Building Paris
Building Paris provides an overview of the various architectural services that collectively gave shape to the French capital during a period of explosive growth, from 1830 to 1870. In his analysis of the transformation of Paris during this period, David Van Zanten demonstrates how a succession of royal and imperial monarchs used urban projects as representations of their authority. This study also chronicles the dissolution of the traditional absolutist political structures before the emergence of national consciousness, and amid the splintering of state authority into an array of distinct and competing architectural services. It demonstrates, moreover, how private architectural enterprise, which emerged in this period, was accommodated by government institutions, and how it achieved dominance in the building profession by the end of the century.
Product details
September 1994Hardback
9780521394215
384 pages
262 × 210 × 27 mm
1.359kg
141 b/w illus. 14 maps
Unavailable - out of print August 2000
Table of Contents
- 1. The Quartier de l'Opéra
- 2. The government architectural services
- 3. The foreground: The fundamentals of representational building
- 4. The background: The fundamentals of private and institutional building
- 5. The architects
- 6. Haussmann, Baltard, and municipal architecture
- 7. Churches and historic monuments.