84 resultados para Holland House.
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2012 AAI Awards Publication by Gandon Editions. Award winning House in Bogwest by Steve Larkin Architects. Includes text by Steve Larkin Architects, Peer Review text by AAI awards 2012 international jury of Architects including Joseph Rykwert, Keith Williams, Noel Brady, Michael McGarry and Ruairí Ó Cuív, Drawings by Steve Larkin and Photographs by Alice Clancy.
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Critical review of House at Bogwest by Steve Larkin Architects. Text by editorial team, drawings by Steve Larkin and photographs by Alice Clancy.
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House at Bogwest to be included in a guide to contemporary Irish architecture since 1990 published by Gandon Editions and prepared by Sean Antoin O Muiri.
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Feature on House at Bogwest. Includes text by Steve Larkin and Emmet Scanlon. Includes photographs by Alice Clancy and drawings by Steve Larkin.
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All houses selected for exhibition in "Houses of the World 2013" exposition in Ljubljana, Kongresni Trg to be published in the "Houses of the world 2013" by Hise Magazine. House at Bogwest selected for publication and exhibition.
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Malone, C.A.T., S.K.F. Stoddart, and D. Trump, Antiquity, 1988. 62: p. 297-301.
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A series of individual poems selected for a special contemporary Irish edition of the American journal Atlanta Review.
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Archaeological excavation has provided an alternative source of evidence for the development of the late medieval peasant house. It is argued that whilst there was a significant change in building techniques in the decades around 1200 with the adoption of ground-set timbers, the most important factor which led to the survival of houses was a fall in real wages during the thirteenth century. This encouraged peasants to repair existing buildings, rather than replace them with new ones. Alternative traditions of building are also investigated. Stone construction was adopted in a number of areas of England, but in spite of the durability of the material, few medieval peasant buildings of this type have survived in use because of the failure to use lime mortar. Decisions about whether to invest in a building’s renovation will depend on the capital initially expended upon it. This interpretation is considered against the data from the fifteenth century and found to conform satisfactorily. Its implications are considered for the period between 1200 and 1350. Data collected from archaeological excavations combined with the results of dendrochronology on a growing number of closely dated standing buildings suggest that there was a significant ‘cull’ of houses in the period after 1350 as new dwellings were constructed.
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The Parker Morris report of 1961 attempted, through the application of scientific principles, to define the minimum living space standards needed to accommodate household activities. But while early modernist research into ideas of existenzminimum were the work of avant-garde architects and thinkers, this report was commissioned by the British State. This normalization of scientific enquiry into space can be considered not only a response to new conditions in the mass production of housing – economies of scale, prefabrication, system-building and modular coordination – but also to the post-war boom in consumer goods. The domestic interior was assigned a key role as a privileged site of mass consumption as the production and micro-management of space in Britain became integral to the development of a planned national economy underpinned by Fordist principles. The apparently placeless and scale-less diagrams executed by Gordon Cullen to illustrate Parker Morris emblematize these relationships. Walls dissolve as space flows from inside to outside in a homogenized and ephemeral landscape whose limits are perhaps only the boundaries of the nation state and the circuits of capital.
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It has long been recognized that the byre-house or longhouse, in which animals and humans lived in the same building and with direct contact, was a distinctive building plan. Earlier interpretations have seen it as a ubiquitous house type found throughout Britain, but gradually replaced by separate buildings for keeping animals and accommodating humans. More recent work has suggested that it was a regional variant of the common late medieval domestic plan. The use of this building type was restricted to parts of Wales, and northern and western areas of England. It is argued that the introduction of the byre-house occurs mainly in the thirteenth century as part of a wider trend to provide accommodation for livestock during the winter months. The byre-house was a one response to this need, and its adoption was not due to climatic or geographical factors. Instead, it is interpreted as reflecting localized cultural attitudes to the relationship between humans and animals.