Designing for Heritage: Contemporary Visitor Centres: 2018
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2017 | Architecture & Design
With tourists expecting higher levels of service, information and retail opportunities, visitor centres have become a vital component in providing access to heritage sites, historic buildings, landscapes of natural beauty and monuments. As a consequence, numerous architecturally renowned centres have been designed and built in recent years. It is perhaps no surprise that so many of these centres have been featured in architectural awards, as they not only offer a 'jewel' of a project to architects, being small in scale but high in profile, but the buildings must also respond sympathetically to a rich physical and cultural context. This book examines the global phenomenon of this relatively new, but increasingly popular, building type. The first section offers a series of essays which explore the origins and key characteristics of the visitor centre, its relationship between place and landscape, its social role, and its focus on the visitor's needs.
The book's second section documents and critically analyses 20 award-winning visitor centres across the United Kingdom which have been built over the past two decades, including the centres at The Giant's Causeway, Stonehenge, Brockholes, Rosslyn Chapel, Culloden and the Wildfowl Centre in Welney. Each building study is beautifully illustrated with photographs and architectural drawings, and includes the essential facts about the building, an experiential description and a full spatial analysis.
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Published by | Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd |
Edition | Unknown |
ISBN | 9781848222144 |
Language | N/A |
Images And Data Courtesy Of: Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd.
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