Cover image for Dictionary of building preservation
Title:
Dictionary of building preservation
Publication Information:
New York : John Wiley & Sons, 1996
ISBN:
9780471144137

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30000003904186 NA31 D53 1996 rd Reference Book Dictionary
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Summary

Summary

Most historic buildings are owned by private citizens who havelittle or no background in building preservation or its alliedfields. These owners--as dedicated as they are to preserving orrefurbishing their property--often feel at a disadvantage whencommunicating with professionals well-versed in the complex jargonof this multidisciplinary field. The Dictionary of BuildingPreservation provides easy access to this terminology and helps thenonspecialist to understand and communicate with building anddesign professionals, preservation groups, government agencies,attorneys, and others concerned with building preservation.

Containing more than 10,000 entries that cover the entire breadthof building preservation in North America, this is the best sourceavailable for definitions of terms used for buildings, parts ofbuildings, the development of historic structures, technicalstandards, relevant legal terminology, and preservation practice.It provides detailed information on various historical styles andfashions, structural, mechanical, and electrical systems, andcurrent restoration techniques. In the Dictionary of BuildingPreservation, readers will find
* Straightforward definitions that include preservation context,word origin, and national and regional vernaculars
* Many terms that do not appear in any other dictionary
* Cross referencing that allows readers to move from the general tothe specific or vice versa
* Nearly 400 illustrations--many rare-edition prints and linedrawings from the Historic American Buildings Survey as well asfirst edition Architectural Graphic Standards technical drawings
* Both modern and obsolete spellings along with an indication ofthe period in which the term was most commonly used

Compiled by a practicing restoration architect, this is the idealreference resource for owners of historic homes, preservationistsand restoration consultants, architecture buffs, urban planners,land-use attorneys, architects and architectural historians, andanyone involved in building renovation, community preservation, orlandmark designation.

building types, building parts, construction methods, raw andmanufactured building materials, products and finishes, structuralsystems, architectural styles, room names, Canadian and U.S.national preservation law and administration, government agenciesand preservation organizations, National Register designations,building codes, real estate development, conservation andrestoration treatments, specialty items, archeological terms,abbreviations and preservationist jargon, building types


Author Notes

About the editor

WARD BUCHER, AIA, is a practicing restoration architect in theWashington, D.C. area. He has written several articles for OldHouse Journal on house heating systems and the structural analysisof historic buildings. An active member of the American Instituteof Architects and the Association for Preservation Technology, hehas done preservation work in Charleston, South Carolina;Albuquerque, New Mexico; and Nova Scotia.


Reviews 1

Choice Review

Among the numerous dictionaries of architectural terms, this is one of the few that focuses on preservation. Others (e.g., Carl R. Lounsbury's Illustrated Glossary of Early Southern Architecture and Landscape, CH, Jun'94) offer hundreds of terms useful to preservationists but are not limited to such terms. Intended to define specialized terms used in preservation in the US and Canada that allow recorders to describe historic resources fully, this dictionary focuses on structures, sites, and objects rather than persons, tools, and processes. The types of buildings included are generally limited to those in use before WW II, and building terms are limited to those known to have been used in North America regardless of the original source of the word. Only current preservation usage is defined. Definitions are concise and cross-references are plentiful. Line drawings to illustrate terms are excellent, although with 10,000 entries the 400 drawings are too few. Bucher, a restoration architect, has compiled a useful source that should be acquired by all collections serving programs in architecture, preservation, history, or American studies. S. M. Klos University of Oregon