'Tower Blocks - Our Blocks': Difference between revisions

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The project was initially launched by Miles Glendinning and Stefan Muthesius in a fieldwork and research programme in the late 1980s into mass housing in the UK, published in definitive form in the 1994 book, Tower Block. This book and associated archive materials have now been transformed into an online public resource through the [http://fields.eca.ac.uk/gis/ Tower Block] website, based at the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies, Edinburgh College of Art, and set up with the ongoing support of English Heritage and other public bodies.
The project was initially launched by Miles Glendinning and Stefan Muthesius in a fieldwork and research programme in the late 1980s into mass housing in the UK, published in definitive form in the 1994 book, Tower Block. This book and associated archive materials have now been transformed into an online public resource through the [http://fields.eca.ac.uk/gis/ Tower Block] website, based at the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies, Edinburgh College of Art, and set up with the ongoing support of English Heritage and other public bodies.
Initially focused on the UK, the project is potentially of wide-ranging international scope. TOWER BLOCK is concerned exclusively with ‘public’ or ’social’ mass housing programmes built or directed by the state. Architecturally, it focuses especially on large-scale Modernist complexes including high blocks. Its aim is to collect and disseminate information about this great heritage of C20 social struggle, both in the UK and architecturally





Latest revision as of 15:44, 12 February 2015

The project was initially launched by Miles Glendinning and Stefan Muthesius in a fieldwork and research programme in the late 1980s into mass housing in the UK, published in definitive form in the 1994 book, Tower Block. This book and associated archive materials have now been transformed into an online public resource through the Tower Block website, based at the Scottish Centre for Conservation Studies, Edinburgh College of Art, and set up with the ongoing support of English Heritage and other public bodies.

Initially focused on the UK, the project is potentially of wide-ranging international scope. TOWER BLOCK is concerned exclusively with ‘public’ or ’social’ mass housing programmes built or directed by the state. Architecturally, it focuses especially on large-scale Modernist complexes including high blocks. Its aim is to collect and disseminate information about this great heritage of C20 social struggle, both in the UK and architecturally


Other Interesting Web Sites[edit]

Tower Block

BBC News Story on 'Tower Blocks - Our Blocks'