This first detailed comprehensive study has been long awaited. Until now, interest in the history of Canadian architecture has been satisfied mainly by brief surveys or local histories. Writing these two volumes over ten years, Harold Kalman has produced a rich panorama, treating the vast range of Canadian building from the dwellings of the native peoples and the first settlers to buildings of the recent past and the present day. Describing the country's architectural history in a lucid and interesting narrative, and placing the buildings firmly in a social and cultural context, Kalman brings to light some distinctive characteristics of Canadian architects and architecture: a respect for nature, natural forms, and local materials; the tendencies to absorb ideas from abroad and then simplify and restrain them, and to take a middle position between extreme modernism and extreme traditionalism; the development of marked regional differences; and the flair for producing innovations in response to social issues.
Lavishly illustrated with over 800 black and white drawings and photographs, this is the ideal gift for architects, historians, and the general reader interested in architecture.
- ISBN10 019541103X
- ISBN13 9780195411034
- Publish Date 24 November 1994
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 2 March 2002
- Publish Country CA
- Imprint Oxford University Press, Canada
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 949
- Language English