In 2008, Jim Parsons and David Bush, staff members of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, published Houston Deco: Modernistic Architecture of the Texas Coast, a photographic sampling intended to draw attention to the region\u27s surviving examples of buildings erected between the 1920s and the late 1940s in the modernistic styles popularly known as Art Deco and Art Moderne. Hill Country Deco applies this model to Central Texas, covering an area considerably beyond the geographical Hill Country to include San Antonio and Austin as well as towns in the prairie lands to the east. Like its predecessor, Hill Country Deco is intended to raise awareness of modernistic architecture by presenting striking photographs of a wide range of exampl...
This is the fifth in the ambitious Buildings of the United States series of guides to American archi...
Architectural projects and/or sites mentioned: Hugo V. Neuhaus Residence (H. T. (Harrie Thomas) Lind...
Review of: "The Suburban Church: Modernism and Community in Postwar America", by Gretchen Buggeln
In 2008, Jim Parsons and David Bush, staff members of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, pub...
Geometry in Architecture is really two books in one. The subtitle, Texas Buildings Yesterday and Tod...
Review of: The Spirit of H. H. Richardson on the Midland Prairies: Regional Transformations of an Ar...
Public buildings have been seen as reflections of society\u27s culture and politics for centuries, a...
Review of: Folk Architecture in Little Dixie: A Regional Culture in Missouri. Marshall, Howard Wrigh...
The book succeeds on several intellectual levels: it presents valuable historical references for the...
Few substantial cities in the United States can boast of such an impressive aggregate of preserved p...
Stodgy university presses, in these hard economic times, have begun to produce books that have a bro...
Presenting the architecture of an entire state is a daunting task, given the profusion of potential ...
South Dakota\u27s architectural legacy bears close resemblance to that of other prairie and Plains s...
A Guide to Kansas Architecture by David H. Sachs and George Ehrlich selects representative examples ...
Monthly newsletter of the Houston Earlier Texas Art Group discussing the news and events of the orga...
This is the fifth in the ambitious Buildings of the United States series of guides to American archi...
Architectural projects and/or sites mentioned: Hugo V. Neuhaus Residence (H. T. (Harrie Thomas) Lind...
Review of: "The Suburban Church: Modernism and Community in Postwar America", by Gretchen Buggeln
In 2008, Jim Parsons and David Bush, staff members of the Greater Houston Preservation Alliance, pub...
Geometry in Architecture is really two books in one. The subtitle, Texas Buildings Yesterday and Tod...
Review of: The Spirit of H. H. Richardson on the Midland Prairies: Regional Transformations of an Ar...
Public buildings have been seen as reflections of society\u27s culture and politics for centuries, a...
Review of: Folk Architecture in Little Dixie: A Regional Culture in Missouri. Marshall, Howard Wrigh...
The book succeeds on several intellectual levels: it presents valuable historical references for the...
Few substantial cities in the United States can boast of such an impressive aggregate of preserved p...
Stodgy university presses, in these hard economic times, have begun to produce books that have a bro...
Presenting the architecture of an entire state is a daunting task, given the profusion of potential ...
South Dakota\u27s architectural legacy bears close resemblance to that of other prairie and Plains s...
A Guide to Kansas Architecture by David H. Sachs and George Ehrlich selects representative examples ...
Monthly newsletter of the Houston Earlier Texas Art Group discussing the news and events of the orga...
This is the fifth in the ambitious Buildings of the United States series of guides to American archi...
Architectural projects and/or sites mentioned: Hugo V. Neuhaus Residence (H. T. (Harrie Thomas) Lind...
Review of: "The Suburban Church: Modernism and Community in Postwar America", by Gretchen Buggeln