The Country House Ideal: Recent Work by Adam Architecture
Autor Clive Aslet, Paul Barker, Calder Lothen Limba Engleză Hardback – 23 sep 2015
ADAM Architecture has a worldwide reputation for traditional Western design. Although the practice is based in the UK, it has built award-winning projects of all types around the world, and is known for combining modern interpretations of the Classical tradition with the latest technology. Among its most admired work are its country houses, and 19 of these houses are the focus of this new book, written by architectural historian Jeremy Musson.
Robert Adam co-founded the practice (as Winchester Design) in 1986, and has worked with technical director Paul Hanvey for more than 30 years (including at a previous incarnation of the practice). Adam now works with three other architect-directors – Nigel Anderson, Hugh Petter and George Saumarez Smith – to build country houses that are not period reproductions but creative interpretations of past traditions. Each director has his own architectural personality, together producing a body of work that uses historical precedents, including construction techniques, materials, layout and details, to give expression to thoroughly modern works. Their schemes address the modern-day realities of energy conservation, climate control, internet access, computer-managed systems and security – all prerequisites in contemporary house design. Unlike country houses of the past, today’s houses must be functional without live-in staff. Kitchens are now the focus of much family life and entertaining, rather than spaces to be kept from sight. These and numerous other practical considerations receive meticulous attention in an ADAM Architecture country house.
The book begins with two forewords, with Clive Aslet and Calder Loth offering their interpretations of the ideal country house from a British and an American perspective respectively. The introduction provides an overview of the rich and varied tradition of the English country house, from the medieval manor house to houses of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods, and the Classically inspired designs of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries through to the architecture of the Gothic Revival and then the Arts and Crafts Movement. Architects associated with the country house throughout the ages include, among others, John Vanburgh, William Chambers, Robert Adam, John Nash and Sir Edwin Lutyens. And now, today, ADAM Architecture is one of the leading practices designing and building new country houses.
Robert Adam co-founded the practice (as Winchester Design) in 1986, and has worked with technical director Paul Hanvey for more than 30 years (including at a previous incarnation of the practice). Adam now works with three other architect-directors – Nigel Anderson, Hugh Petter and George Saumarez Smith – to build country houses that are not period reproductions but creative interpretations of past traditions. Each director has his own architectural personality, together producing a body of work that uses historical precedents, including construction techniques, materials, layout and details, to give expression to thoroughly modern works. Their schemes address the modern-day realities of energy conservation, climate control, internet access, computer-managed systems and security – all prerequisites in contemporary house design. Unlike country houses of the past, today’s houses must be functional without live-in staff. Kitchens are now the focus of much family life and entertaining, rather than spaces to be kept from sight. These and numerous other practical considerations receive meticulous attention in an ADAM Architecture country house.
The book begins with two forewords, with Clive Aslet and Calder Loth offering their interpretations of the ideal country house from a British and an American perspective respectively. The introduction provides an overview of the rich and varied tradition of the English country house, from the medieval manor house to houses of the Elizabethan and Jacobean periods, and the Classically inspired designs of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries through to the architecture of the Gothic Revival and then the Arts and Crafts Movement. Architects associated with the country house throughout the ages include, among others, John Vanburgh, William Chambers, Robert Adam, John Nash and Sir Edwin Lutyens. And now, today, ADAM Architecture is one of the leading practices designing and building new country houses.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781858946399
ISBN-10: 1858946395
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 270 color photos, B&W photos
Dimensiuni: 257 x 307 x 30 mm
Greutate: 2.09 kg
Editura: Merrell
ISBN-10: 1858946395
Pagini: 288
Ilustrații: 270 color photos, B&W photos
Dimensiuni: 257 x 307 x 30 mm
Greutate: 2.09 kg
Editura: Merrell
Notă biografică
Jeremy Musson: Jeremy Musson is an architectural historian, writer and broadcaster who specializes in British country houses. A former Architectural Editor of Country Life magazine, he is the author of English Country House Interiors (2011), English Ruins (Merrell, 2011, with photographs by Paul Barker), The Country Houses of Sir John Vanbrugh (2008) and How to Read a Country House (2005), among other titles.
Clive Aslet: Clive Aslet is Editor at Large of Country Life and was formerly Editor of that magazine for thirteen years. A leading authority on Britain and its way of life, as well as a well-known campaigner on the countryside and other issues, he also writes extensively for the Daily Telegraph & the Daily Mail.
Calder Loth: Calder Loth is Senior Architectural Historian at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. He lectures on behalf of the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art, headquartered in New York.
Paul Barker: Paul Barker is one of the leading architectural photographers in the United Kingdom. He contributes regularly to such magazines as Country Life, Homes & Gardens and World of Interiors.
Clive Aslet: Clive Aslet is Editor at Large of Country Life and was formerly Editor of that magazine for thirteen years. A leading authority on Britain and its way of life, as well as a well-known campaigner on the countryside and other issues, he also writes extensively for the Daily Telegraph & the Daily Mail.
Calder Loth: Calder Loth is Senior Architectural Historian at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources. He lectures on behalf of the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art, headquartered in New York.
Paul Barker: Paul Barker is one of the leading architectural photographers in the United Kingdom. He contributes regularly to such magazines as Country Life, Homes & Gardens and World of Interiors.