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Building Conservation Philosophy [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 248 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 620 g, 76 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Donhead Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 187339456X
  • ISBN-13: 9781873394564
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 248 pages, height x width: 246x174 mm, weight: 620 g, 76 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Mar-2003
  • Izdevniecība: Donhead Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 187339456X
  • ISBN-13: 9781873394564
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

This is a book about ideas rather than techniques. Public thirst for visible evidence of the past is not, as it is often represented, a recent phenomenon. It was already well developed when an overseer of ancient monuments was appointed in sixth-century Rome. But if the desire to preserve aspects of the past is to do more than respond to popular whims and fashions or represent the personal views of ivory-towered scholars and specialists, it needs to have some kind of solid logical basis. Philosophical questions are raised at every turn. On what basis can buildings be singled out as "historic buildings", demanding special protection? On what authority can we justify interfering with private property rights in pursuing such protective processes? And how should we judge what is acceptable and unacceptable in the treatment of the buildings we value? In this third, substantially revised edition, the author examines the nature of monuments and the varied motives for preserving them. He traces the history of movements to preserve old buildings and the furious conflicts that have frequently surrounded restoration campaigns. Philosophical problems arising in modern conservation practice, including such controversial issues as "skin-deep preservation" and the use of substitute materials, are considered in detail. More space is devoted in this edition to contextual issues.

New sections deal with issues of sustainability and the relationship of buildings to the townscape and landscape. The number of illustrations has also been greatly increased. The book is designed especially for students approaching the subject for the first time but may well be found stimulating by practitioners. No easy formulae are offered. What conservators, have to nurture, the author insists, is an inquiring and self-critical frame of mind enabling them to proceed from comprehensive knowledge of the buildings for the time being in their care, via logical argument, to defensible, if not inevitable, solutions.

Foreword ix
Andrew Saint
Authors Preface xi
Acknowledgements xvii
PART 1 Introduction
1 Guiding Lights
3(2)
2 Approach to the Subject
5(4)
PART II The Nature of Monuments: Motives for Preservation
3 Utility
9(2)
4 The Creation and Preservation of Monuments
11(15)
Celebratory and magnificent
11(4)
Rare and curious
15(3)
Commemorative and associative
18(2)
Exemplary and instructive
20(3)
Pleasing and picturesque
23(1)
The impulse to preserve
24(2)
5 The Growing Popularity of Preservation
26(15)
The rise of preservation and amenity societies
26(2)
The need to see evidence of the past: the non-monumental monument
28(3)
New battlegrounds
31(3)
Guarding resources: `green' issues
34(4)
Guarding the evidence
38(3)
PART III MEANS AND MANNER OF PRESERVATION
6 Control by Legal Process
41(9)
Custodianship and control
42(1)
Hesse and France
43(1)
Control in Britain
44(2)
Statutory control philosophy and practice
46(4)
7 The Practice of Preservation: Historical Background
50(15)
Matters of choice
50(1)
To preserve or restore
51(2)
Restoration: Wyatt and the cathedrals
53(1)
Restoration: Viollet-le-Duc and the search for perfection
54(4)
Scott and Morris: `Scrape and Anti-Scrape'
58(3)
The SPAB Manifesto and after
61(4)
8 The Practice of Preservation: Philosophy in Action
65(15)
No single yardstick
65(2)
Conservation and compromise
67(2)
Ruins
69(2)
Pause for philosophical reflection
71(2)
The nature and interest of a building
73(1)
Investigation before action
74(2)
Degrees of intervention
76(1)
The pressure of circumstances
77(3)
9 The Practice of Preservation: Grounds for Argument
80(39)
Degrees of violence
80(3)
Skin-deep preservation
83(10)
Repair and replacement
93(3)
Restoration and reproduction
96(5)
Substitute materials
101(1)
Restoration by unravelling
102(6)
Visible or invisible?
108(4)
Unseen structure
112(1)
Change of use
112(1)
Additions
113(6)
10 The Practice of Preservation: Contexts
119(14)
Living with the neighbours
119(9)
Living with the landscape
128(3)
Death by design
131(2)
11 Final Thoughts
133(9)
Reconstruction, resiting, resurrection and anastylosis
133(4)
Public opinion and fashion
137(4)
A true record
141(1)
12 Conclusion
142(7)
Appendices
1 Chronology (from 1800)
149(7)
2 The SPAB Manifesto
156(4)
3 The Venice Charter
160(4)
4 The Burra Charter
164(16)
5 The Canadian Code of Ethics
180(14)
6 The Philosophical Background to Listing in Britain
194(17)
7 Education for Conservation
211(3)
8 `A Permanent Agency'
214(4)
Bibliography 218(5)
Last Words 223(1)
Index 224
John Earl, Andrew Saint