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Free Plan for the 1850s: Forgotten Imagined Architectures from Mid-Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 January 2016

Extract

This study focuses on two little-known mid-nineteenth-century pamphlets which proposed radical changes to the ways in which large public and administrative buildings were planned. Although one author went to some lengths to remain anonymous, the other was soon to become recognized and respected as a major critic and historian of architecture. These ideas were thus by no means the fantasies of peripheral dreamers. Indeed, they were possible, practical solutions to current problems which used both proven and emerging technologies. Both authors advocated deep, top-lit, single-storey, ‘universal’, undifferentiated and continuous space as the best way to plan museums, libraries and offices, supported by clearly articulated reasoning. In so doing, they advanced arguments more usually associated with the open planning and ‘free’ plans of twentieth-century Modern architecture; they anticipated ideas put forward independently over three-quarters of a century later. The authors appropriated strategies already rehearsed in contemporary buildings that had been conceived for commercial, horticultural and industrial uses. They also understood how new technologies of construction and servicing developed outside the fields of public and representational buildings could help make the spaces in these types comfortable and environmentally acceptable.

Type
Research Article
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Copyright © Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain 2014

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References

Notes

1 Durand, J.N.L. (Text - Legrand, J.G.), Recueuil et parallèle des edifices de tout genre anciens et modernes remarcables pour leur beauté… (Paris, 1799–1800).Google Scholar

2 Fergusson, James, History of Architecture in All Countries, 4 vols (London, 1865, 1867 and 1876).Google Scholar This work had appeared in various forms and titles from the mid-1850s, starting with The Illustrated Handbook of Architecture, 2 vols (London, 1855)Google Scholar. Some of the publication history and changes in titles is given in the preface to the first edition (1862) of A History of the Modern Styles of Architecture.

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5 Ibid., p. 105.

6 Fergusson, James, Observations on the British Museum, National Gallery, and National Record Office, With Suggestions for Their Improvement (London, 1849).Google Scholar

7 Ibid., pp. 11–12.

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15 Ibid., p. 39.

16 Ibid., p. 39.

17 Combe, James, ‘Description of a Flax Mill Recently Erected by Messrs. Marshall at Leeds’, Minutes of the Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers [hereafter ‘PICE’], 2 (1842), pp. 142–45 (p. 142).CrossRefGoogle Scholar In the published account, Combe’s short presentation was followed by discussion in which costs and other details were discussed. Fergusson relied on these costings for his comparisons with the British Museum. See also ‘Description of a Flax Mill Recently Erected by Messrs. Marshall, at Leeds’, Civil Engineer and Architects Journal, 5 (1842), pp. 350–51Google Scholar; ‘Description of a Flax Mill Recently Erected by Messrs. Marshall, at Leeds’, London Journal of the Arts and Sciences…, 22 (1843), pp. 5155 Google Scholar; ‘A Day at a Leeds Flax-Mill, ’, The Penny Magazine, Supplement (December 1843), pp. 501–08Google Scholar; Dickens, Charles, ‘Wolloty Trot, Scene the Second: a Leeds Flax Mill’, Household Words, 6 (1852–53), pp. 501–02.Google Scholar

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21 Ibid., p. 41.

22 In 1849, it was becoming clear that unprotected iron structural elements were very vulnerable to catastrophic failure when exposed to intense heat. James Braidwood, the superintendent of the London fire brigade wrote on this subject. See Braidwood, James, ‘On Fire-proof Buildings’, PICE, 8 (1849), pp. 141–63.Google Scholar See also On Fire-Proof Buildings’, The Builder, 7 (1849), p. 116.Google Scholar

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24 Ibid., p. 42.

25 Ibid., pp. 42–43.

26 James Pennethorne’s designs for the new Record Office in Chancery Lane were published in The Builder in 1851: ‘The New Record Office, Chancery Lane. — Mr. Pennethorne, Architect’, The Builder, 9 (1851), p. 635 (description), p. 643 (view).Google ScholarPubMed

27 Fergusson, , Observations, p. 64.Google ScholarPubMed

28 Ibid., p. 27.

29 Ibid., p. 43.

30 Ibid., p. 44.

31 Ibid., p. 45.

32 Fergusson’s calculations of cost were based upon the declared cost of the Leeds mill at the presentation made by James Combe at the Institution of Civil Engineers, PICE, 2 (1842), p. 142. This gave the cost including the Egyptian front as £27,443. The mounting costs of the British Museum were regularly updated in the press, based upon Parliamentary reports. By the end of 1846, a total of £606,500 had been spent since work had started in 1823. At the time, ‘the estimate for the cost of completing the building, in which sum is included the expenses for fittings in the year 1847–48 amounts to the sum of £106,911’. The British Museum’, Builder, 5 (1847), p. 151.Google Scholar

33 Collins, Peter, Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture (London, 1968), pp. 128–46.Google Scholar

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38 Anon., A Remedy, p. 86.Google ScholarPubMed

39 Ibid., p. 86.

40 Ibid., p. 86.

41 Ibid., p. 85.

42 Ibid., p. 87.

43 Morrison, Kathryn A., English Shops and Shopping: an Architectural History (New Haven and London, 2003), pp. 110–12.Google Scholar

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49 See Cockerell, Samuel Pepys, Travels in Southern Europe and the Levant, 1810–1817. The Journal of C. R. Cockerel!, R.A. Edited by his Son… (London, 1903).Google Scholar

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51 Nineteenth-century covered markets in Britain generally followed the precedent set by Foster in St John’s Market. European market buildings were often more open pavilions, possibly following other precedents such as the covered market buildings in French Bastide towns. For British covered markets, see, for example, Market House at Blackburn’, Practical Mechanics Journal, 1 (1848), pl. 15.Google Scholar See also Bolton Market’, Builder, 11 (1853), p. 24 Google Scholar; ‘ New Market Burnley’, Builder, 24 (1866), p. 250.Google Scholar

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59 Combe, James, ‘Description of a Flax Mill Recently Erected by Messrs. Marshall at Leeds’, PICE, 2 (1842), pp. 142–45 (p. 142).Google Scholar Little is known of James Combe. There is no entry in Skempton, A.W. (ed.), Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland, volume 1: 1500–1850 (London, 2002)Google Scholar or Cross-Rudkin, P.S.M., Biographical Dictionary of Civil Engineers in Great Britain and Ireland, volume 2: 1830–1890 (London, 2008).CrossRefGoogle Scholar There is also no entry for Combe in Bell, S.P., A Biographical Index of British Engineers in the 19th Century (London, 1975)Google Scholar

60 Combe, , ‘Description’, p. 142.Google Scholar The figure given was £27,443, which included the ornamental Egyptian front.

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63 Ibid., p. 144. Smith, James, who managed a large establishment at Deanston in Lanarkshire, Scotland had built the first such mill in 1834. See ‘The Deanston Cotton Works’, Chambers Edinburgh Journal, 371, 9 March 1839, p. 55 Google Scholar; Smith, James of Deanston Obit., PICE, 10 (1850–51), pp. 9394.Google Scholar For a description of the single-storey weaving room at Deanston, see ‘Reports of the Inspectors of Factories to Her Majesty’s Principal Secretary of State for the Home Department for the Half-Year ending 31st December 1838.’ Appendix — No. V — ‘Mr. James Smith’s Statement as to the Deanston Cotton-works, in the County of Perth. Communicated by him to Mr.Stuart’, , in Reports from Commissioners, 16 vols (London, 1839), 6, p. 99 and in report on factories (6, pp. 533–37)Google Scholar. This publication gives a relatively full description of the vaulted mill at Deanston.

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66 Ibid., p. 251.

67 Ibid., p. 253.

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70 Loddiges’, George ‘artificial rain’ (article 1689) in Loudon’s Encyclopaedia of Gardening, p. 331.Google Scholar ‘James Kewley’s alarum-thermometer’ (article 1489). Fully described with a drawing of the mechanism on p. 294, Kewley patented his ingenious mechanism in 1816 (British Patent, 4086).

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77 The problem of waterproofing flat roofs and disposing of rainwater had been solved in the Deanston and Leeds mills by the use of asphalt laid over the plastered vaults and protected and insulated with a layer of soil and the hollow cast-iron columns that conveyed the rainwater to a system of drains below the floor.

78 Fergusson, , The Illustrated Handbook, I, pp. 453–54.Google Scholar The entry of natural light into the vast space was carefully manipulated in some of the important structural bays near the Qibla. This has been confirmed in restoration work carried out since the period when Fergusson was writing. For a discussion of this subject, see Moneo, Rafael, ‘La vida de los edificios, Las ampliaciones de la Mezquita de Cordoba’, Arquitectura, 256 (1985), pp. 2636.Google Scholar

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87 Images and references to early office space have been gathered at http: / / www.officemuseum.comhttp: / / www.officemuseum.com (accessed on 30 December 2013). There were some moves in the direction of grouping large numbers of clerks and people processing orders in banks, mail-order establishments and telegraph offices, but not on the bold and ruthlessly regimented scale proposed for the War Administration Building.

88 Ward, Montgomery & Co., Catalogue No. 13Spring and Summer, 1875 (Chicago, 1875), trade catalogue un-paginated.Google Scholar

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99 Jarzombek, Mark, ‘Corridor Spaces’, Critical Enquiry, 36 (2010), pp. 72870.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

100 Ibid., p. 753.

101 Brownlee, David B., ‘“A Regular Mongrel Affair”: G.G. Scott’s Design for the Government Offices’, Architectural History, 28 (1985), pp. 15982 and 184–87CrossRefGoogle Scholar, plan shown on pl. 4. See also Morris, Ellen K., ‘Symbols of Empire: Architectural Style and the Government Offices Competition’, Journal of Architectural Education, 32 (1978), pp. 813.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

102 ‘Design for the Proposed New Foreign Office and India Office’, The Builder, 17 (1859), pp. 535–37. A perspective of the scheme had been published in The Builder in 1857: ‘The Premiated Designs for the Government Offices’, The Builder, 15 (1857), pp. 494–95. The same drawing appeared in the Illustrated London News in ‘The New Government Offices’, Illustrated London News, 31 (1857), pp. 257–58: ‘Third Prize Design for Foreign Department (ScottGeorge Gilbert, F.S.A., Architect): Premium £ 300.’

103 ’The Premiated Designs for the Government Offices’, The Builder, 15 (1857), pp. 450–52.

104 Bremner, Alex, ‘Nation and Empire in the Government Architecture of Mid-Victorian London: The Foreign and India Office Reconsidered’, The Historical Journal, 48 (2005), pp. 70342 (p. 728).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

105 ‘New Admiralty and War Offices. Selected Design by Messrs Leeming & Leeming’, The Building News, 47 (1884), un-paginated plate.

106 Brownlee, David B., ‘“To Agree Would be to Commit an Act of Artistic Suicide …”: The Revision of the Design for the Law Courts’, JSAH, 42 (1983), pp. 16888.Google Scholar See also Port, M.H., ‘The New Law Courts Competition, 100 1866–67’, Architectural History, 11 (1968), pp. 7593 and 113–20.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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108 For a plan and section of the Reform Club, see Civil Engineer and Architect’s journal, 3 (1840), pls 18–19. An earlier example of such a glazed courtyard was the Attingham Picture Gallery built by John Nash in 1807. See Hussey, Christopher, English Country Houses: Mid Georgian, 1760–1800 (London, 1986), pp. 195202.Google Scholar

109 ‘The Museum of Economic Geology’, Illustrated London News, 12 (1948), p. 235; ‘The Museum of Economic Geology’, The Builder, 6 (1848), p. 559. For a contemporary plan of Deane and Woodward’s Oxford Museum, see Acland, Henry W. and Ruskin, John, The Oxford Museum (London, 1859), folding plate, facing p. 32.Google Scholar For a view of the interior of the glazed court, see ‘ Deane, Sir T. N. and Woodward, B.: The Oxford Museum’, Building News, 6 (1860), p. 271.Google Scholar

110 ’The Royal Exchange Roofing’, The Civil Engineer and Architects Journal, 14 (1851), p. 198.

111 For plan and section of Duban’s Cour vitrée in his Palais des Etudes at the Beaux Arts, see Guadet, Julien, Elements et theorie de l’Architecture, 4 vols (Paris 1900c), II, pp. 34445.Google Scholar Duban planned the building with an open court in 1830. In 1863, he designed its glass roof. For Digby Wyatt’s India Office without the glazed court, see ‘The Courtyard of the India Office, Westminster’, The Builder, 25 (1867), pp. 781–83. For Wyatt’s design for the glazed roof over the court, see ‘The “Sultan’s Court,” New India Office’, The Architect, 7 (1872), p. 10.

112 See, for example, Boileau, L.C., ‘Les Plafonds Vitrées — Eclairage Horizontal. Eclairage Vertical’, L’Architecture, 3 (1890), pp. 15965 Google Scholar; 4 (1891), pp. 53–57, 510–12, 533–36; 5 (1892), pp. 41–44.

113 Fergusson, Observations, p. 69.

114 For a discussion of mid-century attitudes and ideas on the hanging of paintings, see Charlotte, Klonk, ‘Mounting Vision: Charles Eastlake and the National Gallery of London’, The Art Bulletin, 82 (2000), pp. 331–47.Google Scholar

115 Accurate plans and sections of von Klenze’s Pinakothek, completed in 1836 had been published in Förster’s Allgemeine Bauzeitung in 1841. They were reproduced for a wider British public in J.W. Papworth & Wyatt Papworth, Museums, Libraries and Picture Galleries … (London, 1853), pp. 67–68, pl. 8 — von Klenze Pinakothek, Munich, plan and section.

116 Fergusson, Observations, p. 70.

117 Banham, Reyner, The Architecture of the Well-tempered Environment (London, 1969), pp. 7584.Google Scholar

118 Bullen, J. B., ‘Alfred Waterhouse’s Romanesque “Temple of Nature”: The Natural History Museum, London’, Architectural History, 49 (2006), pp. 25785.Google Scholar Capt. Francis Fowke’s plan is shown on p. 264, Alfred Waterhouse’s on p. 270.

119 For the role of Richard Owen, see Yanni, Carla, ‘Divine Display or Secular Science — Defining Nature at the Natural History Museum in London’, JSAH, 55 (1996), pp. 27699.Google Scholar

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121 Werner Oechslin and Wilfred Wang (trans.), ‘Les Cinq Points d’une Architecture Nouvelle’, Assemblage, n. 4 (1987), pp. 82–93. Original typescript of manifesto published pp. 86–88. This text was sent to Alfred Roth in Stuttgart in connection with the Weissenhof exhibition who translated and published it as: Roth, Alfred, Zwei Wohnhauser von Le Corbusier und Pierre Jeanerret (Stuttgart, 1927).Google Scholar

3. LE PLAN LIBRE — Les pilotis se poursuivent jusqu’à la toiture, portant leurs planchers. Ils ne gênent aucunement la disposition des cloisons verticales qui sont différentes à chaque étage. II n’y a plus de murs portants, il y a des membranes légères et tous les étages sont différents les uns des autres.

LIBERTE ABSOLUE DU PLAN. De là, une économie considerable qui contrebalance facilement les prix plus élevés de la construction de ciment armé.

122 Banham, Reyner, Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (London, 1967), p. 262.Google Scholar

123 Blake, Peter, Mies van der Rohe: Architecture and Structure (London, 1963), p. 64.Google Scholar

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127 Giedion, , Space, Time and Architecture, p. 617.Google Scholar The chapter from which this quotation is taken did not appear in the various editions of the work printed between 1941 and 1949. In 1953, it appears in a new chapter: ‘Mies van der Rohe and the Integrity of Form’.

128 Archizoom Associates, ‘Non-Stop City Residential Park Climate Universal System’, Design Quarterly, 78/79(1970), pp. 17–21.

129 Superstudio, Cristiano Toraldo di Francia, Alessandro Magris, Roberto Magris, Piero Frassinelli and Adolfo Natalini, ‘Superstudio on Mindscapes’, Design Quarterly, 89 (1973), pp. 17–31 (p. 17).

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135 Nute, Kevin, ‘Frank Lloyd Wright and Japanese Architecture: a Study in Inspiration’, Journal of Design History, 7 (1994), pp. 16985 CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Turner, V., ‘Frank Lloyd Wright and the Young Le Corbusier’, JSAH, 42 (1983), pp. 35059.Google Scholar