London Society Saturday Schools: The peaceful bit between the two world wars, a talk by Mark Prizeman.
Architecture and Urbanism MA and Cass Cities present:
The 2018 London Society Saturday Morning Architecture School series, launched by Architect and academic Mark Prizeman. This series looks at the peaceful bit between the two world wars. A lot of London was built and invented in the 1920s and ‘30s.
Society and technology came forward to decide how, what and where the metropolis was built. A common desire for health, open space and free movement developed a particular interwar vernacular, both in the sprawling semi-detached suburbs and in the civic centres.
Tube stations, phone boxes, cinemas, police stations, shopping arcades, cigarette factories, lidos, aerodromes and zoos all gave a cultural fabric to the new garden suburbs. Private motor transport gave a greater public greater mobility which in turn created a greater public discussion of design and architecture.
Looking at buildings built by the small volume house builder along with those produced by architects of the time both little known and celebrated such as Gilbert Scott, Charles Holden and H.S. Goodhart-Rendel one sees a particular local working out of the modern world. Styles and aspirations such as Art Deco, Mock Tudor, Liner, Egyptian revival, Jazz and Psuedish in a city that just begins to build a handful of international Modernist buildings before the next War changes everything yet again.
You can book the events individually, or save money by booking every event in the Architecture Saturday School: Block Booking
Cass staff and students get a discounted booking rate, email j.clossick@londonmet.ac.uk for your discount code.
Details
Date/time | Saturday 2 June 2018, 11.30am-12.30pm |
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Book now | Register |
Location | London Metropolitan University The Cass, GSB-01, Goulston Street |
On Twitter | @CassCities |
Website | casscities.co.uk |
Website | londonsociety.org.uk |
Contact | Jane Clossick |