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Here is an incisive and fully illustrated history of Harvard's
architecture told by the distinguished architectural historian
Bainbridge Bunting, author of Houses of Boston's Back Bay. The book
examines the Federal architecture of Charles Bulfinch, H. H.
Richardson's Romanesque buildings, the Imperial manner reflected in
Widener Library, as well as the work of such esteemed architects as
Charles McKim, Gropius, and Le Corbusier-and it shows us how they
all come together to form an amazingly coherent whole. This lively
story of a university campus is a veritable microcosm of American
architectural experience.
This superbly illustrated book records the development of Boston's
Back Bay during the period of its greatest growth. Bainbridge
Bunting focuses his study on one particularly significant
architectural form-the town house. He chronicles, both pictorially
and verbally, the first appearance, evolution, and eventual
discard, during the era, of every local architectural style, all of
which later gained national acceptance. He shows how architectural
styles were affected by such developments as the electric light,
changing preferences in materials, machine production of such
interior parts as woodwork and mantels, new fire laws and building
restrictions, and rising labor costs. He also provides an extensive
account of the pivotal role played by members of the Boston Society
of Architects in the growth of the profession throughout the
country during this formative period. These Back Bay homes, Bunting
points out, reflect to a striking degree the social and cultural
attitudes of the community and, in the process of reconstructing
the life that was led in them, he offers an absorbing and
perceptive commentary on Boston society and its mores.
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