449 research outputs found
Introduction to Heritage Assets: 19th- and 20th-Century Convents and Monasteries
A short description of the history and architecture of English nineteenth and twentieth-century convents and monasteries, with an emphasis on their most significant attribute
Good Fairies
An account of Edwin Lutyens' design for Great Maytham Hall, and of Frances Hodgson Burnett's 'secret garden' ther
The Success of Failure
This is the text of an invited address given to The Annual Colloquium of Doctoral Students of the Institute of Technology (ITA) and the History and Theory of Architecture (GTA) at ETH Zurich on 17 November 201
Ugliness and Judgment: On Architecture in the Public Eye (review)
A review of Ugliness and Judgment: On Architecture in the Public Eye, by Timothy Hyde (Princeton University Press, 2019
A.W.N. Pugin's English residential architecture in its context
The file comprises both volumes of the original thesis. For copyright reasons a number of images were removed.This Dissertation investigates all of A.W.N. Pugin’s known English residential
architecture for the first time, placing it in the context of the domestic and institutional
architecture of comparable small buildings, particularly Anglican parsonages, of the
period in which he lived and worked.
The Dissertation is preceded by a summary of the theoretical issues that architects
were addressing from the beginning of the nineteenth century, in particular those
which Pugin was later to make a central part of his own theoretical writings.
Following an examination of the conventions of the domestic architecture of the
period, the Dissertation analyses Pugin’s own buildings, primarily categorising them
by plan type. Pugin’s attitude to the orientation, location and landscape of his work is
then considered, followed by an analysis of his preferred building forms, their
materials, their detailing, and their decoration. In addition, the Dissertation
investigates the extent to which Pugin’s architecture was actually historicist, reviving
English or Continental Gothic forms and details.
The Dissertation further investigates Pugin’s professional practice as a domestic
architect, defining the nature of his partnership with his favoured building contractor,
George Myers, in the context of contemporary contracting practice. The practical
problems of Pugin’s constructions, and the character of his professional relationship
with his clients are also assessed.
The thesis proposes that elements of Pugin’s architectural theory existed previous to
his career amongst English architectural writers and critics, but that medium and
small houses designed between 1800 and the mid-1840s were overwhelmingly based
on a limited number of conventionalised plans. It will show that Pugin’s residential
planning was inherently different from that of these conventional buildings, and that it
is classifiable into a number of distinct categories. This thesis furthermore argues that
Pugin’s residential architecture was often far from functional and was not essentially
historicist.
This thesis will show that the planning of medium and small houses changed radically
from the 1840s, incorporating aspects of planning which Pugin had pioneered; a
conclusion suggests to what extent Pugin’s architectural creativity was expressive of
cultural change and preoccupation beyond the realm of architecture.
An Appendix is attached which summarises the chronology of all of Pugin’s known
residential works
Picturesque, Modern, Tudor-Style : Edgar Ranger in Thanet
An article on the mainly neo-Tudor houses designed by Edgar Ranger in Broadstairs, Dumpton Park and Cliftonville, Thanet, East Kent, between the mid 1920s and 1930s. There is reference also to Thanet Place, designed for Lord Vestey by Ranmger with Sir Charles Allom
Architecture and the Edwardian Era
This lecture, given at Gresham College on 13 March 2018, presents a new theory of Edwardian domestic architecture based on the contemporary interest in remodelling old houses, and of designing new houses to look as if they have been remodelled. The lecture proposes adding three major houses to the canon of Edwardian domestic architecture: Kingsgate Castle, near Broadstairs; Daws Hill, High Wycombe; and Vann, Hambledon, Surrey. Video and audio recordings can be found on the website given here
James Stirling: Victorian Architect
The text of a short talk delivered to launch the RIBA Late 'Less is More. Less is a bore' programme of events, on 28 March 201
Twentieth-Century Architecture: Postmodernism
This is a talk given at the Twentieth Century Society on 2 March 2017, the final lecture in a Society series on different architectural styles. Sir Terry Farrell and Carl Laubin attended the lecture
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