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Chris Dyson Architects: Heritage and Modernity

Author/EditorBradbury, Dominic (Author)
Hopkins, Owen (Author)
Dyson, Chris (Author)
ISBN: 9781848225862
Pub Date08/09/2023
BindingHardback
Pages176
Dimensions (mm)260(h) * 210(w) * 22(d)
¥8,435
excluding shipping
Availability: 4 In Stock
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'We build "new into old"': since Chris Dyson set up his own practice in 2004, he has gained a reputation as one of the foremost historic conservation architects, poetically adapting listed buildings for the 21st century. Yet the vigour and originality he brings to his work is far from a conventional conservation approach. Dyson's is an architecture seemingly with no rules, yet at the same time marked by a recurring interest in the interactions between people and city, culture and community.

Dyson's work is indelibly associated with Spitalfields, having lived and worked there since 1990, and it's a place that provides a fitting metaphor for his architecture. Over its history Spitalfields has been subject to recurring waves of new people and cultures, which has created somewhere defined by its rich cultural and material layers. And so with Dyson's architecture, in which, even with new-build projects, there's an overriding sense of different elements - be they material, temporal or cultural - coming together into coherent wholes. Dyson's is that rare thing: architecture that feels old and new at the same time.

This volume is the first sustained critical analysis of Chris Dyson Architect's philosophy, approach and body of work, focusing on their particular expertise in being sensitive to a sense of place, history and heritage.

'We build "new into old"': since Chris Dyson set up his own practice in 2004, he has gained a reputation as one of the foremost historic conservation architects, poetically adapting listed buildings for the 21st century. Yet the vigour and originality he brings to his work is far from a conventional conservation approach. Dyson's is an architecture seemingly with no rules, yet at the same time marked by a recurring interest in the interactions between people and city, culture and community.

Dyson's work is indelibly associated with Spitalfields, having lived and worked there since 1990, and it's a place that provides a fitting metaphor for his architecture. Over its history Spitalfields has been subject to recurring waves of new people and cultures, which has created somewhere defined by its rich cultural and material layers. And so with Dyson's architecture, in which, even with new-build projects, there's an overriding sense of different elements - be they material, temporal or cultural - coming together into coherent wholes. Dyson's is that rare thing: architecture that feels old and new at the same time.

This volume is the first sustained critical analysis of Chris Dyson Architect's philosophy, approach and body of work, focusing on their particular expertise in being sensitive to a sense of place, history and heritage.

Writer and journalist Dominic Bradbury has produced more than a dozen books on design, architecture and interiors, also works for many leading newspapers and magazines around the world, including The Financial Times/How To Spend It, The Times, The Telegraph, World of Interiors, House & Garden, Vogue Living and many international editions of Architectural Digest and Elle Decoration.

Foreword, Owen Hopkins. General Introduction. Residential; Dyson House, Spitalfields; Faulkner Residence, Spitalfields; Gasworks, Cotswolds; Clerkenwell Cooperage; Hampton Lodge, Sussex; Wapping Pierhead House. Mixed Use; Albion Works, Hackney; The Queens Head/Dyson Offices & MTE, Spitalfields; The Sekforde, Clerkenwell; Chanarin Residence & Studio, Spitalfields; Timothy Everest Store, Shoreditch; Architect's Retreat and Studio, Suffolk. Culture and Community; Maison Colbert, London; Eleven Spitalfields Gallery & Offices; Crystal Palace Cafe & Community Space; Bookshop Confer & Karnak, Spitalfields

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