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Tag Archives: Norfolk
A Ruralise ‘Reader’
It’s been a while since my last post, the final installment of my Forest Village epic. The piece was well-received: specifically one international journal has picked up on it and I have done a re-write for publication, hopefully in their … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Norfolk DNA
Tagged design quality, design/architecture, farmstead, history, house-builders, housing delivery, local distinctiveness, materials, modernism, Norfolk, normal, roofs, rural archetypes, simplicity, Tayler and Green, thatch, vernacular, village, wide-fronted house
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Tayler and Green #11 – Critical Regionalism?
A pervading narrative in UK housing-design is that of ‘local distinctiveness’. The idea that new homes should ‘fit in’, or ‘reflect local character’, is enshrined in national and local planning guidance. For house-builders – and most of the local authority … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, context, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, fitting in, Frampton, Herbert Tayler, history, house-builders, local distinctiveness, Loddon, materials, modernism, Norfolk, normal, pastiche, Tayler and Green, vernacular
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Tayler & Green #10 – Refusing to Indulge the Un-Homely
In a most arresting passage of Alan Power’s essay in ‘Tayler and Green 1938-1973: The Spirit of Place in Modern Housing’, he describes one of the main differences between Tayler and Green’s approach and the ethos of ‘mainstream’ Modernism. It … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, colour, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, domesticity, Herbert Tayler, history, local distinctiveness, Loddon, modernism, Norfolk, normal, pattern, Tayler and Green, The Sublime, through-store, trellis, Un-homely, Unhomely
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Tayler and Green #9 – Composition
Tayler and Green’s preference for terraces over more conventional semis was partly due to their impact in the landscape. Tayler had come to believe that semis looked wrong in a rural context – like ‘a row of pointed teeth, with … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, composition, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, Herbert Tayler, history, landscape, local distinctiveness, Loddon, modernism, Norfolk, normal, orientation, parker and unwin, radburn planning, semi, Tayler and Green, terrace
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Tayler and Green #7 – A Kit of Parts
Loddon Council’s most pressing need, reflected in its initial briefings to Tayler and Green, was for family homes (one four-bed house for every seven three-beds), but very soon the Council introduced single-storey two-bed units into the mix, for older residents. … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, bungalow, Critical Regionalism, David Green, Davy Place, design quality, design/architecture, Egan, Geldeston, Herbert Tayler, history, Kells Acre, local distinctiveness, Loddon, modernism, Norfolk, normal, Rethinking Construction, Tayler and Green
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Tayler & Green #6 – From Semi to Terrace
Despite Tayler and Green’s stipulation about not working rigidly with standard Minstry house-types, the first two projects for Loddon Rural District Council (five pairs at Leman Grove in Loddon and seven at College Road, Thurlton) were closely based on their … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, Ditchingham, Herbert Tayler, history, local distinctiveness, Loddon, modernism, Norfolk, normal, orientation, semi, Tayler and Green, terrace, wide-fronted house, Windmill Green
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Tayler and Green #5 – A Thirty-Year Partnership
Towards the end of the war most district councils were planning major house-building programmes, but Loddon Rural District Council had begun to do so much earlier, under powers for slum-clearance granted by the by 1936 Housing Act, with the intention … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, Herbert Tayler, history, local distinctiveness, Loddon, modernism, Norfolk, normal, Tayler and Green
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Tayler & Green #4 – Coming Home
After the early acclaim for Kings Head Yard, the real world intruded rapidly on Tayler and Green’s career. In 1941 they left London for Norfolk so David Green could help his father’s practice with reconstruction work after early bombing raids … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture/Design, Tayler & Green
Tagged affordable housing, Blundeston, Critical Regionalism, David Green, design quality, design/architecture, Herbert Tayler, history, local distinctiveness, Loddon, Lothingland, modernism, Norfolk, normal, semi, Tayler and Green, terrace, Wrentham
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