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Winner of the International Society of Place, Landscape, and
Culture Fred B. Kniffen Award A reexamination of working-class
architecture in late nineteenth-century urban America As the
multifamily building type that often symbolized urban squalor,
tenements are familiar but poorly understood, frequently recognized
only in terms of the housing reform movement embraced by the
American-born elite in the late nineteenth century. This book
reexamines urban America's tenement buildings of this period,
centering on the immigrant neighborhoods of New York and Boston.
Zachary J. Violette focuses on what he calls the "decorated
tenement," a wave of new buildings constructed by immigrant
builders and architects who remade the slum landscapes of the Lower
East Side of Manhattan and the North and West Ends of Boston in the
late nineteenth century. These buildings' highly ornamental facades
became the target of predominantly upper-class and Anglo-Saxon
housing reformers, who viewed the facades as garish wrappings that
often hid what they assumed were exploitative and brutal living
conditions. Drawing on research and fieldwork of more than three
thousand extant tenement buildings, Violette uses ornament as an
entry point to reconsider the role of tenement architects and
builders (many of whom had deep roots in immigrant communities) in
improving housing for the working poor. Utilizing specially
commissioned contem-porary photography, and many
never-before-published historical images, The Decorated Tenement
complicates monolithic notions of architectural taste and housing
standards while broadening our understanding of the diversity of
cultural and economic positions of those responsible for shaping
American architecture and urban landscapes. Winner of the
International Society of Place, Landscape, and Culture Fred B.
Kniffen Award
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