Home


  Find:    

Capital Losses: A Cultural History of Washington's Destroyed Buildings

Capital Losses: A Cultural History of Washington|s Destroyed Buildings reviews
Author(s): Goode, James M.
Publisher: Smithsonian Institution Press
Format: Hardcover
List Price: $69.95
Send this review on  Tell a Friend

Overview:
Before the passage of critical preservation legislation in 1978, the Nation's Capital lost an irreplaceable assembly of architecturally and culturally significant buildings. Wanton destruction in the name of progress - particularly in the decades immediately following World War II - resulted in a legacy forever lost, a cultural heritage destroyed by the wrecker's ball. In originally documenting 252 of these historic losses, the publication of Capital Losses a quarter century ago created a clarion call for preservationists. By reminding us of things lost, James Goode's magisterial and poignant study represented a comprehensive call for action, a mandate for responsible stewardship of the architectural legacy of Washington, D.C. In the decades since, rising public awareness and the passage of the Historic District and Historic Landmark Protection Act in 1978 have slowed the pace of thoughtless destruction. But as this completely new and updated edition of Capital Losses demonstrates, vigilance remains the watchword, especially as pressures for urban growth continue to intensify. Capital Losses reveals the Washington that was and how it became what it is today. This updated edition includes eighteen more treasures lost - among them Rhodes Tavern and Valley View - and ninety additional historic photographs. The 270 buildings featured here range from the earliest Georgian plantation house to the latest art deco commercial structure and include private houses, hotels, apartment houses, office and government buildings, schools, hospitals, churches, and fire stations. Both the familiar public Washington of official landmarks and the private city of residential neighborhoods are paid tribute in this volume, dedicated to the vanished. A foreword by noted architectural historian Richard Longstreth brings the preservation story up to the present. NOTE: This is a Scratch and Dent version and accordingly MAY NOT have a dust jacket.

Category: History

ISBN-10:1588341054
Language:English
Pages:541
Dimensions:12.24" l x 9.30" w x 1.68" h

Capital Losses: A Cultural History of Washington|s Destroyed Buildings Comments

Please Sign in to post your comment! or Sign up here



Similar Titles


Capone: The Man and the Era review, price, low price
Capone: The Man and the Era
Captives review, price, low price
Captives
Air Power: America|s Finest review, price, low price
Air Power: America|s Finest


New Books Reviews
Reviews on Six Wives
Six Wives
Starkey, David
Reviews on 401(k)S for Dummies
401(k)S for Dummies
Benna, Ted Newmann, Brenda Watson
Reviews on Get Clark Smart (Abridged)
Get Clark Smart (Abridged)
Howard, Clark Meltzer, Mark
Reviews on Flight: One Hundred Years of Aviation in Photographs
Flight: One Hundred Years of Aviation in Photographs
Heppenheimer, T. A.
Reviews on Borders, Exiles, Diasporas
Borders, Exiles, Diasporas
Barkan, Elazar (Edt) Shelton, Marie-Denise (Edt)
Reviews on Air Force One
Air Force One
Dallek, Robert Walsh, Kenneth T.
Reviews on Guide to Online Investing (Wall Street Journal)
Guide to Online Investing (Wall Street Journal)
Jaroslovsky, Rich Pettit, Dave Wall Street Journal Interactive Edition
Reviews on Facing the Extreme
Facing the Extreme
Denner, Arthur Pollak, Abigail Todorov, Tzvetan
Reviews on Alien Contact
Alien Contact
Brennan, Herbie

 
Sponsored Links

Tools
Bookmark/Discuss