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Imperial London M. H. Port

Imperial London By M. H. Port

Imperial London by M. H. Port


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Summary

Tells the story of the public buildings erected in London when it was the capital of a world-wide empire. A range of structures including the British Museum and the Law Courts are examined in this text, as well as discussing their architectural style, political, financial and social history.

Imperial London Summary

Imperial London: Civil Government Building in London 1851-1915 by M. H. Port

This important book tells the story of the public buildings erected in London during the period when that city served as the capital of a worldwide empire. Examining a wide range of structures, including the British Museum, the Law Courts, the Whitehall government buildings, and the South Kensington museums complex, M.H. Port discusses their political, financial, and social history and the debates over the architectural styles in which they would be built.

Port relates the arguments conducted in Parliament and in the press over the extent to which these buildings were needed, the character that they should exhibit, who should design them, and where they should be sited. Showing how new pressures were exerted on government in a gradually democratizing age, he moves to a discussion of economicsthe controversy over who should pay for the buildings. According to Port, many people objected to the idea that the public at large should pay for the embellishment of the metropolis and believed that, if buildings were necessary, they should be as inexpensive as possible. Economy was to be observed not only in siting and design but also in execution, by competitive bidding and secure contracts. Debate also raged over whether the current generation should pay the whole cost or whether it should be shared with posterity through loan finance.

Complex, frustrating, occasionally triumphant, frequently disastrous, the story of the building up of London as an imperial capital is here told with sophistication and authority. It is a definitive book.

Published for the Paul Mellon Center for Studies in British Art

About M. H. Port

M.H. Port is emeritus professor of modern history and senior research fellow at Queen Mary & Westfield College, University of London.

Table of Contents

Part 1 Context: the imperial city. Part 2 Need: the case for public buildings. Part 3 Administration: the Office of Works, 1851-1873; the Office of Works, 1873-1915. Part 4 Sites: art and science; courts of justice; government offices. Part 5 Finance: the costs of the building; financing the costs. Part 6 Architects: the Golden Age of competition; rival modes of selection. Part 7 Style: the battle of the styles; a gothic triumph; classicism revivified. Part 8 Building: hazards of the building process; envoi. Appendices: Secretaries of the Office of Work, 1851-1915; major government building works, 1850-1915 - costs, architects, and contractors; figures; the leading characters.

Additional information

GOR005173065
9780300059779
0300059779
Imperial London: Civil Government Building in London 1851-1915 by M. H. Port
Used - Very Good
Hardback
Yale University Press
1995-01-25
356
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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