· The Secret Lives of Buildings is a beautifully wrought book: a kind of illuminated manuscript with words taking the place of pictures of which, Estimated Reading Time: 5 mins. In spell-binding prose, Hollis follows his buildings through time and space to reveal the hidden histories of the Parthenon and the Alhambra, Gloucester Cathedral and Haghia Sofia, Sans Souci and Notre Dame de Paris, Malatesta's Tempio and Loreto, and explores landmarks of our own time, from Hulme's legendary crescents to the Berlin Wall and the fibre-glass theme parks of Las Vegas/5(40). The Secret Lives Of Buildings: From The Parthenon To The Vegas Strip In Thirteen Stories - Kindle edition by Hollis, Edward. Download it once and read it on your Kindle device, PC, phones or tablets. Use features like bookmarks, note taking and highlighting while reading The Secret Lives Of Buildings: From The Parthenon To The Vegas Strip In Thirteen Stories.
Edward Hollis' The Secret Lives of Buildings: From the Ruins of the Parthenon to the Vegas Strip in Thirteen Stories has an interesting premise which Hollis largely exploits. He examines the active life of buildings, from their conception, construction, use, decay and re-use. The Parthenon is the model Hollis uses in all his other examples. Secret Lives of Buildings From the Ruins of the Parthenon to the Vegas Strip in Thirteen Stories by Edward Hollis available in Trade Paperback on www.doorway.ru, also read synopsis and reviews. Few man-made things seem as stable, as immutable, as a building. Yet the life of any structure is. The Secret Lives of Buildings by Edward Hollis. Jonathan Glancey enjoys tracing the stories written in the stones of the world's great edifices. Jonathan Glancey. Fri EDT.
Elliott, ‘Secret Lives of Buildings’ review, pre-publication draft Review: Edward Hollis, The Secret Lives of Buildings: From the Ruins of the Parthenon to the Vegas Strip in Thirteen Stories (Picador, ) By Richard Elliott In a recent interview, the architect Norman Foster, looking back at the success of the buildings he had designed, pointed out that any such success or failure was ultimately down to the fact that buildings are "made by humans, designed by humans, and used by humans. In spell-binding prose, Hollis follows his buildings through time and space to reveal the hidden histories of the Parthenon and the Alhambra, Gloucester Cathedral and Haghia Sofia, Sans Souci and Notre Dame de Paris, Malatesta's Tempio and Loreto, and explores landmarks of our own time, from Hulme's legendary crescents to the Berlin Wall and the fibre-glass theme parks of Las Vegas. But a building is a capricious thing: it is inhabited and changed, and its existence is a tale of constant and curious transformation. In this radical re-imagination of architectural history, Edward Hollis tells the stories of thirteen buildings, beginning with the 'once upon a time' when they first appeared, through the years of appropriation.
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