Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture
The architectural development of Georgia Tech began as a core of Victorian-era buildings sited around a campus green and Tech Tower. During the subsequent Beaux-Arts era, designers (who were also members of the architecture faculty) added traditionally styled buildings, with many of them in a pseudo-Jacobean collegiate redbrick style. Early Modernist Paul Heffernan led an architectural revolution in his academic village of functionalist buildings on campus--an aesthetic that inspired additional International Style campus buildings. Formalist, Brutalist, and Post-Modern architecture followed, and when Georgia Tech was selected as the Olympic Village for the 1996 Summer Olympics, new residence halls were added to the campus. Between 1994 and 2008, Georgia Tech president G. Wayne Clough stewarded over $1 billion in capital improvements at the school, notably engaging midtown Atlanta with the development of Technology Square. The landscape design by recent campus planners is especially noteworthy, featuring a purposeful designation of open spaces, accommodations for pedestrian perambulations, and public art. What might have developed into a prosaic assemblage of academic and research buildings has instead evolved into a remarkably competent assemblage of aesthetically pleasing architecture.
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Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture
The architectural development of Georgia Tech began as a core of Victorian-era buildings sited around a campus green and Tech Tower. During the subsequent Beaux-Arts era, designers (who were also members of the architecture faculty) added traditionally styled buildings, with many of them in a pseudo-Jacobean collegiate redbrick style. Early Modernist Paul Heffernan led an architectural revolution in his academic village of functionalist buildings on campus--an aesthetic that inspired additional International Style campus buildings. Formalist, Brutalist, and Post-Modern architecture followed, and when Georgia Tech was selected as the Olympic Village for the 1996 Summer Olympics, new residence halls were added to the campus. Between 1994 and 2008, Georgia Tech president G. Wayne Clough stewarded over $1 billion in capital improvements at the school, notably engaging midtown Atlanta with the development of Technology Square. The landscape design by recent campus planners is especially noteworthy, featuring a purposeful designation of open spaces, accommodations for pedestrian perambulations, and public art. What might have developed into a prosaic assemblage of academic and research buildings has instead evolved into a remarkably competent assemblage of aesthetically pleasing architecture.
23.99 In Stock
Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture

Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture

by Robert M. Craig
Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture

Georgia Tech: Campus Architecture

by Robert M. Craig

Paperback

$23.99 
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Overview

The architectural development of Georgia Tech began as a core of Victorian-era buildings sited around a campus green and Tech Tower. During the subsequent Beaux-Arts era, designers (who were also members of the architecture faculty) added traditionally styled buildings, with many of them in a pseudo-Jacobean collegiate redbrick style. Early Modernist Paul Heffernan led an architectural revolution in his academic village of functionalist buildings on campus--an aesthetic that inspired additional International Style campus buildings. Formalist, Brutalist, and Post-Modern architecture followed, and when Georgia Tech was selected as the Olympic Village for the 1996 Summer Olympics, new residence halls were added to the campus. Between 1994 and 2008, Georgia Tech president G. Wayne Clough stewarded over $1 billion in capital improvements at the school, notably engaging midtown Atlanta with the development of Technology Square. The landscape design by recent campus planners is especially noteworthy, featuring a purposeful designation of open spaces, accommodations for pedestrian perambulations, and public art. What might have developed into a prosaic assemblage of academic and research buildings has instead evolved into a remarkably competent assemblage of aesthetically pleasing architecture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781467106771
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 08/16/2021
Series: Images of America Series
Pages: 128
Sales rank: 1,129,336
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Robert M. Craig is professor emeritus of Georgia Tech's architecture school, where, from 1973 to 2011, he taught the history of architecture.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 6

Introduction 7

1 Georgia Tech Historic District 9

2 Architecture under Francis Palmer Smith and John Llewellyn Skinner, 1909-1925 19

3 Traditional Architecture under Harold Bush-Brown, 1925-1939 29

4 Paul M. Heffernan's Functionalist Academic Village, 1946-1961 45

5 From School to College of Architecture, the 1960s-1994 67

6 Architecture during G. Wayne Clough's Presidency, 1994-2008 95

7 Contemporary Architecture, 2008-Present 107

8 Architecture of Athletics 113

9 Fraternities and Sororities 123

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