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Old Buildings, New Architecture


Old Buildings, New Architecture

Hardback by Griffiths, Richard

Old Buildings, New Architecture

£30.00

ISBN:
9781527231627
Publication Date:
11 Jul 2019
Publisher:
Richard Griffiths Architects
Pages:
176 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 27 - 29 May 2024
Old Buildings, New Architecture

Description

The conservation of old buildings, otherwise known as refurbishment, retrofit or adaptive reuse, has come to the forefront of architectural thinking in recent years in view of their embodied energy and their significance in the life of the community. Old buildings, unlike new buildings, embody history, memory and the texture of age, and redesigning them for a viable future and for public benefit is therefore an architectural challenge. In this book Richard Griffiths describes his 25 years of experience in repairing and revealing the beauty of old buildings and in adding a new layer of architecture to all those already present, so as to give them new life and a sustainable future. The book is illustrated by examples of the redesign of nationally famous buildings such as St Pancras Hotel, Southwark and St Albans Cathedrals, Lambeth Palace, Burghley House, Stamford and the Tudor Sutton House, Hackney. Individual chapters describe the challenges of different building types, historic houses, churches, schools and civic buildings, as well as the regeneration of historic areas, including the Kings Cross Regent Quarter, the Lancaster Canal corridor and Oxford Castle. The book is richly illustrated with examples of contextual new design in historic sites, where old and new design enhance each other.

Contents

The making of an architect * The layering of history: Sutton House * Old and new in context: Southwark Cathedral * Old and new in contrast: Lambeth Palace and Burghley * Historic houses for the public * The care of churches * The care of cathedrals: St Albans Abbey * New design in an historic context * The typology of barns * The art of repair and the texture of age * The art of construction and detailing * Architecture and decoration * New uses for old buildings * The case for restoration * Historic gardens and landscape * The regeneration of historic areas * Conservation cause celebre: St Pancras Hotel and Station

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