Visions of Architecture
By (Author) Stephen Lees
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
A & C Black Publishers Ltd
23rd March 2011
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
720.1
Paperback
128
Width 189mm, Height 246mm, Spine 8mm
404g
This fascinating study of the development of Western architecture focuses on a unique selection of 52 buildings - mostly from the last 300 years - examining why they have been designed in a particular way, the methods and materials used to construct them and their impact on the development of construction technology.
The buildings have been chosen for their interesting history or design, or both, and are each beautifully illustrated as an architectural line drawing. They range from St Pancras Hotel in London to the Pennsylvania Railroad Station in New York City, to the Stoclet Palace in Brussels and the Acropolis in Athens. Drawing on a range of subject matters, from art through to politics, economics and religion, the author reveals a story about each of the buildings and the motivations of the societies, rulers or individuals that created them.
Stephen Lees read Law at the University of East Anglia before training as a Barrister at Lincoln's Inn in London. His involvement in Contract and Construction Law is due to his interest in the construction process and the practical applications of design innovation and building technology.
He has an extraordinary ability to represent the perspective and elevation of a structure and has been making sketches of interesting buildings from around the world for the last 30 years, 52 of which are reproduced here.