Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buildings. Show all posts

Monday, 6 January 2014

10 buildings that changed the face of England


The head of English Heritage, Dr Simon Thurley, chooses his top ten most important buildings in England’s architectural history.

1. Westminster Abbey (c.960)
Coronation church and mausoleum of kings and queens since the 960s, it was here that Edward the Confessor developed the style known as Norman and Henry VIII started a gothic refurbishment which took nearly 3 centuries to complete.

2. Rievaulx Abbey, North Yorkshire (1147-67)
England’s most beautiful ruin, built in a remote valley by Cistercian monks and one of the first built in the gothic style with pointed arches.

3. King’s Bench Walk, Temple, London (1677)
A prime example of a new type of house developed in James I’s London, first known as a “row house” and later a terrace. This housing style became the backbone of the city after the Great Fire of London.

4. The Peckwater Quadrangle, Christ Church, Oxford (1707)
Designed by Dean Aldrich, this courtyard was built to house rich undergraduates in a style rigorously faithful to ancient Roman buildings. The style was taken up by the circle of the royal court and was adopted for houses, public buildings and churches everywhere.


5. Ditherington Flax Mill, Shrewsbury (1797)
The world’s first incombustible iron-framed building and ancestor to every large building with a steel frame today, from supermarkets to skyscrapers.

6. A&G Murray Mills, Ancoats, Manchester (1801)
A&G Murray’s mills were the first in which manufacturing processes were all powered by steam and look, at a distance, like a Georgian street, but behind the iron casements, they drove the largest economy the world had ever seen.

7. Liverpool Road Railway Station, Manchester (1830)
The world’s first passenger railway station is a modest but reassuring-looking building. By blending Avant-garde engineering with reassuringly familiar architectural styles, architects managed to create an atmosphere of confidence.

8. No 6 Slip, Chatham Historic Dockyard (1847)
Naval engineers pushed the limits of technology to build and equip the Navy, and one of the most important advances was the construction of massive free-standing iron sheds called “slips”, under which ships were built. These were the first wide-spanned metal structures in the world.

9. All Saints, Margaret Street, London (1849)
It was here that architecture and engineering first fused to create a new language for the Victorian era. William Butterfield saw the possibilities of coloured and engineered brick for making modern buildings that were both decorative and functional.

10. Bedford Park, London (from 1877)
This mix of brick-built semi-detached and detached Victorian houses in wide streets with deep gardens became the aspiration of millions. Such suburbs, and cheaper imitations of them, were built all over England from the 1880s.

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