Managing temperature fluctuations through UK architecture

Philip Kennicott, Simon Ducroquet, Frank Hulley-Jones and Aaron Steckelberg, for The Washington Post, tour the evolution of UK architecture and temperature control:

Last summer, staff members at Hardwick Hall, a historic Elizabethan landmark in Derbyshire, were keenly aware of the excessive heat. The house, built during a period of exceptional cold known as the Little Ice Age, is a masterpiece of British architecture. With its glittering array of tall windows, it was vulnerable to the cold, but key design elements made it surprisingly efficient at managing the climate of its day.

As you’d expect, money plays a big role in the changing efficiencies.

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Associate editors, editorial board resign from architecture journal in protest

The editorial board of an architecture journal has resigned en masse after the publisher announced it plans to terminate the editor’s contract at the end of this year. In an open letter to publisher Taylor and Francis, the editorial board of Building Research and Information says the publisher’s decision is:   deeply shocking and we … Continue reading Associate editors, editorial board resign from architecture journal in protest

A colorful hallway in Casa Blanca, the Puerto Rican…



A colorful hallway in Casa Blanca, the Puerto Rican Governor’s Palace, December 1924.Photograph by Charles Martin, National Geographic

A colorful hallway in Casa Blanca, the Puerto Rican…



A colorful hallway in Casa Blanca, the Puerto Rican Governor’s Palace, December 1924.Photograph by Charles Martin, National Geographic

Workers swarm over scaffolding to erect the Nagarjuna Sagar dam…



Workers swarm over scaffolding to erect the Nagarjuna Sagar dam in India, May 1963.
Photograph by John Scofield, National Geographic

The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in 1935. This photo and…



The San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge in 1935.

This photo and others from the National Geographic archives are being auctioned by Christie’s in an exclusive, online-only sale from July 19-29, see here for details.Photograph by L. A. Sanchez, National Geographic

Locals walk the streets of Madison Square near the Flatiron…



Locals walk the streets of Madison Square near the Flatiron Building in New York City, 1918.

This photo and others from the National Geographic archives are being auctioned by Christie’s in an exclusive, online-only sale from July 19-29, see here for detailsPhotograph by W.W. Rock, National Geographic

Three shafts of sunlight illuminate the basilica and its mosaic…



Three shafts of sunlight illuminate the basilica and its mosaic floor in the Vatican, December 1971.
Photograph by Albert Moldvay, National Geographic

Saint Christopher decorates an archway over a cobblestone street…



Saint Christopher decorates an archway over a cobblestone street in Bavaria, Germany, March 1974.
Photograph by George F. Mobley, National Geographic

Visitors stare in awe at the stained glass windows of Sainte…



Visitors stare in awe at the stained glass windows of Sainte Chapelle in Paris, May 1968.
Photograph by Bruce Dale, National Geographic