This thesis is an oral history based investigation of four recently graduated architects (Bill Alington, Maurice Smith, Bill Toomath and Harry Turbott) who individually left New Zealand to pursue postgraduate qualifications at United States universities in the immediate postwar period. Guided interviews were conducted to allow the architects to talk about these experiences within the broader context of their careers. The interviews probed their motivations for travelling and studying in the United States. Where possible archival material was also sought (Fulbright applications, university archives) for comparison with the spoken narratives. Although motivated by the search of modernity and the chance to meet the master architects of the p...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The scholarship of émigré architects that arrived in Australia in the period between 1...
The ability of architecture to mediate cultural identities, and prescribe spatial practices, empower...
This thesis is an oral history based investigation of four recently graduated architects (Bill Aling...
In 1939, a number of European architects found refuge in New Zealand from the National Socialist reg...
With the support of Tūāpapa Rangahau Research and Enterprise at Unitec New Zealand, a research proje...
Many of the architects that contributed to the British Modern Movement during the late 1920s and up ...
This dissertation examines American architectural and social history of the late nineteenth and earl...
This thesis investigates the American influence upon New Zealand architecture between 1840 and 1940...
In Auckland in the 1950s a group of architecture students and young graduates were exploring innovat...
Introduction to the Gummer and Ford Project Gummer and Ford was an architectural firm founded in ...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the works of the important Christchurch architectural partnersh...
It has been argued that domestic architecture within New Zealand is increasingly dominated by intern...
Tūāpapa Rangahau, the Research and Enterprise Office at Unitec Institute of Technology, focuses on o...
"Experiments in Modern Living: Scientists and the National Capital Private House 1925-1970" examines...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The scholarship of émigré architects that arrived in Australia in the period between 1...
The ability of architecture to mediate cultural identities, and prescribe spatial practices, empower...
This thesis is an oral history based investigation of four recently graduated architects (Bill Aling...
In 1939, a number of European architects found refuge in New Zealand from the National Socialist reg...
With the support of Tūāpapa Rangahau Research and Enterprise at Unitec New Zealand, a research proje...
Many of the architects that contributed to the British Modern Movement during the late 1920s and up ...
This dissertation examines American architectural and social history of the late nineteenth and earl...
This thesis investigates the American influence upon New Zealand architecture between 1840 and 1940...
In Auckland in the 1950s a group of architecture students and young graduates were exploring innovat...
Introduction to the Gummer and Ford Project Gummer and Ford was an architectural firm founded in ...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the works of the important Christchurch architectural partnersh...
It has been argued that domestic architecture within New Zealand is increasingly dominated by intern...
Tūāpapa Rangahau, the Research and Enterprise Office at Unitec Institute of Technology, focuses on o...
"Experiments in Modern Living: Scientists and the National Capital Private House 1925-1970" examines...
Ernst Plischke’s life and work have been thoroughly researched and written about. However, one cruci...
The scholarship of émigré architects that arrived in Australia in the period between 1...
The ability of architecture to mediate cultural identities, and prescribe spatial practices, empower...