Charles BaillairgŽ: Architect and Engineer

Portada
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 1989 - 201 páginas
During his career as an architect, he designed major public buildings such as the Quebec Music Hall, Laval University, Sainte-Marie de Beauce church, and Dufferin Terrace, and was supervising architect for the first Parliament Buildings in Ottawa. He was responsible for introducing Gothic and Greek Revival styles to Quebec city and fostered the use of contemporary materials in residential and commercial structures. Christina Cameron's biography of this remarkable man includes an analysis of innovations in architectural design and construction technology in Quebec City during the middle of the nineteenth century, and includes a discussion of the radical change in the role of the architect from the architect/artisan of the previous century to the professional man who no longer took any part in the actual construction. In this first full-scale study of Baillairgé, Cameron has provided a fascinating picture not only of the life of an important architect but of developments in Canadian architecture during this period.
 

Páginas seleccionadas

Contenido

Introduction
xvii
The Making of an Architect Engineer and Surveyor
3
Baillairgé the Professional Man
13
First Commissions Experiments in Neoclassicism and the Gothic Revival
19
Discovering Greek Revival Quebec Music Hall
39
Innovations in Construction Technology Laval University Buildings
59
Religious Commissions SainteMarie de Beauce
66
First Mishaps Department of Public Works
67
Success Controversy and Failure Ottawa Parliament Buildings
86
Quebec City Engineer
102
Baillairgé the Educator
122
Professional Standards
131
Conclusion
138
Summary Catalogue of Architectural Works by Charles Baillairgé
145
Genealogy of Charles Baillairgé
149
Bibliography of Primary Source Material
153

Parliament Buildings Competition and the Quebec Jail
74

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Información bibliográfica