2013年10月23日星期三

Architact - William Alexander Harvey

William Alexander Harvey was an English architect. He is most notable for his design of Bournville, the model 'garden suburb' built by Cadburys to house their chocolate-making workforce to the south of Birmingham. Harvey born into an artistic family, he studied architecture at the Municipal School of Art in Birmingham, and was appointed by George Cadbury to work on houses in Bournville in 1895 aged just 20.

Style
Influenced by the Arts and Crafts Movement, many of Harvey's designs incorporated arty features such as stepped gables, small Venetian windows over canted bays, timber corner porches below dormers with very concave little leaded roofs. Houses at 10-12 Sycamore Road, Bournville, are typical.

Build of Bournville
St Francis' Church (1925)
the parish hall (1913)
the Rest House (1914)
the Bournville Junior School (1902-5)
the adjoining Ruskin Hall (1903)
the Infants' School (1910)
the Friends' Meeting House (1905)
He rebuilt Selly Manor (1912–16)and Minworth Greaves (1929)
In Selly Oak he designed Kingsmead College (1905), Westhill College (1907), and Carey Hall (1912).

From 1914 until at least 1935 his firm, Harvey and Wicks, was based at 5 Bennetts Hill, an important commercial street in central Birmingham. He continued to design public buildings in the village, but also designed houses, estates, municipal buildings and churches elsewhere in Birmingham and further afield.

Reference:
H. Michael, (2009), Birmingham's Victorian and Edwardian Architects, Phillada Ballard. ed. Oblong. ISBN 978-0-9556576-2-7. 
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Alexander_Harvey

2013年10月22日星期二

Bournville History -1

Bournville played an important part in the development of the garden city movement, and it was "the parent of the whole [garden city] movement ". Bournville has a complicated history that consists of four stages: 1.The houses and Institutes constructed by George Cadbury in Northfield and Stirchley, and the fifteen houses (now demolished) for managers associated with the move of the factory to Bournville in 1879; 2. the building estate; 3. houses constructed for rental in 1898; 4. the foundation of Bournville Village Trust (BVT, established 1900).
The first architect employed by Cadbury was Alfred Walker, and the a other architect William Alexander Harvey was responsible for most of the houses constructed by the Bournville Building Estate, and developed the ‘Bournville Style’.

Cadbury's objectives in Bournville were the construction of decent quality homes at prices affordable to industrial workers. The particulars stated that it was: "intended to make it easy for working men to own houses with large gardens, secure from the dangers of being spoilt either by factories, or by the interference with the enjoyment of sun, light and air". The building estate was provided with no community facilities, and the houses were targeted at the lower- and upper- middle classes. 


The story of Bournville house begins on 29 September 1898 when one George Exell, gentleman, purchased a semi-detached pair of houses for £700. (Architect W.A. Harvey)

The first group of houses constructed by Bournville Village Trust. (Architect: W. A. Harvey)

The Bournville Building Estate in 1898.

The Bournville Building Estate as Model Village, 1915    

SOCIAL PROBLEM- exclusion of female voices

The factory always employed more single women than men, married women were not employed, and women who became pregnant lost their jobs. Most single women would have been unable to afford to buy or rent a house on the Bournville Estate. All of these voices are absent from the accepted story, and yet the only true measure of the success or failure of a model community must come from the people who either bought or rented houses. 

REFERENCE
John R. Bryson and Philippa A. LoweStory-telling and history construction: rereading George Cadbury’s Bournville Model Village, Journal of Historical Geography, 28, 1 (2002) 21–41 doi:10.1006/jhge.2001.0372



2013年10月13日星期日

Research~

These weeks I got many information about Bournville. This picture is my map of Bournville. 


Though this I know the George have Quaker beliefs- all human beings should be treated equally and should live in peace, believed in social responsibility and social reform. So he bullied the chocolate factory and Bournville village.
Though the research, I think my interesting in advert, because, advert is very important.
Advert usually have two form- video and print.






These poster from last time, poster just need key works and straight mean of picture.
Then, these pictures is now posters, pictures need edited on computer and added special effects.