Lost futures : the disappearing architecture of post-war Britain
Hopkins, Owen [1984-]
Lost futures : the disappearing architecture of post-war Britain - London Royal Academy of Arts 2017 - 128 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Published on the occasion of the display 'Futures Found' held at Royal Academy of Arts, London, 18th February-29th May 2017.
9781910350621 Includes bibliographical references and index. Rebuilding Britain after World War II and through the post-austerity decades of the 1960s and 1970s enabled architecture to embody a vision of a better future - both social and technological. The work of such practitioners as Erno Goldfinger, James Stirling, Alison and Peter Smithson, Team 4, Ahrends, Burton & Karolek and Lyons, Israel & Ellis, on many types of building across the country, was captured by equally radical photographers, providing a record of a time when a belief in progress underlay innovation in design. The book documents thirty-five buildings dating from 1945 to 1979, all of them significant both architecturally and through the ideas they represented. Most have been either demolished or fundamentally altered: the rest face imminent demolition or alteration. Owen Hopkins examines the complex social, economic, political and cultural contexts in which they were built and in which their eventual destruction could be seen as inevitable and even welcome. 2022
1910350621
Modern movement (Architecture)--Great Britain
Architecture--Great Britain--History--20th century
Urban renewal--Great Britain--History--20th century
Reconstruction (1939-1951)--Great Britain
720.94109044
Lost futures : the disappearing architecture of post-war Britain - London Royal Academy of Arts 2017 - 128 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Published on the occasion of the display 'Futures Found' held at Royal Academy of Arts, London, 18th February-29th May 2017.
9781910350621 Includes bibliographical references and index. Rebuilding Britain after World War II and through the post-austerity decades of the 1960s and 1970s enabled architecture to embody a vision of a better future - both social and technological. The work of such practitioners as Erno Goldfinger, James Stirling, Alison and Peter Smithson, Team 4, Ahrends, Burton & Karolek and Lyons, Israel & Ellis, on many types of building across the country, was captured by equally radical photographers, providing a record of a time when a belief in progress underlay innovation in design. The book documents thirty-five buildings dating from 1945 to 1979, all of them significant both architecturally and through the ideas they represented. Most have been either demolished or fundamentally altered: the rest face imminent demolition or alteration. Owen Hopkins examines the complex social, economic, political and cultural contexts in which they were built and in which their eventual destruction could be seen as inevitable and even welcome. 2022
1910350621
Modern movement (Architecture)--Great Britain
Architecture--Great Britain--History--20th century
Urban renewal--Great Britain--History--20th century
Reconstruction (1939-1951)--Great Britain
720.94109044