Be the architectural historian of your neighborhood with this invaluable updated version of a well-researched classic
There, in astonishing explanation and detail, the authors had assembled drawings, details, diagrams and photos of almost every dwelling type ever built on North American soil. You could trace the path of ancient classical architecture I had seen in the previous months to the Greek-revival Texas governor’s mansion that I photographed for a senior studio project the following year. It also included an explanation of Spanish architecture’s convergence with Native American building techniques so familiar to me, with my Southwestern upbringing.
So when, earlier this year and three decades later, I gleefully discovered that Virginia Savage McAlester had released an updated and revised edition of this classic, I knew I would find a way to thank her and make it known what a phenomenal book is.
She then stretches into the beginning of the 21st century with adept interpretations of current architectural trends. “After realizing that approximately eighty percent of American houses had been built since 1940, it seemed very important to bring the book right up to the present,” says McAlester.
The addition of a chapter on land development and neighborhood formation, as well as explanations of how bank lending and transportation systems influenced home building, further enrich this study. There is also a chapter that delves into green design and methods of prefabricated construction. With additional photos and explanations in original chapters, and new topics, the second edition is 300 pages longer than the first, coming in at 848. This is a not a book that you read straight through; it is one that you cherish and refer to year after year. Thank you, Virginia Savage McAlester. No doubt that my new copy, like my original, will also be dog-eared, coffee stained and losing its cover 30 years from now.
Simple line drawings illustrate stylistic elements that aid in identifying the architecture of a given structure. Simply refer to this guide, and you will soon be the architectural historian in your neighborhood.
Significant to the study is the identification of five groups of historical precedent in which most residential U.S. architecture has its origins. They are:
- Ancient classical
- Renaissance classical
- Medieval
- Hispanic
- Modern
Once you grasp this knowledge, you will be able to comprehend and identify various styles rather quickly and easily.
Interiors are excluded from this book. The complexity of the subject demands that attention be given to the overall aesthetic and bones of the architecture. This is about form, context, structure and influences on the fashion of domestic construction.
“I wrote it because in the 1970s, I was trying to save my own neighborhood — Swiss Avenue in Dallas — as a historic district,” she explains. “The first thing we were asked for was a historic survey, which required identifying architectural styles. I assumed there would be a book like the field guides to birds, but there wasn’t. All I could find were books about great landmark houses such as those in Newport, Rhode Island, or New York City’s Upper East Side.”
Must-Have Book: ‘A Field Guide to American Houses"
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