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AD Classics: Sainsbury Wing, National Gallery London / Venturi Scott Brown

October 3, 2018 Adam Nathaniel Furman 0

Venturi Scott-Brown’s National Gallery Sainsbury Wing extension (1991) was born into a precarious no-man’s land between the warring camps of neo-Modernists and traditionalists who had been tussling over the direction of Britain’s cities for much of the prior decade. The site of the extension had come to be one of the most symbolic battlefields in British architecture since a campaign to halt its redevelopment with a Hi-Tech scheme by Ahrends Burton Koralek had led to that project’s refusal at planning in 1984.

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The Democratic Monument: Adam Nathaniel Furman’s Manifesto for a New Type of Civic Center

July 3, 2017 Adam Nathaniel Furman 0

Civic buildings are, as a rule, both austere and intimidating. They are often designed to represent authority above all, taking cues from Classical architectural language to construct an image of power, dominance, and civic unity. Adam Nathaniel Furman, a London-based architect and thinker, has at once eschewed and reengaged this typology in order to propose an entirely new type of civic center (“Town Hall”) for British cities. The proposal is currently on display at the 2017 Scottish Architectural Fringe in Glasgow.

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The Democratic Monument: Adam Nathaniel Furman’s Manifesto for a New Type of Civic Center

July 3, 2017 Adam Nathaniel Furman 0

Civic buildings are, as a rule, both austere and intimidating. They are often designed to represent authority above all, taking cues from Classical architectural language to construct an image of power, dominance, and civic unity. Adam Nathaniel Furman, a London-based architect and thinker, has at once eschewed and reengaged this typology in order to propose an entirely new type of civic center (“Town Hall”) for British cities. The proposal is currently on display at the 2017 Scottish Architectural Fringe in Glasgow.