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Top: Arts: Architecture: History

Please submit only sites in the English language containing significant information relating to the history of buildings.
The study of structures built in periods earlier than the last fifty years, including those who commissioned, designed, built, altered and used them.

Academic Departments

Institutions of higher learning, or sections of them, offering graduate and/or post-graduate courses in architectural history.

Architects

Please submit only sites relating to architects no longer living. Sites from currently practicing architects should be sent to the appropriate subcategory of http://dmoz.org/Business/Industries/Construction_and_Maintenance/Design/Architects/ .
The life and works of architects no longer living.

Materials

Sites on the history of materials or constituent parts of buildings.

Organizations

Bodies concerned with the study, recording, evaluation and preservation of historic buildings.

Periods and Styles

Sites which describe and/or discuss a number of periods or styles in architecture belong in the main category here. Those which cover a particular period or style belong in the relevant sub-category.

Regional

Historic buildings in specific regions: their preservation, study and presentation to the public.

Vernacular

Vernacular Architecture is 'architecture without architects'. The term vernacular has been used interchangeably with the terms folk, common, native or non-academic architecture. Definitions often refer to its localised nature, use of traditional skills, use of locally produced building materials and absence of architects. All these points are debatable! Another definintion is on functional grounds: contrasting "high-style building types as houses, churches, state houses, and theaters" with "utilitarian and vernacular building types ranging from factories and bridges to barns and gas stations". Kingston Heath argues that a locality with a unique character, culture, materials, climate, topography and so on can "filter" conventional ideas about architecture (vernacular architecture or otherwise). The result is the "product of a place, of a people, by a people." All prehistoric architecture is vernacular, by most definitions, but 'vernacular architecture' tends to be seen as historic buildings. There is, at the moment, an ongoing debate on the limits of vernacular architecture. Earlier, rural, pre-industrial buildings were the focus. Urban vernacular, industrial vernacular, and the use of vernacular idiom by architects are now all being considered.

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