By Kim Dirckinck-Holmfeld
DKK 278
9788774071136
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Guide to Danish Architecture is a two-volume series that covers the period from around the year 1000 to 1995. The second volume begins in around 1960, when the industrialization of building took hold in earnest, and in a few years changed the conditions for the creation of architecture. ENGLISH EDITION.
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Guide to Danish Architecture is a two-volume series that covers the period from around the year 1000 to 1995. The second volume begins in around 1960, when the industrialization of building took hold in earnest, and in a few years changed the conditions for the creation of architecture.
Guide 2 is arranged around individual categories of building divided into time segments of about a decade. This approach was chosen because during the period covered by this volume, these categories determined the appearance of architecture and especially the layout of plans. One category of this kind is school construction, which produced specific types of buildings to meet functional needs.
The guide is introduced by a review of changing architectural ideals in the post-war period and of dramatic changes in conditions for architecture that have proved of great importance for the appearance of architecture in our time.
Together, the two guides, with their 1,800 illustrations, provide a concentrated history of architecture in Denmark - the largest of its kind ever published.
Author | Kim Dirckinck-Holmfeld |
Published | 1995 |
Language | English |
ISBN | 9788774071136 |
Publisher | Arkitektens Forlag |
Binding | Soft cover |
Page count | 390 |