The Icelandic Concrete Saga - Architecture and Construction (1847-1958)

By Sofia Nannini

DKK 360

9783986120276

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The Icelandic Concrete Saga  - Architecture and Construction (1847-1958)

“Many would consider a country without building materials uninhabitable.” With these words, Minister of Industry Gylfi Þorsteinsson Gíslason opened Iceland’s first and only cement plant in 1958. More than a century before, Portland cement was first used as plaster on the walls of the Reykjavík cathedral. At the time, most rural and urban dwellings were still being built from local turf or expensive imported timber. Just a few decades later, Icelandic architects, engineers, and masons were building their country exclusively in concrete. How did this material become so popular that the first decades of the twentieth century are referred to as “the age of concrete”? The Icelandic Concrete Saga focuses on over one hundred years of Icelandic architecture, construction, and technology. It traces the history of an architecture in constant struggle with material scarcity and the natural elements, its outcomes intertwined with Icelandic politics, culture, and society.

About the author

Sofia Nannini, PhD, is an architectural historian specializing in the relationship between building materials, society, and culture in nineteenth- and twentieth-century Europe. She is the author of Icelandic Farmhouses: Identity, Landscape and Construction (1790–1945), published in 2023, and is currently an assistant professor at the Politecnico di Torino, Italy.

AuthorSofia Nannini
Published2023
LanguageEngelsk
ISBN9783986120276
PublisherJovis Verlag
BindingSoft cover
Page count224 pages, 109 illustrations colour and b/w