fbpx
Wikipedia

Georgian architecture

Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is named after the first four British monarchs of the House of HanoverGeorge I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The so-called great Georgian cities of the British Isles were Edinburgh, Bath, pre-independence Dublin, and London, and to a lesser extent York and Bristol.[1] The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In the United States the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all buildings from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention",[2] and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range.

Middle-class house in Salisbury cathedral close, England, with minimal classical detail.
Very grand terrace houses at The Circus, Bath (1754), with basement "areas" and a profusion of columns.
Function rules at Massachusetts Hall at Harvard University, 1718-20

The Georgian style is highly variable, but marked by symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.

Georgian architecture is characterized by its proportion and balance; simple mathematical ratios were used to determine the height of a window in relation to its width or the shape of a room as a double cube. Regularity, as with ashlar (uniformly cut) stonework, was strongly approved, imbuing symmetry and adherence to classical rules: the lack of symmetry, where Georgian additions were added to earlier structures remaining visible, was deeply felt as a flaw, at least before John Nash began to introduce it in a variety of styles.[3] Regularity of housefronts along a street was a desirable feature of Georgian town planning. Until the start of the Gothic Revival in the early 19th century, Georgian designs usually lay within the Classical orders of architecture and employed a decorative vocabulary derived from ancient Rome or Greece.

Characteristics

In towns, which expanded greatly during the period, landowners turned into property developers, and rows of identical terraced houses became the norm.[4] Even the wealthy were persuaded to live in these in town, especially if provided with a square of garden in front of the house. There was an enormous amount of building in the period, all over the English-speaking world, and the standards of construction were generally high. Where they have not been demolished, large numbers of Georgian buildings have survived two centuries or more, and they still form large parts of the core of cities such as London, Edinburgh, Dublin, Newcastle upon Tyne and Bristol.

The period saw the growth of a distinct and trained architectural profession; before the mid-century "the high-sounding title, 'architect' was adopted by anyone who could get away with it".[5] This contrasted with earlier styles, which were primarily disseminated among craftsmen through the direct experience of the apprenticeship system. But most buildings were still designed by builders and landlords together, and the wide spread of Georgian architecture, and the Georgian styles of design more generally, came from dissemination through pattern books and inexpensive suites of engravings. Authors such as the prolific William Halfpenny (active 1723–1755) had editions in America as well as Britain.

A similar phenomenon can be seen in the commonality of housing designs in Canada and the United States (though of a wider variety of styles) from the 19th century down to the 1950s, using pattern books drawn up by professional architects that were distributed by lumber companies and hardware stores to contractors and homebuilders.[6]

From the mid-18th century, Georgian styles were assimilated into an architectural vernacular that became part and parcel of the training of every architect, designer, builder, carpenter, mason and plasterer, from Edinburgh to Maryland.[7]

Styles

Georgian succeeded the English Baroque of Sir Christopher Wren, Sir John Vanbrugh, Thomas Archer, William Talman, and Nicholas Hawksmoor; this in fact continued into at least the 1720s, overlapping with a more restrained Georgian style. The architect James Gibbs was a transitional figure, his earlier buildings are Baroque, reflecting the time he spent in Rome in the early 18th century, but he adjusted his style after 1720.[8] Major architects to promote the change in direction from Baroque were Colen Campbell, author of the influential book Vitruvius Britannicus (1715–1725); Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington and his protégé William Kent; Isaac Ware; Henry Flitcroft and the Venetian Giacomo Leoni, who spent most of his career in England.

 
Neoclassical grandeur; Stowe House 1770-79 by Robert Adam modified in execution by Thomas Pitt

Other prominent architects of the early Georgian period include James Paine, Robert Taylor, and John Wood, the Elder. The European Grand Tour became very common for wealthy patrons in the period, and Italian influence remained dominant,[9] though at the start of the period Hanover Square, Westminster (1713 on), developed and occupied by Whig supporters of the new dynasty, seems to have deliberately adopted German stylistic elements in their honour, especially vertical bands connecting the windows.[10]

The styles that resulted fall within several categories. In the mainstream of Georgian style were both Palladian architecture—and its whimsical alternatives, Gothic and Chinoiserie, which were the English-speaking world's equivalent of European Rococo. From the mid-1760s a range of Neoclassical modes were fashionable, associated with the British architects Robert Adam, James Gibbs, Sir William Chambers, James Wyatt, George Dance the Younger, Henry Holland and Sir John Soane. John Nash was one of the most prolific architects of the late Georgian era known as The Regency style, he was responsible for designing large areas of London.[11] Greek Revival architecture was added to the repertory, beginning around 1750, but increasing in popularity after 1800. Leading exponents were William Wilkins and Robert Smirke.

In Britain, brick or stone are almost invariably used;[12] brick is often disguised with stucco. The Georgian terraces of Dublin are noted for their almost uniform use of red brick, for example, whereas equivalent terraces in Edinburgh are constructed from stone.[13] In America and other colonies wood remained very common, as its availability and cost-ratio with the other materials was more favourable. Raked roofs were mostly covered in earthenware tiles until Richard Pennant, 1st Baron Penrhyn led the development of the slate industry in Wales from the 1760s, which by the end of the century had become the usual material.[14]

Types of buildings

Houses

 
Westover Plantation - Georgian country house on a James River plantation in Virginia

Versions of revived Palladian architecture dominated English country house architecture. Houses were increasingly placed in grand landscaped settings, and large houses were generally made wide and relatively shallow, largely to look more impressive from a distance. The height was usually highest in the centre, and the Baroque emphasis on corner pavilions often found on the continent generally avoided. In grand houses, an entrance hall led to steps up to a piano nobile or mezzanine floor where the main reception rooms were. Typically the basement area or "rustic", with kitchens, offices and service areas, as well as male guests with muddy boots,[15] came some way above ground, and was lit by windows that were high on the inside, but just above ground level outside. A single block was typical, with perhaps a small court for carriages at the front marked off by railings and a gate, but rarely a stone gatehouse, or side wings around the court.

Windows in all types of buildings were large and regularly placed on a grid; this was partly to minimize window tax, which was in force throughout the period in the United Kingdom. Some windows were subsequently bricked-in. Their height increasingly varied between the floors, and they increasingly began below waist-height in the main rooms, making a small balcony desirable. Before this the internal plan and function of the rooms can generally not be deduced from the outside. To open these large windows the sash window, already developed by the 1670s, became very widespread.[16] Corridor plans became universal inside larger houses.[17]

Internal courtyards became more rare, except beside the stables, and the functional parts of the building were placed at the sides, or in separate buildings nearby hidden by trees. The views to and from the front and rear of the main block were concentrated on, with the side approaches usually much less important. The roof was typically invisible from the ground, though domes were sometimes visible in grander buildings. The roofline was generally clear of ornament except for a balustrade or the top of a pediment.[18] Columns or pilasters, often topped by a pediment, were popular for ornament inside and out,[19] and other ornament was generally geometrical or plant-based, rather than using the human figure.

 
Grand Neoclassical interior by Robert Adam, Syon House, London

Inside ornament was far more generous, and could sometimes be overwhelming.[20] The chimneypiece continued to be the usual main focus of rooms, and was now given a classical treatment, and increasingly topped by a painting or a mirror.[21] Plasterwork ceilings,[22] carved wood, and bold schemes of wallpaint formed a backdrop to increasingly rich collections of furniture, paintings, porcelain, mirrors, and objets d'art of all kinds.[23] Wood-panelling, very common since about 1500, fell from favour around the mid-century, and wallpaper included very expensive imports from China.[24]

Smaller houses in the country, such as vicarages, were simple regular blocks with visible raked roofs, and a central doorway, often the only ornamented area. Similar houses, often referred to as "villas" became common around the fringes of the larger cities, especially London,[25] and detached houses in towns remained common, though only the very rich could afford them in central London.

In towns even most better-off people lived in terraced houses, which typically opened straight onto the street, often with a few steps up to the door. There was often an open space, protected by iron railings, dropping down to the basement level, with a discreet entrance down steps off the street for servants and deliveries; this is known as the "area".[26] This meant that the ground floor front was now removed and protected from the street and encouraged the main reception rooms to move there from the floor above. Often, when a new street or set of streets was developed, the road and pavements were raised up, and the gardens or yards behind the houses remained at a lower level, usually representing the original one.[27]

 
Georgian townhouses on Baggot Street, Dublin

Town terraced houses for all social classes remained resolutely tall and narrow, each dwelling occupying the whole height of the building. This contrasted with well-off continental dwellings, which had already begun to be formed of wide apartments occupying only one or two floors of a building; such arrangements were only typical in England when housing groups of batchelors, as in Oxbridge colleges, the lawyers in the Inns of Court or The Albany after it was converted in 1802.[28] In the period in question, only in Edinburgh were working-class purpose-built tenements common, though lodgers were common in other cities. A curving crescent, often looking out at gardens or a park, was popular for terraces where space allowed. In early and central schemes of development, plots were sold and built on individually, though there was often an attempt to enforce some uniformity,[29] but as development reached further out schemes were increasingly built as a uniform scheme and then sold.[30]

The late Georgian period saw the birth of the semi-detached house, planned systematically, as a suburban compromise between the terraced houses of the city and the detached "villas" further out, where land was cheaper. There had been occasional examples in town centres going back to medieval times. Most early suburban examples are large, and in what are now the outer fringes of Central London, but were then in areas being built up for the first time. Blackheath, Chalk Farm and St John's Wood are among the areas contesting being the original home of the semi.[31] Sir John Summerson gave primacy to the Eyre Estate of St John's Wood. A plan for this exists dated 1794, where "the whole development consists of pairs of semi-detached houses, So far as I know, this is the first recorded scheme of the kind". In fact the French Wars put an end to this scheme, but when the development was finally built it retained the semi-detached form, "a revolution of striking significance and far-reaching effect".[32]

Churches

 
The courtyard of Somerset House, from the North Wing entrance. Built for government offices.

Until the Church Building Act 1818, the period saw relatively few churches built in Britain, which was already well-supplied,[33] although in the later years of the period the demand for Non-conformist and Roman Catholic places of worship greatly increased.[34] Anglican churches that were built were designed internally to allow maximum audibility, and visibility, for preaching, so the main nave was generally wider and shorter than in medieval plans, and often there were no side-aisles. Galleries were common in new churches. Especially in country parishes, the external appearance generally retained the familiar signifiers of a Gothic church, with a tower or spire, a large west front with one or more doors, and very large windows along the nave, but all with any ornament drawn from the classical vocabulary. Where funds permitted, a classical temple portico with columns and a pediment might be used at the west front. Interior decoration was generally chaste; however, walls often became lined with plaques and monuments to the more prosperous members of the congregation.[35]

In the colonies new churches were certainly required, and generally repeated similar formulae. British Non-conformist churches were often more classical in mood, and tended not to feel the need for a tower or steeple.

The archetypal Georgian church is St Martin-in-the-Fields in London (1720), by Gibbs, who boldly added to the classical temple façade at the west end a large steeple on top of a tower, set back slightly from the main frontage. This formula shocked purists and foreigners, but became accepted and was very widely emulated, at home and in the colonies,[36] for example at St Andrew's Church, Chennai in India. And in Dublin, the extremely similar St. George's Church, Dublin.

The 1818 Act allocated some public money for new churches required to reflect changes in population, and a commission to allocate it. Building of Commissioners' churches gathered pace in the 1820s, and continued until the 1850s. The early churches, falling into the Georgian period, show a high proportion of Gothic Revival buildings, along with the classically inspired.[37]

Public buildings

Public buildings generally varied between the extremes of plain boxes with grid windows and Italian Late Renaissance palaces, depending on budget. Somerset House in London, designed by Sir William Chambers in 1776 for government offices, was as magnificent as any country house, though never quite finished, as funds ran out.[38] Barracks and other less prestigious buildings could be as functional as the mills and factories that were growing increasingly large by the end of the period. But as the period came to an end many commercial projects were becoming sufficiently large, and well-funded, to become "architectural in intention", rather than having their design left to the lesser class of "surveyors".[39]

Colonial Georgian architecture

 
Hyde Park Barracks (1819), Georgian architecture in Sydney

Georgian architecture was widely disseminated in the English colonies during the Georgian era. American buildings of the Georgian period were very often constructed of wood with clapboards; even columns were made of timber, framed up, and turned on an oversized lathe. At the start of the period the difficulties of obtaining and transporting brick or stone made them a common alternative only in the larger cities, or where they were obtainable locally. Dartmouth College, Harvard University and the College of William and Mary offer leading examples of Georgian architecture in the Americas.

Unlike the Baroque style that it replaced, which was mostly used for palaces and churches, and had little representation in the British colonies, simpler Georgian styles were widely used by the upper and middle classes. Perhaps the best remaining house is the pristine Hammond-Harwood House (1774) in Annapolis, Maryland, designed by the colonial architect William Buckland and modelled on the Villa Pisani at Montagnana, Italy as depicted in Andrea Palladio's I quattro libri dell'architettura ("The Four Books of Architecture").

After independence, in the former American colonies, Federal-style architecture represented the equivalent of Regency architecture, with which it had much in common.

In Canada, the United Empire Loyalists embraced Georgian architecture as a sign of their fealty to Britain, and the Georgian style was dominant in the country for most of the first half of the 19th century. The Grange, for example, is a Georgian manor built in Toronto in 1817. In Montreal, English-born architect John Ostell worked on a significant number of remarkable constructions in the Georgian style such as the Old Montreal Custom House and the Grand séminaire de Montréal.

In Australia, the Old Colonial Georgian residential and non-residential styles were developed in the period from c. 1810 – c. 1840.

Post-Georgian developments

 
Winfield House in London was designed and built in the 1930s and is listed by Historic England as an important Neo-Georgian townhouse

After about 1840, Georgian conventions were slowly abandoned as a number of revival styles, including Gothic Revival, that had originated in the Georgian period, developed and contested in Victorian architecture, and in the case of Gothic became better researched, and closer to their originals. Neoclassical architecture remained popular, and was the opponent of Gothic in the Battle of the Styles of the early Victorian period. In the United States the Federalist Style contained many elements of Georgian style, but incorporated revolutionary symbols.

In the early decades of the twentieth century when there was a growing nostalgia for its sense of order, the style was revived and adapted and in the United States came to be known as the Colonial Revival. The revived Georgian style that emerged in Britain during the same period is usually referred to as Neo-Georgian; the work of Edwin Lutyens[40][41] and Vincent Harris includes some examples. The British town of Welwyn Garden City, established in the 1920s, is an example of pastiche or Neo-Georgian development of the early 20th century in Britain. Versions of the Neo-Georgian style were commonly used in Britain for certain types of urban architecture until the late 1950s, Bradshaw Gass & Hope's Police Headquarters in Salford of 1958 being a good example. Architects such as Raymond Erith, and Donald McMorran were among the few architects who continued the neo-Georgian style into the 1960s. Both in the United States and Britain, the Georgian style is still employed by architects like Quinlan Terry, Julian Bicknell, Ben Pentreath, Robert Adam Architects, and Fairfax and Sammons for private residences. A debased form in commercial housing developments, especially in the suburbs, is known in the UK as mock-Georgian.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ St John Parker, Michael. (2013). Life in Georgian Britain. Gloucestershire: Pitkin Publishing. ISBN 9780752491622. Retrieved 3 May 2021.
  2. ^ A phrase used by John Summerson, distinguishing among commercial buildings, Summerson, 252
  3. ^ Musson, 33–34, 52–53
  4. ^ Summerson, 26–28, 73–86
  5. ^ Summerson, 47–49, 47 quoted
  6. ^ Reiff, Daniel D. (2001). Houses from Books. University Park, Pa.: Penn State University Press. ISBN 9780271019437. Retrieved 28 February 2017.
  7. ^ Summerson, 49–51; The Center for Palladian Studies in America, Inc., "Palladio and Patternbooks in Colonial America." 2009-12-23 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Summerson, 61–70, and see index
  9. ^ Jenkins (2003), xiv; Musson, 31
  10. ^ Summerson, 73–74
  11. ^ Summerson, see index on all these; Jenkins (2003), xv–xiv; Musson, 28–35
  12. ^ Summerson, 54–56
  13. ^ "Bricks - their part in the rise of man". The Irish Times.
  14. ^ Summerson, 55
  15. ^ Musson, 31; Jenkins (2003), xiv
  16. ^ Musson, 73-76; Summerson, 46
  17. ^ Bannister Fletcher, 420
  18. ^ Musson, 51; Bannister Fletcher, 420
  19. ^ Bannister Fletcher, 420
  20. ^ Jenkins (2003), xv; Musson, 31
  21. ^ Musson, 84–87
  22. ^ Musson, 113–116
  23. ^ Jenkins (2003), xv
  24. ^ Musson, 101–106
  25. ^ Summerson, 266–269
  26. ^ Summerson, 44–45
  27. ^ Summerson, 44–45
  28. ^ Summerson, 45
  29. ^ Summerson, 73–86
  30. ^ Summerson, 147–191
  31. ^ correspondence in The Guardian
  32. ^ Summerson, 159-160
  33. ^ Summerson, 57–72, 206–224; Jenkins (1999), xxii
  34. ^ Summerson, 222–224
  35. ^ Jenkins (1999), xx–xxii
  36. ^ Summerson, 64–70
  37. ^ Summerson, 212-221
  38. ^ Summerson, 115–120
  39. ^ Summerson, 47, 252–262, 252 quoted
  40. ^ Elizabeth McKellar, Professor of Architectural and Design History at the Open University (30 September 2016). "You Didn't Know it was Neo-Georgian".
  41. ^ "New Book Neo-Georgian Architecture 1880-1970: A Reappraisal by Julian Holder and Elizabeth". lutyenstrust.
  42. ^ "Sutton Lodge Day Centre website". from the original on 2014-10-16. Retrieved 2015-08-12.

References

Further reading

  • Howard Colvin, A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects, 3rd ed., 1995.
  • John Cornforth, Early Georgian Interiors (Paul Mellon Centre), 2005.
  • James Stevens Curl, Georgian Architecture.
  • Christopher Hussey, Early Georgian Houses, Mid-Georgian Houses, Late Georgian Houses. Reissued in paperback, Antique Collectors Club, 1986.
  • Frank Jenkins, Architect and Patron, 1961.
  • Barrington Kaye, The Development of the Architectural Profession in Britain, 1960.
  • McAlester, Virginia & Lee, A Field Guide to American Houses, 1996. ISBN 0-394-73969-8.
  • Sir John Summerson, Architecture in Britain (series: Pelican History of Art). Reissued in paperback 1970.
  • Richard Sammons, The Anatomy of the Georgian Room. Period Homes, March 2006.

georgian, architecture, unrelated, architecture, country, georgia, architecture, georgia, country, name, given, most, english, speaking, countries, architectural, styles, current, between, 1714, 1830, named, after, first, four, british, monarchs, house, hanove. For the unrelated architecture of the country Georgia see Architecture of Georgia country Georgian architecture is the name given in most English speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830 It is named after the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover George I George II George III and George IV who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830 The so called great Georgian cities of the British Isles were Edinburgh Bath pre independence Dublin and London and to a lesser extent York and Bristol 1 The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo Georgian architecture in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture In the United States the term Georgian is generally used to describe all buildings from the period regardless of style in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are architectural in intention 2 and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period though that covers a wide range Middle class house in Salisbury cathedral close England with minimal classical detail Very grand terrace houses at The Circus Bath 1754 with basement areas and a profusion of columns Function rules at Massachusetts Hall at Harvard University 1718 20 The Georgian style is highly variable but marked by symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome as revived in Renaissance architecture Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition but typically restrained and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before replacing English vernacular architecture or becoming the new vernacular style for almost all new middle class homes and public buildings by the end of the period Georgian architecture is characterized by its proportion and balance simple mathematical ratios were used to determine the height of a window in relation to its width or the shape of a room as a double cube Regularity as with ashlar uniformly cut stonework was strongly approved imbuing symmetry and adherence to classical rules the lack of symmetry where Georgian additions were added to earlier structures remaining visible was deeply felt as a flaw at least before John Nash began to introduce it in a variety of styles 3 Regularity of housefronts along a street was a desirable feature of Georgian town planning Until the start of the Gothic Revival in the early 19th century Georgian designs usually lay within the Classical orders of architecture and employed a decorative vocabulary derived from ancient Rome or Greece Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Styles 3 Types of buildings 3 1 Houses 3 2 Churches 3 3 Public buildings 4 Colonial Georgian architecture 5 Post Georgian developments 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingCharacteristics EditIn towns which expanded greatly during the period landowners turned into property developers and rows of identical terraced houses became the norm 4 Even the wealthy were persuaded to live in these in town especially if provided with a square of garden in front of the house There was an enormous amount of building in the period all over the English speaking world and the standards of construction were generally high Where they have not been demolished large numbers of Georgian buildings have survived two centuries or more and they still form large parts of the core of cities such as London Edinburgh Dublin Newcastle upon Tyne and Bristol The period saw the growth of a distinct and trained architectural profession before the mid century the high sounding title architect was adopted by anyone who could get away with it 5 This contrasted with earlier styles which were primarily disseminated among craftsmen through the direct experience of the apprenticeship system But most buildings were still designed by builders and landlords together and the wide spread of Georgian architecture and the Georgian styles of design more generally came from dissemination through pattern books and inexpensive suites of engravings Authors such as the prolific William Halfpenny active 1723 1755 had editions in America as well as Britain A similar phenomenon can be seen in the commonality of housing designs in Canada and the United States though of a wider variety of styles from the 19th century down to the 1950s using pattern books drawn up by professional architects that were distributed by lumber companies and hardware stores to contractors and homebuilders 6 From the mid 18th century Georgian styles were assimilated into an architectural vernacular that became part and parcel of the training of every architect designer builder carpenter mason and plasterer from Edinburgh to Maryland 7 Styles EditGeorgian succeeded the English Baroque of Sir Christopher Wren Sir John Vanbrugh Thomas Archer William Talman and Nicholas Hawksmoor this in fact continued into at least the 1720s overlapping with a more restrained Georgian style The architect James Gibbs was a transitional figure his earlier buildings are Baroque reflecting the time he spent in Rome in the early 18th century but he adjusted his style after 1720 8 Major architects to promote the change in direction from Baroque were Colen Campbell author of the influential book Vitruvius Britannicus 1715 1725 Richard Boyle 3rd Earl of Burlington and his protege William Kent Isaac Ware Henry Flitcroft and the Venetian Giacomo Leoni who spent most of his career in England Neoclassical grandeur Stowe House 1770 79 by Robert Adam modified in execution by Thomas Pitt Other prominent architects of the early Georgian period include James Paine Robert Taylor and John Wood the Elder The European Grand Tour became very common for wealthy patrons in the period and Italian influence remained dominant 9 though at the start of the period Hanover Square Westminster 1713 on developed and occupied by Whig supporters of the new dynasty seems to have deliberately adopted German stylistic elements in their honour especially vertical bands connecting the windows 10 The styles that resulted fall within several categories In the mainstream of Georgian style were both Palladian architecture and its whimsical alternatives Gothic and Chinoiserie which were the English speaking world s equivalent of European Rococo From the mid 1760s a range of Neoclassical modes were fashionable associated with the British architects Robert Adam James Gibbs Sir William Chambers James Wyatt George Dance the Younger Henry Holland and Sir John Soane John Nash was one of the most prolific architects of the late Georgian era known as The Regency style he was responsible for designing large areas of London 11 Greek Revival architecture was added to the repertory beginning around 1750 but increasing in popularity after 1800 Leading exponents were William Wilkins and Robert Smirke In Britain brick or stone are almost invariably used 12 brick is often disguised with stucco The Georgian terraces of Dublin are noted for their almost uniform use of red brick for example whereas equivalent terraces in Edinburgh are constructed from stone 13 In America and other colonies wood remained very common as its availability and cost ratio with the other materials was more favourable Raked roofs were mostly covered in earthenware tiles until Richard Pennant 1st Baron Penrhyn led the development of the slate industry in Wales from the 1760s which by the end of the century had become the usual material 14 Types of buildings EditHouses Edit Westover Plantation Georgian country house on a James River plantation in Virginia Versions of revived Palladian architecture dominated English country house architecture Houses were increasingly placed in grand landscaped settings and large houses were generally made wide and relatively shallow largely to look more impressive from a distance The height was usually highest in the centre and the Baroque emphasis on corner pavilions often found on the continent generally avoided In grand houses an entrance hall led to steps up to a piano nobile or mezzanine floor where the main reception rooms were Typically the basement area or rustic with kitchens offices and service areas as well as male guests with muddy boots 15 came some way above ground and was lit by windows that were high on the inside but just above ground level outside A single block was typical with perhaps a small court for carriages at the front marked off by railings and a gate but rarely a stone gatehouse or side wings around the court Windows in all types of buildings were large and regularly placed on a grid this was partly to minimize window tax which was in force throughout the period in the United Kingdom Some windows were subsequently bricked in Their height increasingly varied between the floors and they increasingly began below waist height in the main rooms making a small balcony desirable Before this the internal plan and function of the rooms can generally not be deduced from the outside To open these large windows the sash window already developed by the 1670s became very widespread 16 Corridor plans became universal inside larger houses 17 Internal courtyards became more rare except beside the stables and the functional parts of the building were placed at the sides or in separate buildings nearby hidden by trees The views to and from the front and rear of the main block were concentrated on with the side approaches usually much less important The roof was typically invisible from the ground though domes were sometimes visible in grander buildings The roofline was generally clear of ornament except for a balustrade or the top of a pediment 18 Columns or pilasters often topped by a pediment were popular for ornament inside and out 19 and other ornament was generally geometrical or plant based rather than using the human figure Grand Neoclassical interior by Robert Adam Syon House London Inside ornament was far more generous and could sometimes be overwhelming 20 The chimneypiece continued to be the usual main focus of rooms and was now given a classical treatment and increasingly topped by a painting or a mirror 21 Plasterwork ceilings 22 carved wood and bold schemes of wallpaint formed a backdrop to increasingly rich collections of furniture paintings porcelain mirrors and objets d art of all kinds 23 Wood panelling very common since about 1500 fell from favour around the mid century and wallpaper included very expensive imports from China 24 Smaller houses in the country such as vicarages were simple regular blocks with visible raked roofs and a central doorway often the only ornamented area Similar houses often referred to as villas became common around the fringes of the larger cities especially London 25 and detached houses in towns remained common though only the very rich could afford them in central London In towns even most better off people lived in terraced houses which typically opened straight onto the street often with a few steps up to the door There was often an open space protected by iron railings dropping down to the basement level with a discreet entrance down steps off the street for servants and deliveries this is known as the area 26 This meant that the ground floor front was now removed and protected from the street and encouraged the main reception rooms to move there from the floor above Often when a new street or set of streets was developed the road and pavements were raised up and the gardens or yards behind the houses remained at a lower level usually representing the original one 27 Georgian townhouses on Baggot Street Dublin Town terraced houses for all social classes remained resolutely tall and narrow each dwelling occupying the whole height of the building This contrasted with well off continental dwellings which had already begun to be formed of wide apartments occupying only one or two floors of a building such arrangements were only typical in England when housing groups of batchelors as in Oxbridge colleges the lawyers in the Inns of Court or The Albany after it was converted in 1802 28 In the period in question only in Edinburgh were working class purpose built tenements common though lodgers were common in other cities A curving crescent often looking out at gardens or a park was popular for terraces where space allowed In early and central schemes of development plots were sold and built on individually though there was often an attempt to enforce some uniformity 29 but as development reached further out schemes were increasingly built as a uniform scheme and then sold 30 The late Georgian period saw the birth of the semi detached house planned systematically as a suburban compromise between the terraced houses of the city and the detached villas further out where land was cheaper There had been occasional examples in town centres going back to medieval times Most early suburban examples are large and in what are now the outer fringes of Central London but were then in areas being built up for the first time Blackheath Chalk Farm and St John s Wood are among the areas contesting being the original home of the semi 31 Sir John Summerson gave primacy to the Eyre Estate of St John s Wood A plan for this exists dated 1794 where the whole development consists of pairs of semi detached houses So far as I know this is the first recorded scheme of the kind In fact the French Wars put an end to this scheme but when the development was finally built it retained the semi detached form a revolution of striking significance and far reaching effect 32 Churches Edit St Martin in the Fields London 1720 James Gibbs The courtyard of Somerset House from the North Wing entrance Built for government offices Until the Church Building Act 1818 the period saw relatively few churches built in Britain which was already well supplied 33 although in the later years of the period the demand for Non conformist and Roman Catholic places of worship greatly increased 34 Anglican churches that were built were designed internally to allow maximum audibility and visibility for preaching so the main nave was generally wider and shorter than in medieval plans and often there were no side aisles Galleries were common in new churches Especially in country parishes the external appearance generally retained the familiar signifiers of a Gothic church with a tower or spire a large west front with one or more doors and very large windows along the nave but all with any ornament drawn from the classical vocabulary Where funds permitted a classical temple portico with columns and a pediment might be used at the west front Interior decoration was generally chaste however walls often became lined with plaques and monuments to the more prosperous members of the congregation 35 In the colonies new churches were certainly required and generally repeated similar formulae British Non conformist churches were often more classical in mood and tended not to feel the need for a tower or steeple The archetypal Georgian church is St Martin in the Fields in London 1720 by Gibbs who boldly added to the classical temple facade at the west end a large steeple on top of a tower set back slightly from the main frontage This formula shocked purists and foreigners but became accepted and was very widely emulated at home and in the colonies 36 for example at St Andrew s Church Chennai in India And in Dublin the extremely similar St George s Church Dublin The 1818 Act allocated some public money for new churches required to reflect changes in population and a commission to allocate it Building of Commissioners churches gathered pace in the 1820s and continued until the 1850s The early churches falling into the Georgian period show a high proportion of Gothic Revival buildings along with the classically inspired 37 Public buildings Edit Public buildings generally varied between the extremes of plain boxes with grid windows and Italian Late Renaissance palaces depending on budget Somerset House in London designed by Sir William Chambers in 1776 for government offices was as magnificent as any country house though never quite finished as funds ran out 38 Barracks and other less prestigious buildings could be as functional as the mills and factories that were growing increasingly large by the end of the period But as the period came to an end many commercial projects were becoming sufficiently large and well funded to become architectural in intention rather than having their design left to the lesser class of surveyors 39 Colonial Georgian architecture EditSee also Federal architecture Hyde Park Barracks 1819 Georgian architecture in Sydney Georgian architecture was widely disseminated in the English colonies during the Georgian era American buildings of the Georgian period were very often constructed of wood with clapboards even columns were made of timber framed up and turned on an oversized lathe At the start of the period the difficulties of obtaining and transporting brick or stone made them a common alternative only in the larger cities or where they were obtainable locally Dartmouth College Harvard University and the College of William and Mary offer leading examples of Georgian architecture in the Americas Unlike the Baroque style that it replaced which was mostly used for palaces and churches and had little representation in the British colonies simpler Georgian styles were widely used by the upper and middle classes Perhaps the best remaining house is the pristine Hammond Harwood House 1774 in Annapolis Maryland designed by the colonial architect William Buckland and modelled on the Villa Pisani at Montagnana Italy as depicted in Andrea Palladio s I quattro libri dell architettura The Four Books of Architecture After independence in the former American colonies Federal style architecture represented the equivalent of Regency architecture with which it had much in common In Canada the United Empire Loyalists embraced Georgian architecture as a sign of their fealty to Britain and the Georgian style was dominant in the country for most of the first half of the 19th century The Grange for example is a Georgian manor built in Toronto in 1817 In Montreal English born architect John Ostell worked on a significant number of remarkable constructions in the Georgian style such as the Old Montreal Custom House and the Grand seminaire de Montreal In Australia the Old Colonial Georgian residential and non residential styles were developed in the period from c 1810 c 1840 Post Georgian developments EditSee also Colonial Revival architecture Winfield House in London was designed and built in the 1930s and is listed by Historic England as an important Neo Georgian townhouse After about 1840 Georgian conventions were slowly abandoned as a number of revival styles including Gothic Revival that had originated in the Georgian period developed and contested in Victorian architecture and in the case of Gothic became better researched and closer to their originals Neoclassical architecture remained popular and was the opponent of Gothic in the Battle of the Styles of the early Victorian period In the United States the Federalist Style contained many elements of Georgian style but incorporated revolutionary symbols In the early decades of the twentieth century when there was a growing nostalgia for its sense of order the style was revived and adapted and in the United States came to be known as the Colonial Revival The revived Georgian style that emerged in Britain during the same period is usually referred to as Neo Georgian the work of Edwin Lutyens 40 41 and Vincent Harris includes some examples The British town of Welwyn Garden City established in the 1920s is an example of pastiche or Neo Georgian development of the early 20th century in Britain Versions of the Neo Georgian style were commonly used in Britain for certain types of urban architecture until the late 1950s Bradshaw Gass amp Hope s Police Headquarters in Salford of 1958 being a good example Architects such as Raymond Erith and Donald McMorran were among the few architects who continued the neo Georgian style into the 1960s Both in the United States and Britain the Georgian style is still employed by architects like Quinlan Terry Julian Bicknell Ben Pentreath Robert Adam Architects and Fairfax and Sammons for private residences A debased form in commercial housing developments especially in the suburbs is known in the UK as mock Georgian Gallery Edit Ditchley House in Oxfordshire a country house James Gibbs 1722 Connecticut Hall at Yale University a relatively unornamented iteration of the Georgian style 1750 Sutton Lodge Sutton London once used by the Prince Regent George IV of the United Kingdom 42 Georgian period townhouses in Pery Square Newtown Pery Limerick Ireland after 1769 Kedleston Hall by Matthew Brettingham and Robert Adam begun 1769 a large English country house One of Robert Adam s masterpieces in a largely Georgian setting Pulteney Bridge Bath 1774 Carpenters Hall in Philadelphia by Robert Smith 1775 example of American colonial architecture Royal Exchange Dublin 1779 A former guildhall in Dunfermline Scotland built between 1805 and 1811 University Hall of Harvard University by Charles Bulfinch 1815 exemplary of Georgian ornamental restraint Western side of Bryanston Square London with its gardens 1810 15 Late Georgian Regency the west curve of Park Crescent London by John Nash 1806 21 The Grange a Georgian manor in Toronto built for D Arcy Boulton in 1817 St James Church Sydney in Colonial Georgian architecture built in 1824 Neo Georgian Chesterfield Town Hall 1938 Derbyshire by Bradshaw Gass amp Hope Rose Terrace Perth ScotlandSee also Edit Architecture portalGolden ratio Jamaican Georgian architecture Canning Liverpool Clifton Bristol Georgian Dublin Grainger Town Newcastle upon Tyne New Town Edinburgh an 18th and 19th century development that contains some of the largest surviving examples of Georgian style architecture and layout Newtown Pery Limerick The Georgian GroupNotes Edit St John Parker Michael 2013 Life in Georgian Britain Gloucestershire Pitkin Publishing ISBN 9780752491622 Retrieved 3 May 2021 A phrase used by John Summerson distinguishing among commercial buildings Summerson 252 Musson 33 34 52 53 Summerson 26 28 73 86 Summerson 47 49 47 quoted Reiff Daniel D 2001 Houses from Books University Park Pa Penn State University Press ISBN 9780271019437 Retrieved 28 February 2017 Summerson 49 51 The Center for Palladian Studies in America Inc Palladio and Patternbooks in Colonial America Archived 2009 12 23 at the Wayback Machine Summerson 61 70 and see index Jenkins 2003 xiv Musson 31 Summerson 73 74 Summerson see index on all these Jenkins 2003 xv xiv Musson 28 35 Summerson 54 56 Bricks their part in the rise of man The Irish Times Summerson 55 Musson 31 Jenkins 2003 xiv Musson 73 76 Summerson 46 Bannister Fletcher 420 Musson 51 Bannister Fletcher 420 Bannister Fletcher 420 Jenkins 2003 xv Musson 31 Musson 84 87 Musson 113 116 Jenkins 2003 xv Musson 101 106 Summerson 266 269 Summerson 44 45 Summerson 44 45 Summerson 45 Summerson 73 86 Summerson 147 191 correspondence in The Guardian Summerson 159 160 Summerson 57 72 206 224 Jenkins 1999 xxii Summerson 222 224 Jenkins 1999 xx xxii Summerson 64 70 Summerson 212 221 Summerson 115 120 Summerson 47 252 262 252 quoted Elizabeth McKellar Professor of Architectural and Design History at the Open University 30 September 2016 You Didn t Know it was Neo Georgian New Book Neo Georgian Architecture 1880 1970 A Reappraisal by Julian Holder and Elizabeth lutyenstrust Sutton Lodge Day Centre website Archived from the original on 2014 10 16 Retrieved 2015 08 12 References EditFletcher Banister and Fletcher Banister A History of Architecture 1901 edn Batsford Esher Lionel The Glory of the English House 1991 Barrie and Jenkins ISBN 0712636137 Jenkins Simon 1999 England s Thousand Best Churches 1999 Allen Lane ISBN 0 7139 9281 6 Jenkins Simon 2003 England s Thousand Best Houses 2003 Allen Lane ISBN 0 7139 9596 3 Musson Jeremy How to Read a Country House 2005 Ebury Press ISBN 009190076X Pevsner Nikolaus The Englishness of English Art Penguin 1964 edn Sir John Summerson Georgian London 1945 1988 revised edition Barrie amp Jenkins ISBN 0712620958 Also see revised edition edited by Howard Colvin 2003 Further reading Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Georgian architecture Howard Colvin A Biographical Dictionary of British Architects 3rd ed 1995 John Cornforth Early Georgian Interiors Paul Mellon Centre 2005 James Stevens Curl Georgian Architecture Christopher Hussey Early Georgian Houses Mid Georgian Houses Late Georgian Houses Reissued in paperback Antique Collectors Club 1986 Frank Jenkins Architect and Patron 1961 Barrington Kaye The Development of the Architectural Profession in Britain 1960 McAlester Virginia amp Lee A Field Guide to American Houses 1996 ISBN 0 394 73969 8 Sir John Summerson Architecture in Britain series Pelican History of Art Reissued in paperback 1970 Richard Sammons The Anatomy of the Georgian Room Period Homes March 2006 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Georgian architecture amp oldid 1141416653, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.