SKU: 3091-19

The heat in old houses

EUR26.16

Available in central stock
Quick facts

Additional information

Weight 0.35 kg
Part of a series

2/5

Sidor

102

Author

Göran Gudmundsson

Publisher

Gysinge Center for Building Conservation

“The Heat of Old Houses” answers questions about heating and insulation of old houses. This is the second book in the series – Building Conservation in Practice.

Find out which solutions are recommended. House fireplaces and heat sources, their history and construction, and renovation aspects. Detailed advice is given on the maintenance and care of tiled stoves, fireplaces, pipe stoves, fireplaces and iron stoves.

A very practical book. Invaluable knowledge for anyone working with older houses.

Description

“The Heat of Old Houses” answers questions about heating and insulation of old houses. This is the second book in the series – Building Conservation in Practice.

Find out which solutions are recommended. House fireplaces and heat sources, their history and construction, and renovation aspects. Detailed advice is given on the maintenance and care of tiled stoves, fireplaces, pipe stoves, fireplaces and iron stoves.

A very practical book. Invaluable knowledge for anyone working with older houses.

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Swedish Grace a forgotten modernism

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DESCRIPTION The book aims to raise awareness of the buildings. The oldest ones date from the 18th century, the youngest from the early 20th century. They are churches or cellars and everything in between. The pictures aim to show how amazing the buildings are and the text provides information about their background, construction and care. The hope is that people will be inspired to take pride in the slag houses and care for these unique buildings, made from a material that is irreplaceable today.

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Period kitchens & bathrooms 1880-2000

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Typical of the time

Stylistic shifts in everyday architecture
Tidstypiskt gives those who influence and develop residential buildings and interiors a tool to base long-term sustainable management and development of the building stock on knowledge of existing values.

The authors take us on a hundred-year journey through stylistic changes in everyday architecture. Typical building details from Stockholm are presented decade by decade. From the classicist architecture of the 1880s via the stripped-down functionalism of the 1930s to the 1970s return to the grammar of the stone city as an ideal.

The building details vary with the prevailing architectural style, from the composition of the facades to the division of the windows and the design of the door handles. The reader is given the opportunity to learn and interpret the buildings and details of different periods. Knowledge provides richer experiences and constantly new impressions of everyday architecture – our built cultural heritage.

Photographs and drawings clearly show the development of residential buildings in the city and the traces left by different styles.

A drawing section makes it possible to date door linings and floor plinths – or to use the drawings to make new ones.

The book is aimed at architects, real estate developers, property managers, property owners, but also at housing associations and homeowners. The book is also suitable for teaching purposes.

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