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Books > Arts & Architecture > Architecture > Residential buildings, domestic buildings
Who was the most beautiful woman in England in the twentieth
century - and why did she become the most hated woman? Who spent
GBP500,000 to remodel her house for a king's weekend visit? What
country house has a roof that is seven acres in size? What prime
minister's mother had at least twenty lovers? How many million
individuals were killed in World War 1? The answers to such
startling questions show that history is an unnerving mixture of
breathtaking moments and punishing reversals. Written as a rattling
good read, The Downton Era takes the reader on a journey through
twentieth century England by pointing out the personal landmarks
that make up history. When we see elegant country houses, we
discover that such great piles of rock record the aristocratic arc
of the English upper class from its Victorian heyday onward into
the twentieth century. Titles and dances and hunts were social
events that linked families and forged governments. By exploring
the interwoven family chronicles of the Churchills and their
cousins, the Mitfords, we see history at a personalized level. In
their lives are woven together stories of great houses, the lure
and weight of title, the range and challenge of political
influence, and the privileged entrapments that undermined their
dazzling social world. As with tragedy, the scale of greatness and
disintegration in these families and their class makes for riveting
reading.
Chinese wallpaper has been an important element of western interior
decoration for three hundred years. As trade between Europe and
China flourished in the seventeenth century, Europeans developed a
strong taste for Chinese art and design. The stunningly beautiful
wall coverings now known as `Chinese wallpaper' were developed by
Chinese painting workshops in response to western demand. In spite
of their spectacular beauty, Chinese wallpapers have not been
studied in any depth until relatively recently. This book provides
an overview of some of the most significant Chinese wallpapers
surviving in the British Isles. Sumptuously illustrated, it shows
how these wallpapers became a staple ingredient of high-end
interiors while always retaining a touch of the exotic.
A House Is Not Just a House argues precisely that. The book traces
Tatiana Bilbao's diverse work on housing ranging from large-scale
social projects to single-family luxury homes. These projects offer
a way of thinking about the limits of housing: where it begins and
where it ends. Regardless of type, her work advances an argument on
housing that is simultaneously expansive and minimal, inseparable
from the broader environment outside of it and predicated on the
fundamental requirements of living. Working within the turbulent
history of social housing in Mexico, Bilbao argues for
participating even when circumstances are less than ideal-and from
this participation she is able to propose specific strategies
learned in Mexico for producing housing elsewhere. A House Is Not
Just a House includes a recent lecture by Bilbao at Columbia
University's Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and
Preservation, as well as reflections from fellow practitioners and
scholars, including Amale Andraos, Gabriela Etchegaray, Hilary
Sample, and Ivonne Santoyo-Orozco.
ABS Bouwteam is a high-end contractor of exclusive residential
projects: villas, country houses and mansions in timeless and
contemporary style. This first monograph highlights the most
important projects by the company, with an overview of 30 years of
exceptional architecture and interior design.
Against a backdrop of international intrigue and intense spiritual
warfare, architect Marga Jann takes us on a seat-gripping journey
through a quartet of academic assignments -- with much more at
stake than her professorial mission. Based at Cambridge, she
unwittingly finds herself embroiled in a dangerous and
diplomatically-sensitive battle between MI6/CIA operatives and
Saudi Intelligence--a narrative she daringly recounts in this first
part of a riveting trilogy. Most people are unaware of the
interconnected real and spiritual wars around us and therefore lack
the tools to attain true victory in seemingly random everyday
battles. In this unusually constructed, engrossing
semi-autobiographical novel, Jann highlights the power of prayer in
exposing and conquering the workings of darkness while sharing
important contemporary socio-cultural and geopolitical insights not
typically revealed in mainstream media.
The climate is changing, and so must domestic architecture. Premium
materials-brick, stone, wood-and timeless design used to be the key
to building homes that would last for generations. But a warming
planet, coupled with severe weather events, has changed the
equation and raised the stakes, sometimes literally. Aimed at
homeowners, architects, and builders, this book presents sixteen
innovative homes that represent the best of resilient-home
practices in four categories-earth, wind, fire, and water-plus a
list of resources from organizations such as FEMA and the National
Fire Protection Agency. Few local building codes provide adequate
protection from the forces of global warming, which will
proliferate in this century. These examples illustrate the
importance of next-level home design to help resist climate
change-the most urgent issue of our time.
Prefabricated housing is a pressing issue - for those looking for
affordable homes as well as for refugees fleeing wars or natural
disasters. In common with politicians, architects were caught
unawares by the largest wave of migration since the end of the
Second World War. However, are tent cities and containers the best
solution for cheap, dignified, and quickly assembled accommodation
for displaced persons? This challenging situation, along with the
changing urban landscape, with its ever-diminishing space, calls
into question existing standards in relation to serial housing.
Bold and unconventional ideas are called for if architects are to
offer high-quality solutions. From eccentric experiments all the
way to projects that have already been realized, international
design teams present their work between the twin poles of
unconventional developments and life-saving shelters in this volume
spanning more than 250 pages. Introduced with articles on design
principles, and divided into three sections according to the form
the structures take when delivered - cuboid, panels and custom
units - the book covers everything from playful follies to
architectural constructions for the homeless and out patient
medical stations which offer a response to social problems and
space shortages. The text, photographs and plans put forward ideas
as to how more can be done than the mere assembling of containers.
Should we not first consider notions bordering on the absurd in
order to come up with workable solutions for housing today?
Wales, a small country, is littered with the relics of war - Iron
Age forts, Roman ruins, medieval castles and the coastal forts of
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The biggest construction
of fortifications in Wales took place during the reign of Edward I.
They were not only built to deter an invader, but to control the
frequent Welsh uprisings. The next wave of constructions occurred
during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, when a number of
forts and gun emplacements were built, mostly in South Wales, to
deter a seaborne invasion. The twentieth century introduced a new
mode of defence, especially during the two world wars, in the form
of pillboxes, tank traps and gun emplacements. The various
airfields constructed were the most visible form of defence and
could be regarded as the castles of the period. This book looks at
how Welsh castles protected Wales to make it what it is today.
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