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Output details

34 - Art and Design: History, Practice and Theory

Royal College of Art

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Book title

Key Urban Housing of the Twentieth Century: Plans Sections and Elevations

Type
A - Authored book
DOI
-
Publisher of book
(2008) Laurence King, and Norton, 2009 Le Moniteur, Gustavo Gili,
ISBN of book
9781856695640
Year of publication
2009
Number of additional authors
0
Additional information

This book presents 87 expositions of the most influential housing designs of the past century, each with drawings to scale, including floor and location plans and explanatory text (42,000 words), with photographs, some sections and elevations, in six themed chapters.

The book prioritises drawings in orthographic projection, the main tool of the architect, bridging a gap between practice and theory (see French REF Output 4). French undertook extensive research in libraries, archives, architects' offices and existing publications to discover and investigate negatives, prints and digital files of various kinds in a range of scales. She analysed and reconstructed these digitally to a uniform scale and style to support comparative study: ‘carefully assembled 1:200 plans allow direct comparisons between the projects encompassing the whole evolution of 20th century housing up to the present day’ (Building Design, 2008). ‘One can track, for example, how bathrooms, bedrooms and overall apartments have increased in size over the years’ (John Hill, Archidose, 2009). The work builds on the seminal ‘picture books’ of F.R.S. Yorke and Frederick Gibberd in the 1930s and 1950s. Since then, with very few exceptions, histories in this field have tended to focus on theories of architecture based on stylistic analysis or the careers of significant architects. This study is a return to the analysis of buildings themselves. ‘A well-designed, knowledgeable work’ (Book News, 2009); ‘A comprehensive overview of multi-residential design and its recent history’ (Australian Design Review, 2009).

Five translated versions have been published. Interest in the book led to an invitation to give the keynote ‘Learning from the past’ at the conclusion of the ‘OIKODOMOS: A Virtual Campus to Promote the Study of Dwelling in Contemporary Europe’ project at Universitat Ramon Llull, Barcelona (2009). French’s New Urban Housing (2006) was subsequently reissued in a paperback and Chinese edition (both 2009).

Interdisciplinary
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Cross-referral requested
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Research group
None
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
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