Image for Lost Victorian Britain  : how the twentieth century destroyed the nineteenth century's architectural masterpieces

Lost Victorian Britain : how the twentieth century destroyed the nineteenth century's architectural masterpieces

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These days it seems obvious that stupendous constructions like St Pancras Station should be preserved and restored.

But as recently as the 1970s Glasgow's superb St Enoch's Hotel made way for a shopping centre, and in the 1960s St Pancras itself was also earmarked for demolition. 'Victorian' was a term of abuse. Add in wartime bombing by the Luftwaffe, and town planners eager for ring roads and multi-storeys, and the destruction is shocking.

This poignant, angry book, full of stunning images, chronicles the catastrophic swathe cut through our architectural heritage by the twentieth century's sustained antipathy to the nineteenth, entirely through buildings that have disappeared.

Of the 200 notable examples of Victorian architecture illustrated in this book, from the magnificent Imperial Institute in Kensington to the vast country house of Eaton Hall, not one still exists.

A photograph is all we have left. As well as architectural causes celebres like the Euston Arch and London's Coal Exchange, Gavin Stamp turns up many lesser-known Victorian buildings, like the extraordinary Gothic battlements of Columbia Market in East London, or Chatsworth's soaring glasshouse streamlined like a spaceship.

Surprising, chastening, but also uplifting, Lost Victorian Britain is a memorable journey back into a world we should never have lost.

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Product Details
Aurum Press Ltd
1781310181 / 9781781310182
Paperback
10/10/2013
United Kingdom
English
192 pages : illustrations (black and white)
20 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More
Reprint. Originally published: 2010.