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Building the Georgian City (Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in Britis)
 
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Building the Georgian City (Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in Britis) [Hardcover]

Mr. James Ayres (Author)

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Book Description

September 10, 1998 Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in Britis
Georgian architecture had its roots in the Great Fire of London in 1666. Out of that disaster grew the need for rapid redevelopment which was accomplished through standardization and the relaxation of restrictive practices in the building trades. This book investigates the decline in crafted buildings of the traditional client economies and the introduction of mass produced components which characterizeed an emerging consumerism. It is an approach which offers insights into our architectural heritiage by focusing on the traditions and innovations in the building methods of the time - the construction processes, the role of the building craftsmen, and the tools and materials they used. James Ayres describes how builders in London developed the terraced house and town centre building systems which influenced the architecture of Bath, Edinburgh, Dublin and distant Philadelphia. He takes us through the building processes craft by craft, from the work of the surveyors and labourers who established the foundations to the joiners and painters who finished the interiors. Ayres outlines the ways in which forms do not only follow functions but are also conditioned by materials and methods. He describes how, with the burgeoning industrialization of the second half of the 18th century, a separation emerged between making and designing, a division which led to the decline of the craftsman as designer. This led to a shift in power, a move from the empirical understanding of those involved in the processes of making to the theoretically based activities of architects.

Editorial Reviews

Review

This absorbing survey by James Ayres ... delves instructively into the ingenious technologies that Georgian carpenters, mason, glaziers, plumbers and other master craftsmen devised, taking the world's first industrialized nation from medieval means of construction and into the modern age. -- The New York Times Book Review, Martin Filler

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