society. Drawing Toward Home: Designs for Domestic Architecture from Historic New England showcases a variety of drawings of domestic buildings that range in date from the late eighteenth through the twentieth centuries, and depict an array of building types estates, modest single-family houses, summer cottages, and even a typical Boston multi-family dwelling known as a three-decker. Architectural drawings have a history of their own, and this exceptional assemblage outlines how the medium has morphed to meet the growing expectations of clients, the increasing complexity of the construction process, and the demands of new technologies.
Second Suburb Cover Second Suburb Cover
Format: 
Pages: 448
ISBN: 9780822943891
Pub Date: 23 Apr 2010
Series: Culture Politics & the Built Environment
Pages: 448
ISBN: 9780822962816
Pub Date: 06 Nov 2013
Series: Culture Politics & the Built Environment
Description:
Carved from eight square miles of Bucks County farmland northeast of Philadelphia, Levittown, Pennsylvania, is a symbol of postwar suburbia and the fulfillment of the American Dream. Begun in 1952, after the completion of an identically named community on Long Island, the second Levittown soon eclipsed its New York counterpart in scale and ambition, yet it continues to live in the shadow of its better-known sister and has received limited scholarly attention. Second Suburb uncovers the unique story of Levittown, Pennsylvania, and its significance to American social, architectural, environmental, and political history.
Planning and the Urban Community Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 256
ISBN: 9780822960461
Pub Date: 23 Mar 2010
Description:
This book presents a broad overview of the planning profession, and discusses many of the major problems encountered in urbanism and planning. The essays discuss topics that include education, the urban community, the place of planning in governmental hierarchy, and its relationship to urban political dynamics.
Westminster Abbey Chapter House Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 305
ISBN: 9780854312955
Pub Date: 15 Mar 2010
Illustrations: 255 illus (155 in colour)
Description:
This volume tells the complete story of the Westminster Abbey chapter house, which ranks as one of the spectacular achievements of European Gothic art and architecture; and that is precisely what its builder, King Henry III, intended. Begun in the mid-1240s, and completed within a decade, its pre-eminence was recognized in its own day, when the chronicler Matthew Paris described Westminster as having 'a chapter house beyond compare'. Papers by leading scholars in the field of medieval art and architecture reveal the reasons for the construction of the chapter house and trace the possible influences upon the master mason in charge of the project.
RRP: £49.95
Between Garden and City Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 296
ISBN: 9780822943709
Pub Date: 29 Nov 2009
Illustrations: 161 b&w Illustrations
Description:
In Between Garden and City, Dorothée Imbert examines the career of Belgian landscape architect Jean Canneel-Claes (1909-1989), firmly establishing his place in the modernist movement. Canneel's theoretical positions and innovative designs sought to align the emergent landscape profession with architecture and urbanism while demonstrating its potential to address the needs of modern society. Canneel studied at La Cambre (Belgium's equivalent to the Bauhaus) under landscape urbanist Louis van der Swaelmen and graduated as the school's first landscape architect in 1931.
Chicago's White City of 1893 Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 400
ISBN: 9780813101408
Pub Date: 11 Nov 2009
Illustrations: 31 b&w photos, 1 map, 2 line drawings
Description:
In 1893, the year that marked the four hundredth anniversary of the landing of Columbus in the New World, Chicago was host to an exposition to mark the occasion. Although the World's Columbian Exposition was the fifteenth world's fair, it was of vastly greater scope than any of its predecessors. Chicago created a veritable new city.
Pittsburgh A New Portrait Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 528
ISBN: 9780822943716
Pub Date: 20 Sep 2009
Description:
From its founding in 1758, Pittsburgh has experienced several epic transformations. It began its existence as a fortress, on a site originally selected by George Washington. A hundred years later, and well into our own time, no other American city was as intensively industrialized, only to be later consigned to "rustbelt" status.
Hill Hall Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 544
ISBN: 9780854312917
Pub Date: 16 Jun 2009
Description:
This is the complete history of a building that began as a hunting lodge, late in the eleventh century and that grew to be the principal house of the manor of Theydon Mount in Essex, a small country retreat within easy reach of London. In 1556, the house was acquired by Sir Thomas Smith (1512-77), a man of humble origins but precocious intellect who became Regius Professor of Civil Law at Cambridge at the age of thirty and Chancellor of the University two years later. He then forsook academic for political life, becoming Master of Requests to the Lord Protector Somerset.
RRP: £55.00
Crystal and Arabesque Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 360
ISBN: 9780822943624
Pub Date: 15 Apr 2009
Description:
From the 1890s to the 1930s, Claude Bragdon enjoyed an international reputation as an architect, designer, and critic working in the progressive tradition associated with Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, and the Prairie School. In 1915 Bragdon created “projective ornament,” a system of geometric patterns designed to serve as a universal form-language integrating not only architecture, art, and design, but also a society divided by differences of class, gender, religion, culture, and national origin. Spreading across the surfaces of buildings, posters, books, and the settings Bragdon designed for massive community singing festivals, projective ornament came to symbolize the progressive potential of modernity for thousands of Americans.
Henry Austin Cover
Format: Hardback
Pages: 252
ISBN: 9780819568960
Pub Date: 17 Feb 2009
Illustrations: 131 illus. (39 colour)
Description:
Henry Austin's (1804-1891) works receive consideration in books on nineteenth-century architecture, yet no book has focused scholarly attention on his primary achievements in New Haven, Connecticut, in Portland, Maine, and elsewhere. Austin was most active during the antebellum era, designing exotic buildings that have captured the imaginations of many for decades. James F.
Vernacular Mudbrick Architecture in the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt, and the Design of the Dakhleh Oasis Training and Conservation Centre Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 63
ISBN: 9781842170595
Pub Date: 01 Nov 2008
Imprint: Oxbow Books
Series: Dakhleh Oasis Project Monographs
Illustrations: 76 b/w pls, plans and drawings
Description:
More than one third of the world's population lives in houses made of unfired earth bricks or stamped earth, materials also known as mud brick, adobe , terre crue , pisé , or rammed earth. Houses in the middle east have been made out this material for at least 10,000 years, but in many places this form of architecture is slowly being superceded by more recent building techniques using reinforced concrete and concrete blocks. This study contains a description of the remaining mud brick architecture in several villages in the Dakhleh Oasis in Egypt.
Designing the Centennial Cover
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
ISBN: 9780813192130
Pub Date: 03 Oct 2008
Series: Material Worlds
Illustrations: photos
Description:
The 1876 United States Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia was not only the United States' first important world's fair, it signaled significant changes in the very shape of knowledge. Quarrels between participants in the exhibition represented a greater conflict as the world transitioned between two different kinds of modernity--the Enlightenment of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries to the High Modern period of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.At the center of this movement was a shift in the perceived relationship between seeing and knowing and in the perception of what makes an object valuable--its usefulness as a subject of study and learning versus its ability to be bought and sold on the market.