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The building site in eighteenth-century Ireland / Arthur Gibney ; Livia Hurley & Edward McParland, editors.

By: Contributor(s): Publication details: Dublin, Ireland : Four Courts Press, 2017.Description: 295 pages : ill. ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 9781846826382 : (hbk)
Related works:
  • Adaptation of (work): Gibney, Arthur. Studies in eighteenth-century building history
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 690.09415 23
Summary: This study by the late Arthur Gibney takes you among labourers, craftspeople, contractors, builders, and designers as they populate the building sites of eighteenth-century Ireland. Gibney tells a story that has never been told so comprehensively before. What kind of contracts bound those involved? How much did it cost to bring a cargo of oak to the Dublin docks from Riga or Shillelagh (or fir from Trondheim) and what kind of roof trusses or floor framing was it used for? What was distinctively Irish about these structural features? What did plumbers do? How did roofers choose between slates and shingles and pantiles, and how did this choice affect the profile of a roof? Based on extensive documentary research and on a lifetime of experience of building and conservation, Gibney takes the interested layperson, the student, the architect, and the conservationist behind the facades to give us an understanding of paint colors-such as Venetian red and Spanish brown-the manufacture of stucco, the variations of Irish, English, and French glass, the composition of masonry walls, and much more in our great legacy of Georgian buildings
List(s) this item appears in: New acquisitions 2017
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Loanable Book Library Irish Collection 690.09415 GIB (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 000412893

Based on the author's PhD thesis, Studies in eighteenth-century building history, Trinity College Dublin, 1998.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

This study by the late Arthur Gibney takes you among labourers, craftspeople, contractors, builders, and designers as they populate the building sites of eighteenth-century Ireland. Gibney tells a story that has never been told so comprehensively before. What kind of contracts bound those involved? How much did it cost to bring a cargo of oak to the Dublin docks from Riga or Shillelagh (or fir from Trondheim) and what kind of roof trusses or floor framing was it used for? What was distinctively Irish about these structural features? What did plumbers do? How did roofers choose between slates and shingles and pantiles, and how did this choice affect the profile of a roof? Based on extensive documentary research and on a lifetime of experience of building and conservation, Gibney takes the interested layperson, the student, the architect, and the conservationist behind the facades to give us an understanding of paint colors-such as Venetian red and Spanish brown-the manufacture of stucco, the variations of Irish, English, and French glass, the composition of masonry walls, and much more in our great legacy of Georgian buildings

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