
1960s University Buildings
The Golden Age of British Modern Architecture
John Barr(Author)
Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd
Published on 18. June 2025
Book
Hardback
240 pages
978-1-84822-670-8 (ISBN)
Description
The 1960s continue to hold an almost mythical place in Western culture, particularly in Britain, where change was widespread and infiltrated many aspects of life. This included architecture, whose role in a modern democracy and the form it should take were hotly debated. This book discusses the architectural thinking of the time through an examination of the design of university buildings. While there were notable buildings being built in other spheres, no other field of architecture provided the opportunity to express those ideas as freely, while also reflecting innovative new thinking about education and society. Somehow, the university buildings of the 1960s seemed to represent the cutting edge of modern architecture in the UK.
This book provides the first critical analysis and overview of these buildings, designed by some of the leading British architects of the period including Basil Spence, Leslie Martin, Alison and Peter Smithson, Denys Lasdun, Powell and Moya and James Stirling. By placing the buildings in a wider social, cultural and political context, it examines the combination of circumstances and attitudes that produced results that are equally admired and detested and allows us to understand how we might replicate or avoid them in the future.
This book provides the first critical analysis and overview of these buildings, designed by some of the leading British architects of the period including Basil Spence, Leslie Martin, Alison and Peter Smithson, Denys Lasdun, Powell and Moya and James Stirling. By placing the buildings in a wider social, cultural and political context, it examines the combination of circumstances and attitudes that produced results that are equally admired and detested and allows us to understand how we might replicate or avoid them in the future.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
Illustrations; 43 Line drawings, black and white; 150 Illustrations, black and white
Dimensions
Height: 255 mm
Width: 196 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
1120 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-84822-670-8 (9781848226708)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
John Barr studied architecture in the early 1970s and is a product of both the architectural and educational ideas that emerged from the 1960s. Following graduation, he worked on a wide variety of projects in the UK, the Netherlands, the Middle East and Japan and, since 2012, he has combined practice with teaching at Strathclyde University Department of Architecture. Now, with the benefit of distance and a long career as an architect and teacher, he assesses the significance of an era that saw radical change and the promise of a better and more equal society.
Content
Introduction: The Sixties; Prelude: Suez, Sputnik and Socialism; 1. Winning the Peace; 2. The Old Knights; 3. The New Universities; 4. The New Colleges; 5. Interlude: Education, a Nubile Cinderella; 6. The Planners; 7. The Urbanists; 8. The Contextualists; 9. The Missionaries; 10. The Structuralists; 11. The Prefabricators; 12. The Disruptors; 13. Interlude: Less R&B, More R&D; 14. The New Knights; 15. Back to the Future; Notes; Bibliography; Index