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Architecture and the Face of Coal: Mining and Modern Britain [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 260x210 mm, Illustrations; 20 Illustrations, color; 150 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2022
  • Kirjastus: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1848223560
  • ISBN-13: 9781848223561
  • Formaat: Hardback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius: 260x210 mm, Illustrations; 20 Illustrations, color; 150 Illustrations, black and white
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Dec-2022
  • Kirjastus: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1848223560
  • ISBN-13: 9781848223561
With only a handful of British coalmines remaining active and with targets set to reduce carbon emissions, the coal industry now seems to be heading towards extinction. Yet, it was coal that turned Britain into a world-leader during the Industrial Revolution and established the conditions for the modern state. In the 20th century, it generated building programmes on a massive scale concerning miners welfare, settlements and housing. The form, space, organisation, and aesthetics of architecture became of critical importance not just to the process of the industrys modernisation but also how it was perceived and understood both within and outside its workforce. But despite the centrality of coal mining and its workers to the development of modern Britain, as well as the contemporary recognition that aspects of its innovative architecture received, its built legacy has often been overlooked and physically almost completely erased. Divided into three parts, this is the first book which provides a critical and comprehensive examination of the architecture of coal in Britain and how it responded to the needs of the industry and, perhaps more significantly, its labour force.





 





Part I explores the relationship between the architecture of coal and the provision of welfare. While this produced a series of enlightened built projects for miners and their communities especially between the wars educational buildings, reading rooms, holiday camps, welfare institutes, sports grounds, swimming pools, medical centres, childrens playgrounds, etc. it focusses on the paradigmatic integration of aesthetics and programme seen most emphatically in the creation of over 600 pithead baths. Part II looks at settlement and the relationships between responses to often adverse conditions within domestic environments in mining settlements and the development of broader and influential theories and practices concerning housing. Finally, Part III explores the modernisation of the industry during the post-war period arguing that that architectural design and representation became pivotal to the functional and symbolic requirements of the newly Nationalised entity and its position within, and singular contribution to, post-war society.

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Winner of Alice Davis Hitchcock Medallion 2023 (UK).
Acknowledgements 7(2)
Introduction: An Architecture of Disappearance 9(5)
PART I PITHEAD BATHS AND THE ARCHITECTURE OF WELFARE
Pithead Baths, Modernism and Modernity
14(9)
John Henry Forshaw
23(6)
Miners' Welfare Committee Architects' Department and `Official' Architecture
29(9)
The Social Context of Coal Between the Wars
38(1)
The Sankey Commission
39(3)
The Beginning of the Miners' Welfare Fund
42(4)
British and European Precedents of Pithead Baths
46(6)
Landscapes of Bathing
52(4)
Architecture and the Pithead Baths Movement
56(4)
The Samuel Commission and the Development of the Pithead Baths Programme
60(3)
Dudok, Morality and Modern Aesthetics
63(4)
The Lessons of Dudok's Schools
67(6)
Modernist Technological Developments in the Pithead Baths Programme
73(7)
The Experimental Baths
80(4)
The Modern Interior
84(6)
The Evolution of Form and Representation: The Search for Expression
90(13)
Exploiting the L-shape
103(11)
Linear Forms
114(7)
The Block
121(4)
Other Iterations
125(5)
Smaller Pithead Baths
130(3)
Prefabrications and / Mass Production
133(9)
PART II SETTLEMENT
Welfare Beyond the Pithead Baths
142(4)
Traditional Mining Settlements
146(9)
Morality, Mining Companies and Model Towns
155(9)
Unwin and Coal Mining
164(13)
Doncaster and the East Kent Coalfields: Patrick Abercrombie
177(9)
The Refinement of a Coalfield Type: The Industrial Housing Association and `The Building of Twelve Thousand Houses'
186(14)
PART III ARCHITECTURE, PUBLICITY AND THE PLAN FOR COAL
Introduction
200(1)
The Reid Report and Technical Transformations
201(5)
Comrie and Other Architectural Paradigms
206(10)
Communicating the Nationalised Industry
216(10)
Planning and Underground Architecture
226(6)
Inter-colliery Architecture
232(8)
Reconstructed Collieries and Superpits
240(16)
Rothes and Scotland
256(11)
Coda: Coal and the New Towns 267(10)
Notes 277(5)
Bibliography 282(10)
Index 292
Gary A. Boyd is a Professor in Architecture at Queens University, Belfast.