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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64629 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64629)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sticks and Stones, by Lewis Mumford
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Sticks and Stones
- A Study of American Architecture and Civilization
-
-Author: Lewis Mumford
-
-Release Date: February 25, 2021 [eBook #64629]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Tim Lindell, Craig Kirkwood, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STICKS AND STONES ***
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-Additional Transcriber’s Notes are at the end.
-
- * * * * *
-
-STICKS AND STONES
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-STICKS AND STONES
-
-
- A STUDY OF AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE
- AND CIVILIZATION
-
- LEWIS MUMFORD
-
- [Illustration]
-
- BONI AND LIVERIGHT
- PUBLISHERS :: :: NEW YORK
-
- * * * * *
-
-Copyright, 1924, by Boni and Liveright, Inc.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
- * * * * *
-
- _Architecture, properly understood, is
- civilization itself._
- --W. R. LETHABY
-
- _What is civilization? It is the humanization
- of man in society._
- --MATTHEW ARNOLD.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. THE MEDIEVAL TRADITION 13
-
- II. THE HERITAGE OF THE RENAISSANCE 35
-
- III. THE CLASSICAL MYTH 53
-
- IV. THE DIASPORA OF THE PIONEER 75
-
- V. THE DEFEAT OF ROMANTICISM 99
-
- VI. THE IMPERIAL FAÇADE 123
-
- VII. THE AGE OF THE MACHINE 155
-
- VIII. ARCHITECTURE AND CIVILIZATION 193
-
- ENVOI 237
-
- NOTES ON BOOKS 241
-
-
-
-
-ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
-
-
-This is an attempt to evaluate architecture in America in terms of our
-civilization. I have not sought to criticize particular buildings or
-tendencies: I have tried, rather, by approaching our modern problems
-from their historic side, to criticize the forces that from one age
-to another have conditioned our architecture, and altered its forms.
-Lest my purpose be misunderstood, I have left out illustrations; for
-a building is not merely a sight; it is an experience: and one who
-knows architecture only by photographs does not know it at all. If the
-omission of pictures lead the reader occasionally to break away from
-the orbit of his daily walks, and examine our development in cities and
-buildings for himself, it will be sufficiently justified.
-
-This book would not have been put together but for the persistent
-encouragement and kindly interest of Mr. Albert Jay Nock: and it was
-in The Freeman that the first five chapters, in somewhat briefer form,
-appeared. My hearty thanks are likewise due to Mr. Charles Harris
-Whitaker, whose private help and whose admirable public work as editor
-of the Journal of the American Institute of Architects have both laid
-me under a heavy obligation. My intellectual debt to Messrs. Victor
-Branford and Patrick Geddes will be apparent to those who have followed
-their work. In the concluding chapters I have been stimulated and
-guided in many places by unpublished reports and memoranda written
-by Mr. Clarence Stein, Mr. Benton Mackaye, and Mr. Henry Wright.
-My friendly thanks are also due to Mr. James Henderson, Mr. Geroid
-Tanquary Robinson, and Miss Sophia Wittenberg.
-
-Besides the essays in The Freeman, some of the material in Sticks
-and Stones has appeared in the Journal of the American Institute of
-Architects (Chapter Six), in The New Republic, and in The American
-Mercury. I thank the editors for their permission to draw on these
-articles.
-
-LEWIS MUMFORD.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER ONE THE MEDIEVAL TRADITION
-
-
-I
-
-For a hundred years or so after its settlement, there lived and
-flourished in America a type of community which was rapidly
-disappearing in Europe. This community was embodied in villages and
-towns whose mummified remains even today have a rooted dignity that the
-most gigantic metropolises do not often possess. If we would understand
-the architecture of America in a period when good building was almost
-universal, we must understand something of the kind of life that this
-community fostered.
-
-The capital example of the medieval tradition lies in the New England
-village.
-
-There are two or three things that stand in the way of our seeing
-the life of a New England village; and one of them is the myth of
-the pioneer, the conception of the first settlers as a free band of
-“Americans” throwing off the bedraggled garments of Europe and starting
-life afresh in the wilderness. So far from giving birth to a new life,
-the settlement of the northern American seaboard prolonged for a
-little while the social habits and economic institutions which were
-fast crumbling away in Europe, particularly in England. In the villages
-of the New World there flickered up the last dying embers of the
-medieval order.
-
-Whereas in England the common lands were being confiscated for the
-benefit of an aristocracy, and the arable turned into sheep-runs for
-the profit of the great proprietors, in New England the common lands
-were re-established with the founding of a new settlement. In England
-the depauperate peasants and yeomen were driven into the large towns
-to become the casual workers, menials, and soldiers; in New England,
-on the other hand, it was at first only with threats of punishment and
-conscription that the town workers were kept from going out into the
-countryside to seek a more independent living from the soil. Just as
-the archaic speech of the Elizabethans has lingered in the Kentucky
-Mountains, so the Middle Ages at their best lingered along the coast
-of Appalachia; and in the organization of our New England villages one
-sees a greater resemblance to the medieval Utopia of Sir Thomas More
-than to the classic republic in the style of Montesquieu, which was
-actually founded in the eighteenth century.
-
-The colonists who sought to establish permanent communities--as
-distinct from those who erected only trading posts--were not a
-little like those whom the cities of Greece used to plant about the
-Mediterranean and the Black Sea littoral. Like the founders of the
-“Ancient City,” the Puritans first concerned themselves to erect an
-altar, or rather, to lay the foundations for an edifice which denied
-the religious value of altars. In the crudest of “smoaky wigwams,” an
-early observer notes, the Puritans remember to “sing psalms, pray, and
-praise their God”; and although we of today may regard their religion
-as harsh and nay-saying, we cannot forget that it was a central point
-of their existence and not an afterthought piled as it were on material
-prosperity for the sake of a good appearance. Material goods formed the
-basis, but not the end, of their life.
-
-The meeting-house determined the character and limits of the community.
-As Weeden says in his excellent Economic and Social History of New
-England, the settlers “laid out the village in the best order to attain
-two objects: first, the tillage and culture of the soil; second,
-the maintenance of a ‘civil and religious society.’” Around the
-meeting-house the rest of the community crystallized in a definite
-pattern, tight and homogeneous.
-
-The early provincial village bears another resemblance to the early
-Greek city: it does not continue to grow at such a pace that it either
-becomes overcrowded within or spills beyond its limits into dejected
-suburbs; still less does it seek what we ironically call greatness by
-increasing the number of its inhabitants. When the corporation has a
-sufficient number of members, that is to say, when the land is fairly
-occupied, and when the addition of more land would unduly increase the
-hardship of working it from the town, or would spread out the farmers,
-and make it difficult for them to attend to their religious and civil
-duties, the original settlement throws out a new shoot. So Charlestown
-threw off Woburn; so Dedham colonized Medfield; so Lynn founded Nahant.
-
-The Puritans knew and applied a principle that Plato had long ago
-pointed out in The Republic, namely, that an intelligent and socialized
-community will continue to grow only as long as it can remain a unit
-and keep up its common institutions. Beyond that point growth must
-cease, or the community will disintegrate and cease to be an organic
-thing. Economically, this method of community-development kept land
-values at a properly low level, and prevented the engrossing of land
-for the sake of a speculative rise. The advantage of the Puritan method
-of settlement comes out plainly when one contrasts it with the trader’s
-paradise of Manhattan; for by the middle of the seventeenth century all
-the land on Manhattan Island was privately owned, although only a small
-part of it was cultivated, and so eagerly had the teeth of monopoly
-bitten into this fine morsel that there was already a housing-shortage.
-
-One more point of resemblance: all the inhabitants of an early New
-England village were co-partners in a corporation; they admitted
-into the community only as many members as they could assimilate.
-This co-partnership was based upon a common sense as to the purpose
-of the community, and upon a roughly equal division of the land into
-individual plots taken in freehold, and a share of the common fields,
-of which there might be half a dozen or more.
-
-There are various local differences in the apportionment of the land.
-In many cases, the minister and deacons have a larger share than the
-rest of the community; but in Charlestown, for example, the poorest
-had six or seven acres of meadow and twenty-five or thereabouts of
-upland; and this would hold pretty well throughout the settlements. Not
-merely is membership in the community guarded: the right of occupying
-and transferring the land is also restricted, and again and again, in
-the face of the General Assembly, the little villages make provisions
-to keep the land from changing hands without the consent of the
-corporation; “it being our real intent,” as the burghers of Watertown
-put it, to “sitt down there close togither.”
-
-These regulations have a positive side as well; for in some cases the
-towns helped the poorer members of the corporation to build houses,
-and as a new member was voted into the community, lots were assigned
-immediately, without further ado. A friend of mine has called this
-system “Yankee communism,” and I cheerfully bring the institution
-to the attention of those who do not realize upon what subversive
-principles Americanism, historically, rests.
-
-What is true of the seventeenth century in New England holds good for
-the eighteenth century in the Moravian settlements of Pennsylvania;
-and it is doubtless true for many another obscure colony; for the same
-spirit lingered, with a parallel result in architecture and industry,
-in the utopian communities of the nineteenth century. It is pretty
-plain that this type of pioneering, this definite search for the good
-life, was conducted on an altogether different level from the ruthless
-exploitation of the individual muckers and scavengers who hit the trail
-west of the Alleghanies. Such renewals of the earlier European culture
-as the Bach Festival at Bethlehem give us a notion of the cultural
-values which the medieval community carried over from the Old World to
-the New. There is some of this spirit left even in the architecture of
-the Shaker community at Mount Lebanon, New York, which was built as
-late as the nineteenth century.
-
-In contrast to the New England village-community was the trading post.
-Of this nature were the little towns in the New Netherlands which were
-planted there by the Dutch West India Company: the settlers were for
-the most part either harassed individuals who were lured to the New
-World by the prospects of a good living, or people of established rank
-who were tempted to leave the walks of commerce for the dignities and
-affluences that were attached to the feudal tenure of the large estates
-that lined the Hudson.
-
-The germs of town life came over with these people, and sheer necessity
-turned part of their energies to agriculture, but they did not develop
-the close village-community we find in New England; and though New
-Amsterdam was a replica of the Old World port, with its gabled brick
-houses, and its well-banked canals and fine gardens, it left no decided
-pattern on the American scene. It is only the country architecture
-of the Dutch which survives as either a relic or a memory. These
-trading posts like Manhattan and Fort Orange were, as Messrs. Petersen
-and Edwards have shown in their study of New York as an Eighteenth
-Century Municipality, medieval in their economy: numerous guild and
-civic regulations which provided for honest weight and measure and
-workmanship continued in force within the town. In their external
-dealings, on the other hand, the practice of the traders was sharp,
-and every man was for himself. Beginning its life by bargaining in
-necessities, the trading post ends by making a necessity of bargaining;
-and it was the impetus from its original commercial habits which
-determined the characteristics of the abortive city plan that was laid
-down for Manhattan Island in 1811. Rich as the Dutch precedent is in
-individual farmhouses, it brings us no pattern, such as we find in New
-England, for the community as a whole.
-
-
-II
-
-Since we are accustomed to look upon the village as a quaint primitive
-relic of a bygone age, we do not readily see that its form was dictated
-by social and economic conditions. Where the village had to defend
-itself against Indians, it was necessary to lay it out completely,
-so that it might be surrounded by a stockade, and so that the
-meeting-house might be such a rallying center as the bell-tower or the
-castle was in Europe, or as the high temple site was in classic times.
-But in the eighteenth century the Indian figured less in the scheme of
-colonial life, and along the seacoast and river--as at Wells Beach in
-Maine or Litchfield in Connecticut--the village became a long strip
-upon a highroad, and the arable land stretched in narrow plots from the
-house to the water, so that the farmer might better protect his crops
-and his livestock from the fox, the wolf, the woodchuck, the hawk, the
-skunk, and the deer.
-
-I emphasize these points of structure because of the silly notion
-superficial observers sometimes carry away from the villages of
-Europe or New England; namely, that their irregularity is altogether
-capricious and uneconomical, associated only with the vagaries of the
-straying cow. It would be more correct to say that the precise reverse
-was true. The inequality in size and shape of plots shows always that
-attention was paid to the function the land was to perform, rather
-than to the mere possession of property. Thus, there was a difference
-in size between home lots, which were always seated in the village,
-and purely agricultural tracts of land, which were usually on the
-outskirts; and in Dedham, for example, married men had home lots of
-twelve acres, while bachelors received only eight. Another reason
-for the compactness of the village was a decree of the General Court
-in Massachusetts, in 1635, that no dwelling should be placed more
-than half a mile from the meeting-house in any new plantation. Even
-irregularities in the layout and placement of houses, which cannot
-be referred to such obvious points as these, very often derive from
-an attempt to break the path of the wind, to get a good exposure in
-summer, or to profit by a view.
-
-All this was genuine community planning. It did not go by this name,
-perhaps, but it achieved the result.
-
-
-III
-
-We have learned in recent years to appreciate the felicities of
-eighteenth-century colonial architecture, and even the earlier
-seventeenth-century style is now coming into its own, in the sense that
-it is being imitated by architects who have an eye for picturesque
-effects; but we lose our perspective altogether if we think that the
-charm of an old New England house can be recaptured by designing
-overhanging second stories or panelled interiors. The just design,
-the careful execution, the fine style that brings all the houses
-into harmony no matter how diverse the purposes they served--for the
-farmhouse shares its characteristics with the mill, and the mill with
-the meeting-house--was the outcome of a common spirit, nourished by
-men who had divided the land fairly and who shared adversity and good
-fortune together. When the frame of the house is to be raised, a man’s
-neighbors will lend him a hand; if the harvest is in danger, every man
-goes out into the fields, even if his own crop is not at stake; if a
-whale founders on the beach, even the smallest boy bears a hand, and
-gets a share of the reward. All these practices were not without their
-subtle effect upon craftsmanship.
-
-Schooled in the traditions of his guild, the medieval carpenter pours
-his all into the work. Since sale does not enter into the bargain, it
-is both to his patron’s advantage to give him the best materials, and
-to his own advantage to make the most of them. If at first, in the
-haste of settlement, the colonists are content with makeshifts, they
-are nevertheless done in the traditional fashion--not the log cabins
-of later days, but, more probably, wattle and daub huts like those
-of the charcoal burners in the English forests. In some points, the
-prevailing English tradition does not fit the raw climate of the north,
-and presently the half-timbered houses of some of the earlier settlers
-would be covered by clapboards for greater warmth, as in the eighteenth
-century their interiors were lined with panelled pine or oak, instead
-of the rough plaster. No matter what the material or mode, the
-carpenter works not simply for hire, but for dear life’s sake, and as
-a baker’s dozen numbers thirteen, so a piece of handicraft contains not
-merely the workmanship itself, but a bit of the worker’s soul, for good
-measure. The new invention of the gambrel roof, which gave additional
-room to the second story without raising the roof-tree, is a product of
-this system; and the variation in its length and pitch in New England,
-New Jersey, and New York is a witness to the freedom of design that
-prevailed throughout the work.
-
-These seventeenth-century houses, built at first with one or two
-rooms, and then as luxury increased and family needs multiplied with
-as many as four, would doubtless seem unspeakably crude and mean to
-the resident of Floral Heights; indeed, if our present requirements
-for housing were so simple it would not be quite so difficult to meet
-our perpetual shortage. As a matter of fact, however, these early
-provincial houses were well up to the standards for a similar homestead
-in England; and in some ways were a distinct advance. Just as all the
-separate courses on a restaurant menu were a few hundred years ago
-cooked in the same pot, so the different subdivisions of the modern
-house were originally combined into a single room, which was not
-merely kitchen, workroom, and living quarters, but which also, at least
-in winter, served as a stable for the more delicate members of the
-barnyard. By the time America was settled the division into rooms had
-just commenced among the better sort of farmer: the barn had split off
-from the rest of the house, and the bedchamber was becoming a separate
-apartment. As the seventeenth century lengthened, this division of
-functions became more familiar in the provincial house.
-
-Let us take a brief look at one of these seventeenth-century buildings;
-let us say, the John Ward house in Salem which still survives as a
-relic. As one approaches the village on some November day, when the
-leaves are no longer on the trees to obscure the vista, one feels
-the dynamic quality of medieval architecture--a quality altogether
-different from the prudent regularities of the later Georgian mode.
-It is not merely a matter of painted gables, leaded, diamond-paned
-windows, overhanging second stories, much as these would perhaps remind
-us of a medieval European town. What would attract one is the feeling,
-not of formal abstract design, but of growth: the house has developed
-as the family within it has prospered, and brought forth children; as
-sons and daughters have married, as children have become more numerous,
-there have been additions: by a lean-to at one end the kitchen has
-achieved a separate existence, for instance; and these unpainted,
-weathered oaken masses pile up with a cumulative richness of effect.
-
-Every step that brings one nearer to the house alters the relation of
-the planes formed by the gable ends; and so one must have got the same
-effect in these old village streets as one gets today when one skirts
-around, let us say, Notre Dame in Paris, now overwhelmed by the towers
-at the front, and now seeing them reduced to nothing by the tall spire
-in the rear. So the building seems in motion, as well as the spectator;
-and this quality delights the eye quite as much as formal decoration,
-which the architecture of the seventeenth century in America almost
-completely lacked.
-
-The Puritan had his failings; and this lack of decoration was perhaps
-the most important one in architecture. In his devotion to books and
-in his love for music, even psalm-music, the Puritan was not immune to
-art; but he was suspicious of the image, and one is tempted to read
-into his idol-breaking a positive visual defect, akin to the Daltonism
-or color blindness of the Quakers. Whereas medieval architecture
-had cherished the sculptor and the painter, even in the commonest
-vernacular work, the Puritans looked upon every diversion of the eye
-as a diversion from the Lord, and, by forbidding a respectable union
-between the artist and the useful arts, they finally turned the artist
-out on the streets, to pander to the first fine gentleman who would
-give him a kind word or a coin. Whereas Puritan buildings in the
-seventeenth century were straightforward and honestly bent to fulfill
-their functions, the Puritan did not see that ornament itself may be
-functional, too, when it expresses some positive gesture of the spirit.
-The bareness of the seventeenth century paved the way for the finicking
-graces of the eighteenth.
-
-
-IV
-
-In essentials, however, both the life and the architecture of the first
-provincial period are sound. While agriculture is the mainstay of
-life, and the medieval tradition flourishes, the New England village
-reaches a pretty fair pitch of worldly perfection; and beneath all the
-superficial changes that affected it in the next century and a half,
-its sturdy framework held together remarkably well.
-
-Consider the village itself. In the center is a common, a little
-to one side will be the meeting-house, perhaps a square barnlike
-structure, with a hipped roof and a cupola, like that at Hingham; and
-adjacent or across the way will be the grammar school. Along the roads
-where the houses are set at regular intervals is a great columnar
-arcade of elm trees. All these elements are essential to our early
-provincial architecture, and without them it would be a little bare and
-forbidding. The trees, above all, are an important part of New England
-architecture: in summer they absorb the moisture and cool the air,
-besides giving shade; in the winter their huge boles serve as a partial
-windbrake; even the humus from their leaves keeps the soil of the lawns
-in better order. The apple trees that cling to the warmer side of
-the house are not less essential. Would it be an exaggeration to say
-that there has never been a more complete and intelligent partnership
-between the earth and man than existed, for a little while, in the
-old New England village? In what other part of the world has such a
-harmonious balance between the natural and the social environment been
-preserved?
-
-Nowadays we have begun to talk about garden cities, and we realize that
-the essential elements in a garden-city are the common holding of land
-by the community, and the coöperative ownership and direction of the
-community itself. We refer to all these things as if they represented a
-distinct achievement of modern thought; but the fact of the matter is
-that the New England village up to the middle of the eighteenth century
-was a garden-city in every sense that we now apply to that term, and
-happily its gardens and its harmonious framework have frequently
-lingered on, even though the economic foundations have long been
-overthrown.
-
-This is a medieval tradition in American architecture which should
-be of some use to our architects and city planners; for it is a much
-more substantial matter than the building of perpendicular churches or
-Tudor country-houses in painfully archæological adaptations. If we wish
-to tie up with our colonial tradition we must recover more than the
-architectural forms: we must recover the interests, the standards, the
-institutions that gave to the villages and buildings of early times
-their appropriate shapes. To do much less than this is merely to bring
-back a fad which might as well be Egyptian as “colonial” for all the
-sincerity that it exhibits.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWO THE HERITAGE OF THE RENAISSANCE
-
-
-I
-
-The forces that undermined the medieval civilization of Europe sapped
-the vitality from the little centers it had deposited in America.
-What happened in the course of three or four centuries in Europe took
-scarcely a hundred years on this side of the Atlantic.
-
-Economically and culturally, the village community had been pretty well
-self-contained; it scraped along on its immediate resources, and if it
-could not purchase for itself the “best of everything” it at least made
-the most of what it had. In every detail of house construction, from
-the setting of fireplaces to the slope of the roof, there were local
-peculiarities which distinguished not merely the Dutch settlements
-from the English, but which even characterized several settlements in
-Rhode Island that were scarcely a day’s tramp apart. The limitation of
-materials, and the carpenter’s profound ignorance of “style” made for
-freedom and diversity. It remained for the eighteenth century to erect
-a single canon of taste.
-
-With the end of the seventeenth century the economic basis of
-provincial life shifted from the farm to the sea. This change had the
-same effect upon New England, where the village-community proper alone
-had flourished, that fur-trading had had upon New York: it broke up
-the internal unity of the village by giving separate individuals the
-opportunity by what was literally a “lucky haul,” to achieve a position
-of financial superiority. Fishermen are the miners of the water.
-Instead of the long, watchful care that the farmer must exercise from
-planting time to harvest, fishing demands a sharp eye and a quick, hard
-stroke of work; and since what the Germans call _Sitzfleisch_ is not
-one of the primary qualities of a free lad, it is no wonder that the
-sea weaned the young folks of New England away from the drudgeries of
-its boulder-strewn farms. With fishing, trading, and building wooden
-vessels for sale in foreign ports, riches poured into maritime New
-England; and what followed scarcely needs an explanation.
-
-These villages ceased to be communities of farmers, working the land
-and standing squarely on their own soil: they became commercial towns
-which, instead of trading for a living, simply lived for trade. With
-this change, castes arose; first, the division between the poor and the
-rich, and then between craftsmen and merchants, between the independent
-workers and the menials. The common concerns of all the townsfolk
-took second rank: the privileges of the great landlords and merchants
-warped the development of the community. Boston, by the middle of
-the eighteenth century, was rich in public buildings, including four
-schoolhouses, seventeen churches, a Town House, a Province House,
-and Faneuil Hall--a pretty large collection for a town whose twenty
-thousand inhabitants would scarcely fill a single block of tenements
-in the Bronx. But by this time a thousand inhabitants were set down as
-poor, and an almshouse and a workhouse had been provided for them.
-
-With the rise of the merchant class, the industrial guild began to
-weaken, as it had weakened in Europe during the Renaissance. For about
-a hundred years the carpenter-builder continued to remain on the scene,
-and work in his forthright and painstaking and honest manner; but in
-the middle of the eighteenth century he was joined, for the first
-time, by the professional architect, the first one being probably
-Peter Harrison, who designed the Redwood Library, which still stands
-in Newport. Under competition with architects and amateurs of taste,
-the carpenter-builder lost his position as an independent craftsman,
-building intelligently for his equals: he was forced to meet the swift,
-corrosive influences brought in from foreign lands by men who had
-visited the ports of the world; and he must set his sails in order to
-catch the new winds of fashion.
-
-What were these winds, and what effect did they have upon the
-architecture of the time?
-
-Most of the influences that came by way of trade affected only the
-accent of architecture; the language remained a homely vernacular. In
-the middle of the eighteenth century China sent over wallpaper; and in
-the Metropolitan Museum there is an American lacquered cabinet dated
-as early as 1700, decorated with obscure little Chinese figures in
-gilded gesso. “China” itself came in to take the place of pewter and
-earthenware in the finer houses; while in the gardens of the great
-manors, pavilions and pagodas, done more or less in the Chinese manner,
-were fashionable. Even Thomas Jefferson, with his impeccably classical
-taste, designed such a pavilion for Monticello before the Revolution.
-
-This specific Chinese influence was part of that large, eclectic
-Oriental influence of the eighteenth century. The cultural spirit that
-produced Montesquieu’s Lettres Persanes also led to the translation of
-the Chinese and Persian and Sanskrit classics, and by a more direct
-route brought home Turkish dressing-gowns, turbans, and slippers to
-Boston merchants. In Copley’s painting of Nicholas Boylston, in 1767,
-these Turkish ornaments rise comically against the suggestion of a
-Corinthian pillar in the background; and this pillar recalls to us the
-principal influence of the time--that of classic civilization. This
-influence entered America first as a motif in decoration, and passed
-out only after it had become a dominating motive in life.
-
-
-II
-
-The Renaissance was an orientation of the European mind towards the
-forms of Roman and Greek civilization, and towards the meaning of
-classical culture. On the latter side its impulse was plainly a
-liberating one: it delivered the human soul from a cell of torments
-in which there were no modulating interests or activities between the
-base satisfactions of the temporal life and the beatitudes of heaven.
-With the Renaissance the god-beast became, once again, a man. Moreover,
-just when the Catholic culture of Christendom was breaking down under
-the influence of heresy and skepticism, the classics brought to the
-educated men of Europe a common theme which saved them from complete
-intellectual vagrancy. The effect of classical civilization, on the
-other hand, was not an unmixed good: for it served all too quickly
-to stereotype in old forms a spirit which had been freshly reborn,
-and it set up a servile principle in the arts which has in part been
-responsible for the wreck of both taste and craftsmanship.
-
-The first builders of the Renaissance, in Italy, were not primarily
-architects; they were rather supreme artists in the minor crafts; and
-their chief failing was, perhaps, that they wished to stamp with their
-personal imprint all the thousand details of sculpture, painting,
-and carving which had hitherto been left to the humble craftsman.
-Presently, the technical knowledge of the outward treatment of a
-building became a touchstone to success; and a literal understanding
-of the products of antiquity took the place in lesser men of personal
-inspiration. The result was that architecture became more and more
-a thing of paper designs and exact archæological measurements; the
-workman was condemned to carry out in a faithful, slavish way the
-details which the architect himself had acquired in similar fashion.
-So the architect ceased to be a master-builder working among comrades
-of wide experience and travel: he became a Renaissance gentleman who
-merely gave orders to his servants.
-
-Victor Hugo said in Notre Dame that the printing-press destroyed
-architecture, which had hitherto been the stone record of mankind. The
-real misdemeanor of the printing-press, however, was not that it took
-literary values away from architecture, but that it caused architecture
-to derive its value from literature. With the Renaissance the great
-modern distinction between the literate and the illiterate extends
-even to building; the master mason who knew his stone and his workmen
-and his tools and the tradition of his art gave way to the architect
-who knew his Palladio and his Vignola and his Vitruvius. Architecture,
-instead of striving to leave the imprint of a happy spirit on the
-superficies of a building, became a mere matter of grammatical
-accuracy and pronunciation; and the seventeenth-century architects who
-revolted from this regime and created the baroque were at home only in
-the pleasure gardens and theaters of princes. For the common run of
-architects, particularly in the northern countries, the Five Orders
-became as unchallengeable as the eighty-one rules of Latin syntax. To
-build with a pointed arch was barbarous, to build with disregard for
-formal symmetry was barbarous, to permit the common workman to carry
-out his individual taste in carving was to risk vulgarity and pander to
-an obsolete sense of democracy. The classics had, it is true, united
-Europe anew in a catholic culture; but alas! it was only the leisured
-upper classes who could fully take possession of the new kingdom of
-the mind. The Five Orders remained firmly entrenched on one side, the
-“lower orders” on the other.
-
-Hereafter, architecture lives by the book. First it is Palladio and
-Vignola; then it is Burlington and Chambers; then, after the middle
-of the eighteenth century, the brothers Adam and Stuart’s Antiquities
-of Athens. Simpler works with detailed prescriptions for building in
-the fashionable mode made their way in the late seventeenth century
-among the smaller fry of carpenters and builders; and they were widely
-used in America, as a guide to taste and technique, right down to the
-middle of the nineteenth century. It was by means of the book that
-the architecture of the eighteenth century from St. Petersburg to
-Philadelphia seemed cast by a single mind. We call the mode Georgian
-because vast quantities of such building was done in England, as a
-result of the general commercial prosperity of that country; but it
-was common wherever European civilization had any fresh architectural
-effort to make, and if we call this style “colonial” in America it is
-not to mark any particular lapse or lack of distinction.
-
-The Renaissance in architecture had reached England at about the time
-of the Great Fire (1666), fully two generations after the Italian
-influence had made its way into English literature; and it came to
-America, as one might guess, about a generation later. It was left
-for Alexander Pope, who himself was a dutiful Augustan, to sum up the
-situation with classic precision to Lord Burlington, who had published
-Palladio’s Antiquities of Rome:
-
- “You show us Rome was glorious, not profuse,
- And pompous buildings once were things of use.
- Yet shall, my lord, your just and noble rules
- Fill half the land with imitation fools;
- Who random drawings from your sheets shall take
- And of one beauty many blunders make.”
-
-These lines were a warning and a prophecy. The warning was timely;
-and the prophecy came true, except in those districts in which the
-carpenter continued to ply his craft without the overlordship of the
-architect.
-
-
-III
-
-The first effect of the Renaissance forms in America was not to
-destroy the vernacular but to perfect it; for it provided the
-carpenter-builder, whose distance from Europe kept him from profiting
-by the spirited work of his forbears, with a series of ornamental
-motifs. New England, under the influence of an idol-breaking
-Puritanism, had been singularly poor in decoration, as I have already
-observed: its modest architectural effects relied solely on mass,
-color, and a nice disposition of parts. In its decorative aspects
-medievalism had left but a trace in America: the carved grotesque
-heads on the face of the Van Cortlandt Mansion in New York, and the
-painted decorations in some of the older houses and barns among the
-Pennsylvania Dutch pretty well complete the tally.
-
-Classical motifs served to fill the blank in provincial architecture.
-As long as the carpenter worked by himself, the classic influence
-was confined to little details like the fanlights, the moldings, the
-pillars of the portico, and so on. In the rural districts of New
-England, from Maine to Connecticut, and in certain parts of New York
-and New Jersey and Pennsylvania, the carpenter keeps on building in his
-solid, traditional manner down to the time that the jig-saw overwhelms
-a mechanically hypnotized age; and even through the jig-saw period
-in the older regions, the proportions and the plan remained close to
-tradition. The classical did not in fact supplant the vernacular until
-the last vestiges of the guild and the village-community had passed
-away, and the economic conditions appropriate to the Renaissance
-culture had made their appearance.
-
-The dwelling house slowly became more habitable during this period:
-the skill in shipbuilding which every sheltered inlet gave evidence of
-was carried back into the home, and in the paneling of the walls and
-the general tidiness and compactness of the apartments, a shipshape
-order comes more and more to prevail. The plastered ceiling makes its
-appearance, and the papered wall; above all, white paint is introduced
-on the inside and outside of the house.
-
-Besides giving more light, this innovation surely indicates that
-chimney flues had become more satisfactory. Paint was no doubt
-introduced to keep the torrid summer sun from charring the exposed
-clapboards; and white paint was used, despite the expense of white
-lead, for the reason that it accorded with the chaste effect which was
-inseparable in the eighteenth-century mind from classic precedent.
-
-Indeed, the whiteness of our colonial architecture is an essential
-characteristic; it dazzled Dickens on his first visit to America, and
-made him think that all the houses had been built only yesterday. The
-esthetic reason for delighting in these white colonial farmhouses is
-simple: white and white alone fully reflects the surrounding lights;
-white and white alone gives a pure blue or lavender shadow against
-the sunlight. At dawn, a white house is pale pink and turquoise; at
-high noon it is clear yellow and lavender-blue; in a ripe sunset it
-is orange and purple; in short, except on a gray day it is anything
-but white. These old white houses, if they seem a little sudden and
-sharp in the landscape, are at least part of the sky: one finds them
-stretched on a slight rise above the highroad like a seagull with
-poised wings, or a cloud above the treetops. Were anything needed to
-make visible the deterioration of American life which the nineteenth
-century brought with it, the habit of painting both wood and brick gray
-should perhaps be sufficient.
-
-
-IV
-
-If the architecture of the early eighteenth century in America is
-a little prim and angular, if it never rises far above a sturdy
-provincialism, it is not without its own kind of interest; and Faneuil
-Hall, for example, is not the worst of Boston’s buildings, though it
-is overshadowed by the great utilitarian hulks that line the streets
-about it. By studying the classical forms at one remove, the builders
-of the eighteenth century in America had the same kind of advantage
-that Wren had in England. Wren’s “Renaissance” churches, with their
-box-like naves and their series of superimposed orders for steeples,
-had no parallel, so far as I am aware, in Italy, and certainly had
-no likeness to anything that had been built in classic times: they
-were the products of a playful and original fancy, like the mermaid.
-Mere knowledge, mere imitation, would never have achieved Renaissance
-architecture; it was the very imperfection of the knowledge and
-discipleship that made it the appropriate shell of its age. Coming
-to America in handbooks and prints, chastely rendered, the models of
-antiquity were, down to the Revolution, followed just so far as they
-conveniently served. Instead of curbing invention, they gave it a more
-definite problem to work upon.
-
-It was a happy accident that made the carpenter-builders and cabinet
-makers of America see their China, their Paris, their Rome through a
-distance, dimly. What those who admire the eighteenth century style
-do not, perhaps, see is that an accident cannot be recovered. However
-painstakingly we may cut the waistcoat, the stock, the knee-breeches
-of an eighteenth-century costume, it is now only a fancy dress: its
-“moment” in history is over. The same principle holds true for Georgian
-or colonial architecture, even more than it does for that of the
-seventeenth century; for one might, indeed, conceive of a breakdown
-in the transportation system or the credit system which would force
-a builder to rely for a while upon the products of his own region;
-whereas, while our civilization remains intact there are a hundred
-handbooks, measured drawings, and photographs which make a naïve
-recovery of antiquity impossible.
-
-Once we have genuinely appreciated the influence that created early
-colonial architecture, we see that it is irrecoverable: what we call
-a revival is really a second burial. All the king’s horses and all
-the king’s men have been hauling and tugging vigorously during the
-last fifty years to bring back the simple beauties and graces of the
-colonial dwelling, and the collectors’ hunt for the products of the
-Salem, Newburyport and Philadelphia cabinetmakers is a long and merry
-one; but the only beneficent effect of this movement has been the
-preservation of a handful of antiquities, which would otherwise have
-been impiously torn down. What we have built in the colonial mode is
-all very well in its way: unfortunately, it bears the same relation to
-the work of the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries that
-the Woolworth Building bears to the cathedrals of the Middle Age, or
-the patriotism of the National Security League to the principles of
-Franklin and Jefferson. Photographic accuracy, neatly touched up--this
-is its capital virtue, and plainly, it has precious little to do with a
-living architecture. Like the ruined chapel in The Pirates of Penzance,
-our modern colonial houses are often attached to ancestral estates that
-were established--a year ago; and if their occupants are “descendants
-by purchase,” what shall we say of their architects?
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THREE THE CLASSICAL MYTH
-
-
-I
-
-The transformation of European society and its material shell that took
-place during the period we call the Renaissance is associated with
-the break-up of the town economy and its replacement by a mercantile
-economy devoted to the advantage of the State. Along with this goes
-the destruction of the village community, and the predominance
-in social affairs of a landholding oligarchy who have thrown off
-feudal responsibilities while they have retained most of the feudal
-privileges, and a merchant class, buttressed by riches derived from
-war, piracy, and sharp trade.
-
-America reproduced in miniature the changes that were taking place in
-Europe. Because of its isolation and the absence of an established
-social order, it showed these changes without the blur and confusion
-that attended them abroad.
-
-It is sometimes a little difficult to tell whether the classical modes
-of building were a result of these changes in society or, among other
-things, an incentive to them; whether the classical frame fitted the
-needs of the time, or whether men’s activities expanded to occupy the
-idolum that had seized their imagination. At any rate, the notion that
-the classical taste in architecture developed mainly through technical
-interests in design will not hold; for the severely classical shell
-arose only in regions where the social conditions had laid a foundation
-for the classical myth.
-
-The first development of the grand style in the American renaissance
-was in the manors of Virginia and Maryland. It came originally through
-an imitation of the country houses of England, and then, after the
-Revolutionary War, it led to a direct adaptation of the Roman villa
-and the Greek temple. One does not have to go very deep to fetch
-up the obvious parallel between the land-monopoly and slavery that
-prevailed in the American manors and the conditions that permitted the
-Roman villa itself to assume its stately proportions; nor need one
-dwell too long upon the natural subordination, in this regime, of the
-carpenter-builder to the gentleman-architect. “In the town palaces
-and churches,” as Mr. Fiske Kimball justly says, “there was a strong
-contradiction between modern conditions and ancient forms, so that it
-was only in the country that Palladio’s ideas of domestic architecture
-could come to a clear and successful expression. These monuments, since
-so much neglected, served in Palladio’s book expressly to represent the
-‘Antients’ designs of country-houses....’”
-
-At his death, Robert Carter, who had been Rector of the College,
-Speaker of the Burgesses, President of the Council, Acting Governor of
-Virginia, and Proprietor of the Northern Neck, was described in the
-Gentleman’s Magazine of 1732 as the possessor of an estate of 300,000
-acres of land, about 1,000 slaves, and ten thousand pounds. Pliny the
-Younger might well have been proud of such an estate. On a substantial
-basis like this, a Palladian mansion was possible; and up and down the
-land, wherever the means justified the end, Palladian mansions were
-built.
-
-The really striking thing about the architecture of Manorial America
-with its great dignity and its sometimes striking beauty of detail or
-originality of design--as in the staircase at Berry Hill which creates
-a flaring pattern like butterfly’s wings--the striking thing is the
-fact that the work is not the product of a specialized education; it
-is rather the outcome of a warm, loving, and above all intelligent
-commerce with the past, in the days before Horseback Hall had become
-as aimless and empty as Heartbreak House. Mr. Arthur T. Bolton, the
-biographer of the brothers Adam, has exhibited letters from Robert
-Adam’s patrons in England which mark their avid and precise interest
-in classical forms; and without doubt a little digging would uncover
-similar examples in America.
-
-These educated eighteenth-century gentlemen, these contemporaries of
-“Junius” and Gibbon, who had read Horace and Livy and Plutarch, had one
-foot in their own age, and the other in the grave of Rome. In America,
-Thomas Jefferson exemplified this whole culture at its best and gave it
-a definite stamp: he combined in almost equal degrees the statesman,
-the student, and the artist. Not merely did Jefferson design his own
-Monticello; he executed a number of other houses for the surrounding
-gentry--Shadwell, Edgehill, Farrington--to say nothing of the Virginia
-State Capitol and the church and university at Charlottesville. It
-was Jefferson who in America first gave a strict interpretation to
-classicism; for he had nothing but contempt for the free, Georgian
-vernacular which was making its way among those who regarded the
-classical past as little more than a useful embellishment.
-
-The contrast between the classical and the vernacular, between the
-architecture of the plantation and the architecture of the village,
-between the work of the craftsman, and the work of the gentleman
-and the professional architect, became even more marked after the
-Revolutionary War. As a result of that re-crystallization of American
-society, the conditions of classical culture and classical civilization
-were for a short time fused in the activities of the community, even
-in the town. One may express the transformation in a crude way by
-saying that the carpenter-builder had been content with a classical
-finish; the architects of the early republic worked upon a classical
-foundation. It was the Revolution itself, I believe, that turned the
-classical taste into a myth which had the power to move men and mold
-their actions.
-
-The merchant who has spent his hours in the counting house and on the
-quay cannot with the most lofty effort convert himself into a classical
-hero. It is different with men who have spent long nights and days
-wrangling in the State House, men who have ridden on horseback through
-a campaign, men who have plotted like Catiline and denounced like
-Cicero, men whose daily actions are governed with the fine resolution
-of a Roman general or dictator. Unconsciously, such men want a stage
-to set off and magnify their actions. King Alfred can perhaps remain a
-king, though he stays in a cottage and minds the cakes on the griddle;
-but most of us need a little scenery and ritual to confirm these high
-convictions. If the tailors had not produced the frock-coat, Daniel
-Webster would have had to invent one. The merchant wants his little
-comforts and conveniences; at most, he desires the architect to
-make his gains conspicuous; but the hero who has drawn his sword or
-addressed an assembly wants elbow room for gestures. His parlor must
-be big enough for a public meeting, his dining room for a banquet.
-So it follows that whereas under pre-Revolutionary conventions even
-civic buildings like Independence Hall in Philadelphia are built on
-a domestic scale, the early republican architecture is marked by the
-practice of building its domestic dwellings on a public scale. The fine
-houses of the early republic all have an official appearance; almost
-any house might be the White House.
-
-Even when Dickens made his first visit to America, the classical
-myth and the classical hero had not altogether disappeared: one has a
-painful memory of the “mother of the modern Gracchi,” and one sees how
-the republican hero had been vulgarized into a Jacksonian caricature
-like General Cyrus Choke. For a whole generation the classical myth
-held men in its thrall; the notion of returning to a pagan polity,
-quaintly modified by deism, was a weapon of the radical forces in
-both America and France. Jean Jacques himself preached the virtues of
-Sparta and Rome in Le Contrat Social, as well as the state of nature
-which he praised in Emile; and, in general, “radicalism” associated
-itself with the worship of rule and reason, as opposed to the caprice,
-the irrationality, the brute traditionalism of what the children of
-that age then characterized as “Gothic superstition.” Almost within
-his lifetime Washington became Divus Cæsar, and if a monument was not
-built to him immediately, a city was named after him, as Alexandria had
-been named after Alexander. Did not the very war-veterans become the
-Society of the Cincinnati; did not the first pioneers on the westward
-march sprinkle names like Utica and Ithaca and Syracuse over the Mohawk
-trail; and did not a few ex-soldiers go back to their Tory neighbor’s
-plow? As Rome and Greece embodied the political interests of the age,
-so did classical architecture provide the appropriate shell. Even those
-who were not vitally touched by the dominant interests of the period
-were not immune to the fashion, once it had been set.
-
-
-II
-
-In New England, not unnaturally, the influence of the merchant
-prevailed in architecture for a longer time, perhaps, than it did
-elsewhere. Samuel McIntire, a carver of figureheads for ships and
-moldings for cabins, provided an interior setting in the fashion of
-Robert Adam, which enabled the merchant of Salem to live like a lord
-in Berkeley Square; and Bulfinch, a merchant’s son, began by repairing
-his father’s house, went on a grand tour of Europe, and returned to a
-lucrative practice which included the first monument on Bunker Hill,
-and the first theater opened in Boston. Under McIntire’s assiduous and
-scholarly hands, the low-lying traditional farmhouse was converted
-into the bulky square house with its hipped roof, its classical
-pilasters, its frequently ill-proportioned cupola, its “captain’s
-walk,” or “widow’s walk.” The merchant with his eye for magnitude
-lords it over the farmer with his homely interest in the wind and the
-weather; and so McIntire, the last great figure in a dying line of
-craftsmen-artists, is compelled to make up by wealth of ornament a
-beauty which the earlier provincial houses had achieved by adaptation
-to the site without, and to subtlety of proportion within. The standard
-of conspicuous waste, as Mr. Thorstein Veblen would call it, spread
-from the manor to the city mansion.
-
-Throughout the rest of the country, the pure classical myth created the
-mold of American architecture, and buildings that were not informed by
-this myth attempted some sort of mimicry, like the mansion Squire Jones
-built for Marmaduke Temple in Cooper’s The Pioneers. There are churches
-standing in New Jersey and New York, for example, built as late as
-1850, which at a distance have the outlines and proportions of classic
-buildings, either in the earlier style of Wren, or in the more severe
-and stilted Greek manner favored by a later generation. It is only on
-closer inspection that one discovers that the ornament has become an
-illiterate reminiscence; that the windows are bare openings; that the
-orders have lost their proportions, and that, unlike the wandering
-mechanic, who “with a few soiled plates of English architecture” helped
-Squire Jones, the builder could no longer pretend to talk learnedly “of
-friezes, entablatures, and particularly of the composite order.” Alas
-for a bookish architecture when the taste for reading disappears!
-
-
-III
-
-The dominant designs of the early republican period proceeded directly
-or indirectly from such books as Stuart’s Antiquities of Athens, and
-from such well-known examples of temple architecture in southern
-Europe as the Maison Carrée at Nîmes. In one sense, there was a
-certain fitness in adapting the Greek methods of building to America.
-Originally, the Greek temple had probably been a wooden building. Its
-columns were trees, its cornices exposed beams; and the fact that in
-America one could again build mightily in wood may have furnished an
-extra incentive to the erection of these colossal buildings. The fact
-that the Greek mode in America was well under way before the first
-example of it had appeared in Edinburgh, London, or Paris, shows
-perhaps that time and place both favored its introduction on this side
-of the Atlantic: for the availability of certain materials often, no
-doubt, directs the imagination to certain forms.
-
-On the whole, however, the Greek temple precedent was a bad one. For
-one thing, since the Greek _cella_ had no source of light except the
-doorway, it was necessary to introduce modifications in the elevation,
-and to break up the interior; and it was only in the South that the
-vast shadowed retreats formed by porches and second-story balconies
-proved a happy adaptation to the climate. Again: Greek architecture
-was an architecture of exteriors, designed for people who spent the
-greater part of the year out of doors. With no temple ritual comparable
-to the services of the church or cathedral, the Greeks lavished their
-attention upon externals, and as a great admirer of the Greeks, Sir
-Reginald Blomfield well says, “may have been more successful with the
-outside of their buildings than with the inside.” To fail with the
-interior in a northern climate is to fail with the essentials of a
-habitation; and these vast rooms, for all their ornament, too often
-remained bleak.
-
-Even on the esthetic side, the Greek style of building was not a
-full-blown success. With all their strict arrangement of the classic
-orders, with all their nice proportions, the muted white exteriors
-resembled a genuine Greek temple in the way that a sepia photograph
-would represent a sunrise--the warm tones, the colors, the dancing
-procession of sculptures were absent; it was a thinned and watered
-Greece that they called to mind. Indeed, the disciples of the Age of
-Reason and white perukes would have been horrified, I have no doubt,
-at the “barbarism” of the original Greek temples, as they would
-doubtless also have been at the meanness of the dwellings in which
-Pericles or Thucydides must have lived. Once the temple-house ceased
-to be a stage upon which the myth of classicism could be enacted, it
-ceased also to be a home. For who wishes to live in a temple? That is
-a spiritual exercise we do not demand even of a priest. Small wonder
-that the temple lingered longest in the South, where, down to the Civil
-War, gangs of slaves supported the dignity of the masters and a large
-household diminished the chilly sense of solitude.
-
-It was in public architecture that the early republic succeeded best,
-and it was here that its influence lingered longest, for down to 1840
-well-designed buildings in the classic mode, like the Sub-Treasury
-building in New York, were still put up. The work of McComb in New
-York, Hoadley in Connecticut, Latrobe in Pennsylvania and Maryland, to
-mention only a few of the leading architects, represents the high-water
-mark of professional design in America; and the fact that in spite
-of the many hands that worked upon it the Capitol at Washington is
-still a fairly coherent structure is a witness to the strength of
-their tradition. For all its minor felicities, however, we must not
-make the mistake of the modern revivalists, like Mr. Fiske Kimball,
-who urge the acceptance of the classic tradition in America as a
-foundation for a general modern style. Form and function are too far
-divorced in the classic mode to permit the growth of an architecture
-which will proceed on all fours in houses and public buildings, and
-factories and barns; moreover, there are too many new structures
-in the modern world which the builders of Rome or the Renaissance
-have not even dimly anticipated. In medieval building the town hall
-is a different sort of building from the cathedral: using the same
-elements, perhaps, it nevertheless contrives an altogether different
-effect. In the architecture of the early republic, on the other hand,
-the treasury building might be a church, and the church might be a
-mansion, for any external differentiation one can observe--in fact, the
-only ecclesiastical feeling that goes with the churches of the time
-is a cold deism, or an equally cold Protestant faith which has lost
-entirely the memories and associations of the intervening centuries.
-This sort of architecture achieves order and dignity, not by composing
-differences, but by canceling them. Its standards do not inhere in
-the building, but are laid on outside of it. When the purpose of the
-structure happens to conform to the style, the result may be admirable
-in every way. When it does not happen to conform the result is tedious
-and banal; and, to tell the truth, a great deal of the architecture of
-the early republic is tedious and banal.
-
-
-IV
-
-One further effect of the classic mode has still to be noted: the
-introduction of formal city design, by the French engineer, Major
-L’Enfant, in the laying out of Washington. Stirred by the memory of
-the grand design of Paris under Louis XIV, with its radiating avenues
-that cut through the city in the way that riding lanes cut through the
-hunting forest, L’Enfant sought to superimpose a dignified pattern
-upon the rectangular plan provided by the commissioners of Washington.
-By putting the major public buildings in key positions, by providing
-for a proper physical relation between the various departments of the
-government, by planning spacious avenues of approach, culminating in
-squares, triangles, and round-points, Major L’Enfant gave great dignity
-to the new capital city, and even though in the years that followed his
-plan was often ignored and overridden, it still maintained a monumental
-framework for the administrative buildings of the American State.
-
-Unfortunately, if Washington has the coherence of a formal plan, it
-also has its abstractness: contrived to set off and serve the buildings
-of the government, it exercised no control over domestic building, over
-business, over the manifold economic functions of the developing city.
-The framework was excellent, if cities could live by government alone.
-By laying too much stress on formal order, the exponents of classic
-taste paved the way for the all too formal order of the gridiron plan,
-and since the gridiron development was suited to hasty commercial
-exploitation, while the mode of Washington was not, it was in this mold
-that the architecture of the nineteenth century was cast.
-
-Within a short while after its introduction in New York in 1811 the
-effects of the rectangular streets and rectangular lots became evident;
-whereas the prints of New York before 1825 show a constant variety in
-the elevation and layout of houses, those after this date resemble more
-and more standardized boxes. Long monotonous streets that terminated
-nowhere, filled by rows of monotonous houses--this was the net
-contribution of the formal plan. Classical taste was not responsible
-for these enormities--but on the whole it did nothing to check them,
-and since the thrifty merchants of New York could not understand
-L’Enfant’s plan for Washington, they seized upon that part of it which
-was intelligible: its regularity, its appearance of order.
-
-With the new forces that were at work on the American scene, with
-the disintegration of classical culture under the combined influence
-of pioneer enterprise, mechanical invention, overseas commerce,
-and the almost religious cult of utilitarianism, all this was
-indeed inevitable. What happened to the proud, Roman-patterned
-republic of 1789 is a matter of common knowledge. Benjamin Latrobe,
-the British architect who contributed so much to the Capitol at
-Washington--including a new order of corn stalks and tobacco
-leaves--was a witness to the disintegration of the age and the
-dissolution of its world of ideas; and there is a familiar ring to his
-commentary upon it:
-
- “I remember [he says in his autobiography] the time when I was over
- head and ears in love with Man in a State of Nature.... Social
- Compacts were my hobbies; the American Revolution--I ask its pardon,
- for it deserves better company--was a sort of dream of the Golden
- Age; and the French Revolution was the Golden Age itself. I should
- be ashamed to confess all this if I had not a thousand companions
- in my kaleidoscopic amusement, and those generally men of ardent,
- benevolent, and well-informed minds and excellent hearts. Alas!
- experience has destroyed the illusion, the kaleidoscope is broken,
- and all the tinsel of scenery that glittered so delightfully is
- translated and turned to raggedness. A dozen years’ residence at the
- Republican court of Washington had affected wonderfully the advance
- of riper years.”
-
-Major L’Enfant’s plan for Washington was the last gasp, it seems to me,
-of the classical order; Jefferson’s University of Virginia was perhaps
-its most perfect consummation, for Jefferson had planned for the life
-of the institution as well as for the shell which was to contain it.
-Before the nineteenth century was long under way men’s minds ceased
-to move freely within the classical idolum; and by 1860 the mood
-was obliterated and a large part of the work had been submerged or
-destroyed. The final ironic commentary upon the dignity and austerity
-of the earlier temples is illustrated in a house in Kennebunkport,
-Maine; for there the serene, pillared façade is broken up in the rear
-by a later, and alas! a necessary addition: a two-story bow-window
-projected far enough beyond the eaves to give a little light to the
-occupants of the rooms!
-
-In sum, there was a pathetic incompatibility in this architecture
-between need and achievement, between pretensions and matter-of-fact--a
-rigid opposition to common sense that a vernacular, however playful,
-would never countenance. These temples were built with the marmoreal
-gesture of eternity; they satisfied the desire and fashion of the
-moment; and today their ghosts parade before us, brave but incredible.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOUR THE DIASPORA OF THE PIONEER
-
-
-I
-
-From the standpoint of architecture, the early part of the nineteenth
-century was a period of disintegration. The gap between sheer utility
-and art, which the Renaissance had emphasized, was widened with the
-coming of machinery. That part of architecture which was touched by
-industrialism became crude beyond belief: the new mills and factories
-were usually packing boxes, lacking in light and ventilation, and the
-homes of the factory workers, when they were not the emptied houses
-of merchants and tradesmen, made to serve a dozen families instead of
-the original one, were little more than covered pens, as crowded as
-a cattle market. At the same time that the old forms were undermined
-by the new methods of mechanical production, a sentimental longing to
-retain those forms, just because they were old, seized men’s minds;
-and so industrialism and romanticism divided the field of architecture
-between them.
-
-It was no accident that caused romanticism and industrialism to
-appear at the same time. They were rather the two faces of the new
-civilization, one looking towards the past, and the other towards
-the future; one glorifying the new, the other clinging to the old;
-industrialism intent on increasing the physical means of subsistence,
-romanticism living in a sickly fashion on the hollow glamour of the
-past. The age not merely presented these two aspects; it sought to
-enjoy each of them. Where industrialism took root, the traditions
-of architecture were disregarded; where romanticism flourished, on
-the other hand, in the mansions, public buildings, and churches,
-architecture became capricious and absurd, and it returned to a past
-that had never existed. Against the gross callousness which a Bounderby
-exhibited toward beauty and amenity, there was only the bland piety of
-a Pecksniff.
-
-The dream that is dying and the dream that is coming to birth do not
-stand in sequence, but mingle as do the images in a dissolving view;
-and during the very years that the architecture of the Renaissance,
-both in Europe and America, achieved new heights of formal design, the
-first factories were being planted in Staffordshire and Yorkshire,
-the Duke of Bridgewater built his famous canal, and Horace Walpole
-designed his “Gothic” mansion on Strawberry Hill. The coincidence of
-industrialism and romanticism is just as emphatic in America as in
-England; and it is not without historic justice that the architect who
-in 1807 designed the chapel of St. Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, after
-the Gothic fashion, successfully introduced a steam pumping system in
-Philadelphia’s waterworks. While the industrial buildings of the period
-represented nothing but a lapse from the current vernacular, due to
-haste and insufficient resources, romantic architecture was a positive
-influence; and it will perhaps best serve our purpose to examine the
-romantic heritage in its pristine form, rather than in the work of
-disciples like Latrobe, whose American practice is dated about two
-generations later.
-
-The author of The Castle of Otranto had a perverse and wayward
-interest in the past; and the spirit he exhibited in both his novel
-and his country home was typical of the romantic attitude everywhere.
-What attracted Walpole to the Gothic style was little more than the
-phosphorescence of decay: he summoned up the ghosts of the Middle
-Ages but not the guilds; and instead of admiring the soundness of
-medieval masonry, those who followed directly in his path were
-affected rather by the spectacle of its dilapidation, so that the
-production of authentic ruins became one of the chief efforts of the
-eighteenth-century landscape gardener.
-
-It is not a great step from building a ruin to building a mansion that
-is little better than a ruin. While Walpole defended Strawberry Hill
-by saying he did not aim to make his house so Gothic as to exclude
-convenience, it happened again and again that the picturesque was the
-enemy of simple honesty and necessity; and just as Walpole himself
-in his refectory used wall paper that imitated stucco, so did other
-owners and builders use plaster and hangings and wall paper and carpet
-to cover up defects of construction. Towers that no one ever climbed,
-turrets that no one could enter, and battlements that no one rose to
-defend, took the place of the classic orders. The drawbridge-and-moat
-that embellished Mr. Wemmick’s villa in Great Expectations was not a
-wild conceit of Dickens but a relic of Walpole and his successors.
-
-As a disguise for mean or thoughtless workmanship, the application of
-antique “style” was the romantic contribution to architecture; and
-it served very handily during the period of speculative building and
-selling that accompanied the growth of the new industrial towns. Even
-where style did not conceal commercial disingenuousness, it covered
-up a poverty of imagination in handling the elements of a building.
-Gothic touches about doors and the exterior of windows, and a heap
-of bric-a-brac and curios on the inside, softened the gauntness and
-bareness of this architecture, or rather, distracted attention from
-them. Curiosity was the dominant mood of the time, acquisitiveness its
-principal impulse, and comfort its end. Many good things doubtless came
-out of this situation; but architecture was not one of them.
-
-
-II
-
-Modern industrialism began to take root in America after the War of
-Independence, and its effect was twofold: it started up new villages
-which centered about the waterfall or the iron mine and had scarcely
-any other concern than industry; at the same time, by cutting canals
-which tapped the interior, it drew life away from the smaller
-provincial ports and concentrated commerce and population in great
-towns like Boston, Philadelphia, and New York. In New England, as in
-the English Cotswolds from Whitney to Chalford, the mechanical regime
-was humanized by the presence of an older civilization, and the first
-generation of factory hands were farmers’ lads and lasses who neither
-lost nor endangered their independence; but where the factory depended
-upon paupers or immigrants, as it did in the big towns and in some
-of the unsettled parts of the country, the community relapsed into a
-barbarism which affected the masters as well as the hands. There was
-more than a difference in literary taste between the Corinths and
-Bethels named by an earlier generation and the Mechanicsvilles that
-followed them.
-
-The chief watchwords of the time were progress and expansion. The
-first belonged to the pioneer in industry who opened up new areas for
-mechanical invention and applied science; the second, to the land
-pioneer; and between these two resourceful types the old ways, were
-they good or bad, were scrapped, and the new ways, were they good or
-bad, were adopted. Both land pioneering and industrial pioneering were
-essentially subdivisions of one occupation, mining; and, following the
-clue opened by Messrs. Geddes and Branford, one may say with Professor
-Adshead that the nineteenth century witnessed “the great attack of the
-miner on the peasant.”
-
-Mechanical industry owes its great development and progress to the work
-of the woodman and the miner: the first type of worker takes the bent
-sapling and develops the lathe or “bodger” which is still to be found
-in the remote parts of the Chiltern Hills in England, while from the
-mine itself not merely comes the steam engine, first used for pumping
-out water, but likewise the railway. The perpetual débris amid which
-the miner lives forms a capital contrast with the ordered culture, the
-careful weeding and cutting, of field and orchard: almost any sort of
-habitation is an advance upon the squalor of the pithead; and it is
-not a mere chance that the era devoted to mining and all its accessory
-manufactures was throughout the western world the dingiest and dirtiest
-that has yet befouled the earth. Choked by his own débris, or stirred
-by the exhaustion of minerals, the miner’s community runs down--and he
-departs.
-
-The name pioneer has a romantic color; but in America the land pioneer
-mined the forests and the soil, and the industry pioneer almost as
-ruthlessly mined the human resources, and when the pay-dirt got sallow
-and thin, they both moved on. Longfellow’s allusion to the “bivouac of
-life” unconsciously points to the prevailing temper; for even those who
-remained in the older American centers were affected by the pioneer’s
-malaise and unsettlement; and they behaved as if at any moment they
-might be called to the colors and sent westward.
-
-Beside the vivid promises of Mechanical Progress and Manifest Destiny
-the realities of an ordered society thinned into a pale vapor. In many
-little communities Mechanical Societies were formed for the propagation
-of the utilitarian faith: industrialism with its ascetic ritual of
-unsparing work, its practice of thrift, its renunciation of the arts,
-gathered to itself the religious zeal of Protestantism. The erection
-of factories, the digging of canals, the location of furnaces, the
-building of roads, the devising of inventions, not merely exhausted a
-great part of the available capital; even more, it occupied the energy
-and imagination of the more vigorous spirits. Two generations before,
-Thomas Jefferson could lay out and develop the estate of Monticello;
-now, with many of Jefferson’s capacities, Poe could only dream about
-the fantastic Domain of Arnheim. The society around Poe had no more
-use for an architectural imagination than the Puritans had for
-decorative images; the smoke of the factory-chimney was incense, the
-scars on the landscape were as the lacerations of a saint, and the mere
-multiplication of gaunt sheds and barracks was a sign of progress, and
-therefore an earnest of perfection.
-
-Did ever so many elements of disintegration come together at one time
-and place before? The absence of tradition and example raised enough
-difficulties in Birmingham and Manchester and Lyons and Essen; but in
-America it was accentuated by the restless march of those pioneers who,
-in the words of a contemporary economist, “leave laws, education and
-the arts, all the essential elements of civilization, behind them.”
-What place could architecture fill in these squatter communities? It
-could diminish the hardships of living; it could grease the channels of
-gain; and it could demolish or “improve” so much of the old as it could
-not understand, as Bulfinch’s Court House in Newburyport was improved,
-and as many a fine city residence was swept away under the tide of
-traffic.
-
-These were the days when the log cabin flourished; but it did not
-remain long enough in place to become the well-wrought and decorative
-piece of rustic architecture that the better sort of peasant hut, done
-with the same materials, became in Russia. A genuine architectural
-development might have led from a crude log cabin to a finished one,
-from a bare cabin to an enriched and garnished one, and so, perhaps,
-in the course of a century or so, to a fine country architecture and
-a great native art of wood carving comparable to that of the Russian
-sculptors today. In America, however, the pioneer jumped baldly from
-log cabin to White House, or its genteel and scroll-sawed equivalent;
-and the arts inherent in good building never had a chance to develop.
-With the animus of the miner in back of everything the pioneer
-attempted, the pioneer’s architecture was all false-work and scantling.
-
-
-III
-
-The first contribution to the pioneer’s comfort was Franklin’s
-ingenious stove (1745). After that came a number of material
-appliances. Central heating gave the American house a Roman standard of
-comfort, the astral-oil lamp captivated Edgar Poe; and cooking stoves,
-gas-lighting, permanent bathtubs, and water-closets made their way
-into the better sort of house in the Eastern cities before the middle
-of the nineteenth century. In the development of the city itself, the
-gridiron plan was added to the list of labor-saving devices. Although
-the gridiron plan had the same relation to natural conditions and
-fundamental social needs as a paper constitution has to the living
-customs of a people, the simplicity of the gridiron plan won the heart
-of the pioneer. Its rectangular blocks formed parcels of land which he
-could sell by the front foot and gamble with as easily as if he were
-playing cards, and deeds of transfer could be drawn up hastily with the
-same formula for each plot; moreover, the least competent surveyor,
-without thought or knowledge, could project the growth of New Eden’s
-streets and avenues into an interminable future. In nineteenth-century
-city planning the engineer was the willing servant of the land
-monopolist; and he provided a frame for the architect--a frame in which
-we still struggle today--where site-value counted for everything, and
-sight-value was not even an afterthought.
-
-In street layout and land subdivision no attention was paid to the
-final use to which the land would be put; but the most meticulous
-efforts were made to safeguard its immediate use, namely,
-land-speculation. In order to further this use hills were graded,
-swamps and ponds filled, and streets laid out before these expenditures
-could be borne by the people who, in the end, were to profit by
-or suffer from them. It was no wonder that the newer towns like
-Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Chicago by the middle of the century had
-forfeited to the gambler in real estate, to pay the cost of street
-improvements, generous tracts of land which the original planners had
-set aside as civic centers. Planned by men who still retained some of
-the civic vision of the early republic, the commercial city speedily
-drifted into the hands of people who had no more civic scruples than
-the keeper of a lottery.
-
-The gridiron plan had one other defect which was accounted a virtue by
-the pioneer, and still is shared by those who have not profited by the
-intervening century’s experience. With its avenues that encompassed
-swamps and wildernesses, with its future growth forecast for at least
-a hundred years, the complete city plan captivated the imagination.
-Scarcely any American town was so mean that it did not attempt to
-grow faster than its neighbor, faster perhaps than New York. Only by
-the accumulation of more and more people could its colossal city
-plan and its inflated land values be realized. If the older cities of
-the seaboard were limited in their attempts to become metropolises
-by the fact that their downtown sections were originally laid out
-for villages, the villages of the middle west labored under just
-the opposite handicap; they had frequently acquired the framework
-of a metropolis before they had passed out of the physical state of
-a village. The gridiron plan was a sort of hand-me-down which the
-juvenile city was supposed to grow into and fill. That a city had
-any other purpose than to attract trade, to increase land values,
-and to grow is something that, if it uneasily entered the mind of an
-occasional Whitman, never exercised any hold upon the minds of the
-majority of our countrymen. For them, the place where the great city
-stands _is_ the place of stretched wharves, and markets, and ships
-bringing goods from the ends of the earth; that, and nothing else.
-
-
-IV
-
-With business booming and vanishing, with people coming and going, with
-land continually changing hands, what encouragement was there for the
-stable achievements of architecture? In vain does the architect antic
-and grimace to conceal his despair; his business is to put on a front.
-If he is not a Pecksniff at heart, he will at any rate have to serve
-Mr. Veneering. A guide book of 1826 refers to a Masonic Hall “somewhat
-in the Gothic style”; and we can characterize all the buildings of the
-period by saying that they were “somewhat” like architecture--a little
-more than scenery, a little less than solids.
-
-For a while it seemed as if the Gothic revival might give the
-prevailing cast to nineteenth-century building; for if this mode was
-adopted at first because it was picturesque and historic it was later
-reënforced by the conviction that it was a natural and scientific mode
-of construction, that it stood for growth and function, as against the
-arbitrary character of the classic work. The symbols of the organic
-world were rife in the thought of this period, for in the sphere of
-thought biology was supplanting physics, and Gothic architecture was
-supposed peculiarly to be in the line of growth, while that of the
-Renaissance cut across and, heretically, denied the principle of
-organic development. Unfortunately the process of disintegration
-had gone so far that no one current of thought had the power to
-dominate; and the Gothic style proved to be only the first of a number
-of discordant influences, derived from industry, from history, from
-archæology.
-
-Indeed, the chief sign that bears witness to the disintegration of
-architecture during the formative days of the pioneer is eclecticism;
-but there is still another--the attempt to justify the industrial
-process by using solely the materials it had created in abundance. In
-discussing the plans for the Smithsonian Institution, Robert Dale Owen
-observed that “of late years a rival material, from the mine, seems
-encroaching on these [stone, clay, wood] and the next generation may
-see, arising on our continent, villages, or it may be cities, of iron.”
-
-What Owen’s generation actually did see, apart from sheet-iron façades
-and zinc cornices, was the Crystal Palace, which was built in New
-York in 1853 in imitation of London’s exhibition hall of 1850. Ruskin
-described the original Crystal Palace, with sardonic justice, as a
-magnified conservatory; and that is about all that can be said for
-either building. As exercises in technique they doubtless taught
-many lessons to the iron masters and engineers; but they had scarcely
-anything to contribute to architecture. A later generation built the
-train sheds for their smoky railways on this pattern; but the precedent
-lingers today chiefly in subway kiosks and window-fronts, and even here
-it has created no fresh forms for itself--unless the blank expanse of
-a plate-glass window framed in metallic grilles can be called a fresh
-form.
-
-The growth of eclecticism, on the other hand, had by the middle of the
-century given the American city the aspect of a museum and the American
-countryside a touch of the picture-book. Washington Irving’s Sunnyside
-and the first Smithsonian building were in the predominant Gothic mode;
-but Poe described the mansion of a not altogether imaginary Arnheim as
-semi-Gothic, semi-Saracenic; and the old Tombs prison in New York got
-its name from the Egyptian character of its façade. Who can doubt that
-the design for a _Byzantine_ cottage, shown in The American Cottage
-Builder (1854), was somewhere carried out?
-
-Nettled by the criticism that America was not Europe, the pioneer
-determined to bring Europe to his doors. Relatively few American
-architects during the period, however, had been abroad, and still
-fewer had been there to any purpose; even men of culture and
-imagination like Hawthorne and Emerson were not at home in the physical
-environment of Europe, however intimate they were with its mind. The
-buildings that were erected under the inspiration of European tours
-only accentuated the barbarism of the American scene and the poverty of
-the architect’s imagination.
-
-A good part of our architecture today still exhibits the parvenu’s
-uneasiness, and is by turns French, Italian, or more or less obsolete
-English; but we do not, perhaps, realize with what a difference;
-for photography and archæological research now make it possible to
-produce buildings which have all the virtues of the original except
-originality, whereas the earlier, illiterate development of foreign
-examples, rehearsed in memory, resulted in a conglomerate form which
-resembled nothing so much, perhaps, as P. T. Barnum’s mermaid.
-
-If the Crystal Palace represents the extreme of industrial art, Colonel
-Colt’s Armsmear represents the opposite--untutored romanticism.
-Armsmear was built near Hartford, between 1855 and 1862. A writer in
-the Art Journal for 1876 calls this mansion a “characteristic type
-of the unique.” It was a “long, grand, impressive, contradictory,
-beautiful, strange thing.... An Italian villa in stone, massive,
-noble, refined, yet not carrying out any decided principles of
-architecture, it is like the mind of its originator, bold and unusual
-in its combinations.... There is no doubt it is a little Turkish among
-other things, on one side it has domes, pinnacles, and light, lavish
-ornamentation, such as Oriental taste delights in.... Yet, although
-the villa is Italian and cosmopolitan, the feeling is English. It is
-an English home in its substantiality, its home-like and comfortable
-aspects.”
-
-It is, alas! impossible to illustrate in these pages this remarkable
-specimen of American architecture; but in a lecture on the Present
-and Future Prospects of Chicago (1846), I have discovered its exact
-literary equivalent, and it will sum up the crudity and cultural
-wistfulness of the period perhaps better than any overt description:
-
- “I thank you [apologizes the lecturer] for the patience you have
- manifested on this occasion, and promise never more to offend in like
- manner, so long. I have now, as Cowper observes--
-
- ‘Roved for fruit,
- Roved far, and gathered much....’
-
- “And can, I think with Scott, surely say that--
-
- ‘To his promise just
- Vich-Alpine has discharged his trust.’
-
- “I propose now, gentlemen, to leave you at Carlangtoghford,
-
- ‘And thou must keep thee with thy sword.’
-
- “Let me say to you on this occasion, as Campbell does on another:
-
- ‘Wave, Munich! all your banners wave!
- And charge with all your chivalry.’
-
- “And should you in the contest fall, remember with old Homer--
-
- ‘Such honours Ilion to her hero paid,
- And peaceful slept the mighty Hector’s shade.’
-
- “Allow me now to close in one of Scott’s beautiful strains:
-
- ‘Charge, Chester, charge! On, Stanley, on!
- Were the last words of Marmion.’”
-
-_That_ was American architecture between 1820 and the Civil War--a
-collection of tags, thrown at random against a building. Architectural
-forms were brought together by a mere juxtaposition of materials,
-held in place by neither imagination nor logic. There are a number
-of honorable exceptions to this rule, for architects like Renwick,
-who designed St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and Upjohn, who built Trinity
-Church, had a more sincere understanding of the conventional task; and
-by any standard of esthetic decency the old Gothic building of New
-York University, on Washington Square, was a far finer structure than
-the bulky office building that has taken its place. Nevertheless, this
-saving remnant does not alter the character of the great mass of work,
-any more than the occasionally excellent cast-iron balconies, brought
-over from the London of the Regency, alter the depressing character
-of the great mass of domestic building. In elevation and interior
-treatment, these ante-bellum buildings were all what-nots. Souvenirs
-of architecture, their forms dimly recall the monuments of the past
-without in any sense taking their place.
-
-To tell the truth, a pall had fallen over the industrial city:
-contemporary writers in the ’forties and ’fifties speak of the
-filth and smoke, and without doubt the chocolate brownstone front
-was introduced as a measure of protective coloration. In this dingy
-environment, men turned to nature as a refuge against the soiled
-and bedraggled works of man’s creation; and as the creeping factory
-and railroad train removed Nature farther from their doors, the park
-was introduced as a more convenient means of escape. The congested
-capitals of Europe had already learnt this lesson; traveled Americans,
-like William Cullen Bryant, brought it home; and Central Park, planned
-in 1853, was the first of the great landscape parks to serve as a
-people’s pleasance. Conceived in contrast to the deflowered landscape
-and the muddled city, the park alone re-created the traditions of
-civilization--of man naturalized, and therefore at home, of nature
-humanized, and therefore enriched. And even today our parks are what
-our cities should be, and are not.
-
-By 1860 the halcyon day of American civilization was over; the spirit
-had lingered in letters and scholarship, in the work of Parkman and
-Motley and Emerson and Melville and Thoreau, but the sun had already
-sunk below the horizon, and what seemed a promise was in reality an
-afterglow. By the time the Civil War came, architecture had recorded
-faithfully the social transformation; it was sullen, grim, gauche,
-unstable. While in almost every age architecture has an independent
-value to the spirit, so that we can rejoice in Chartres or Winchester
-even though we have abandoned the Roman faith, in the early industrial
-period architecture is reduced to a symptom. Romanticism had not
-restored the past, nor had industrialism made the future more welcome.
-Architecture wandered between two worlds, “one dead, the other
-powerless to be born.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FIVE THE DEFEAT OF ROMANTICISM
-
-
-I
-
-Between 1860 and 1890, some of the forces that were latent in
-industrialism were realized in American architecture. Where the first
-pioneers had fared timidly, hampered by insufficient resources, the
-generation that had been stimulated by war industries and profiteering,
-by the discovery of petroleum and natural gas, by the spanning of the
-American continent and by cable communication with Europe, rioted over
-its new-found wealth.
-
-“The Song of the Broad-Ax” still faintly lingered on the Pacific
-slopes; but the land pioneer was rapidly giving way to the pioneer
-in industry; and for perhaps the first time during the century, the
-surplus of capital outran the immediate demand for new plant and
-equipment. The Iron Age reached its peak of achievement in a series
-of great bridges, beginning with the Eads Bridge at St. Louis; and
-romanticism made a last stand. It will pay us, perhaps, to take one
-last look at the romantic effort, in order to see how impossible and
-hopeless was the task it set out to perform.
-
-In England, the romantic movement in architecture had made the return
-to the Middle Ages a definite symbol of social reform: in Ruskin’s mind
-it was associated with the restoration of a medieval type of polity,
-something like a reformed manor, while with Morris it meant cutting
-loose from the machine and returning to the meticulous handicraft of
-the town-guilds. In America, the romantic movement lacked these social
-and economic implications; and while it is not unfair to say that the
-literary expression of English romanticism was on the whole much better
-than the architecture, in the proportion that The Stones of Venice was
-better than the Ashmolean Museum or the Albert Memorial, the reverse is
-true on this side of the Atlantic.
-
-Inarticulate as H. H. Richardson, the chief exponent of American
-romanticism, was, it seemed for a while as if he might breast the
-tide of mechanical industry and create for a good part of the scene a
-sense of stability and harmony which it had all too plainly lacked. In
-relation to his age, however, Richardson was in the biological sense a
-“sport”; surrounded by jerry-builders, who had degraded the craft of
-building, and engineers who ignored it, he was perhaps the last of the
-great medieval line of master-masons.
-
-Richardson began his career in America directly after the Civil War.
-Almost the first of the new generation of Americans to be trained by
-the Ecole des Beaux Arts, he brought back to America none of those
-atrocious adaptations of the French Renaissance like the New York,
-Philadelphia, and Boston Post Offices. On the contrary, he had come
-under the influence of Viollet-le-Duc; and for about ten years he
-struggled with incongruous forms and materials in the anomalous manner
-known as Free Gothic. The end of this period of experiment came in
-1872, when he received the commission for Trinity Church in Boston; and
-although it was not until ten years later that he saw any Romanesque
-buildings other than in photographs--for he had not traveled during
-his student-years in Paris--it was in this sturdy mode that he cast
-his best work. Richardson was not a decorator, but a builder: in going
-back to Romanesque precedent, with its round arches and massive stone
-members, he was following out a dictum of Viollet-le-Duc’s: “only
-primitive sources supply the energy for a long career.” Turning away
-from “applied Gothic,” Richardson started to build from the bottom
-up. So far had the art of masonry disappeared that in Trinity Church
-Richardson sometimes introduced struts and girders without any attempt
-to assimilate them in the composition; but as far as any single man
-could absorb and live with a vanished tradition, Richardson did.
-
-The proof of Richardson’s genius as a builder lies in the difference
-between the accepted drawings for Trinity Church and the finished
-building. His ideas altered with the progress of the work, and in
-almost every case the building itself is a vast improvement over the
-paper design. Moreover, in his capacity as master-mason, Richardson
-trained an able corps of craftsmen; and so pervasive was his influence
-that one still finds on houses Richardson never saw, the touches of
-delicate, leafy stone-carving he had introduced. With carving and
-sculpture, the other arts entered, and by his fine designs and exacting
-standards of work, Richardson elevated the position of the minor
-crafts, at the same time that he turned over unreservedly to men like
-John La Farge and Augustus St. Gaudens the major elements of decoration.
-
-Probably most people who know Richardson’s name vaguely associate
-him with ecclesiastical work; but Richardson’s brand of romanticism
-was a genuine attempt to embrace the age, and in his long list of
-public works there are but five churches. If the Pittsburgh Court
-House and Trinity Church stand out as the hugest of his architectural
-conceptions, it is the smaller buildings that test the skill and
-imagination of the master, and the public libraries at North Easton,
-Malden, and Quincy, Mass., and some of the little railway stations
-in Massachusetts stand on an equally high level. Richardson pitted
-his own single powers against the barbarism of the Gilded Age; but,
-unlike his contemporaries in England, he did not turn his back upon
-the excellences of industrialism. “The things I want most to design,”
-he said to his biographer, “are a grain-elevator and the interior of a
-great river-steamboat.”
-
-In short, Richardson sought to dominate his age. So nearly did he
-succeed that in a symposium on the ten finest buildings in America,
-conducted by an architectural journal in the ’eighties, Richardson
-was given five. This was no easy victory, and, to tell the truth,
-it was only a partial one. The case of the State Capitol at Albany,
-which Richardson and Eidlitz took in hand in 1878, after five
-million dollars had been squandered on it in the course of ten years’
-misconstruction, scarcely caricatures the conditions under which the
-arts struggled to exist. Begun in the style of the Roman Renaissance,
-the building under Richardson’s impetuous touch began to take on
-Romanesque proportions, only to be legislated back into Renaissance by
-the offended lawgivers!
-
-William Morris Hunt, then at the height of his powers, was commissioned
-to paint two large mural compositions for the assembly chamber of
-this blessed building. So much time had been spent in mismanaging the
-structure that Hunt was given only two months to transfer his cartouche
-to the panels; but he worked heroically, and, as one of his biographers
-says, the work was a great triumph. Great, perhaps--but temporary!
-“The building had fallen into the hands of a political ring, and the
-poor construction was revealed in the leaking of the massive roof and
-the settling of the whole structure. Before ten years had passed,
-great portions of Hunt’s paintings flaked off, and what remained was
-walled up behind the rebuilding necessary to avert utter ruin.” In a
-period like this, Richardson’s comparative success takes on heroic
-proportions.
-
-
-II
-
-With the little eddies of eclecticism, with the rage for the Mansard
-roof, or the introduction of German Gothic, and, a little later, the
-taste for Queen Anne domesticity, there is scarcely any need to deal;
-they represented only the dispersion of taste and the collapse of
-judgment which marked the Gilded Age.
-
-Up to the time of the Chicago World’s Fair, Richardson had imitators,
-and they were not always mean ones. L. H. Buffington, in Minneapolis,
-had to his credit a number of buildings which would not, perhaps,
-have dishonored the master himself; but, as so often happens, the
-tags in Richardson’s work were easier to imitate than his spirit
-and inventiveness; and the chief marks of the style he created are
-the all-too-solid courses of rough stone, the round arch, the squat
-columns, and the contrasts in color between the light granite and the
-dark sandstone or serpentine. Mr. Montgomery Schuyler, an excellent
-architectural critic, once said, not without reason, that Richardson’s
-houses were not defensible except in a military sense; but one is
-tempted to read into these ponderous forms partly the architect’s
-unconscious desire to combat the infirmity and jerry-building of his
-lower contemporaries, and partly his patron’s anxiety to have a seat of
-refuge against the uneasy proletariat. A new feudalism was entrenching
-itself behind the stockades of Homestead and the other steel-towns
-of the Pittsburgh district. Here was a mode of building, solid,
-formidable, at times almost brutal, that served the esthetic needs of
-the barons of coal and steel almost as well as the classic met those
-heroes who had survived the War of Independence.
-
-I have emphasized what was strong and fine in Richardson’s work in
-order to show how free it was from the minor faults of romanticism; and
-yet it reckoned without its host, and Richardson, alas! left scarcely
-a trace upon the period that followed. Romanticism was welcomed when
-it built churches; tolerated when it built libraries; petted when it
-built fine houses; but it could not go much farther. Richardson was a
-mason, and masonry was being driven out by steel; he was an original
-artist, and original art was being thrust into the background by
-connoisseurship and collection; he was a builder, and architecture
-was committing itself more and more to the paper plan; he insisted
-upon building foursquare, and building was doomed more and more to
-_façaderie_. The very strength of Richardson’s buildings was a fatal
-weakness in the growing centers of commerce and industry. It takes more
-than a little audacity to tear down one of Richardson’s monuments,
-and so, rather ironically, they have held their own against the
-insurrections of traffic and realty speculation; but the difficulty of
-getting rid of these Romanesque structures only increased the demand
-for a more frail and facile method of construction.
-
-Romanticism met its great defeat in the office-building. By the use
-of the passenger elevator, first designed for an exhibition-tower
-adjacent to the Crystal Palace in 1853, it had become possible to raise
-the height of buildings to seven stories: the desire for ground-rents
-presently increased the height to ten. Beyond this, mere masonry could
-not go without thickening the supporting piers to such an extent that
-on a twenty-foot lot more than a quarter of the width would be lost
-on the lower floors. Richardson’s Marshall Field Building in Chicago
-was seven stories high; and that was about as far as solid stone or
-brick could climb without becoming undignified and futile by its
-bulk. The possibilities of masonry and the possibilities of commercial
-gain through ground-rents were at loggerheads, and by 1888 masonry was
-defeated.
-
-Richardson, fortunately, did not live to see the undermining of the
-tradition he had founded and almost established. Within a decade of
-his death, however, only the empty forms of architecture remained, for
-the steel-cage of the engineer had become the new structural reality.
-By 1890 the ground-landlord had discovered, in the language of the
-pioneer’s favorite game, that “the roof’s the limit.” If that was so,
-why limit the roof? With this canny perception the skyscraper sprang
-into being.
-
-During this Gilded Age the standard of the best building had risen
-almost as high as it had been in America in any earlier period; but
-the mass of good building had relatively decreased; and the domestic
-dwellings in both city and country lost those final touches of
-craftsmanship that had lingered, here and there, up to the Civil War.
-In the awkward country villas that began to fill the still-remote
-suburbs of the larger cities, all sense of style and proportion were
-lost: the plan was marked by meaningless irregularities; a dingy,
-muddy color spread over the wooden façades. There exists a huge and
-beautifully printed volume, of which, I believe, there are not more
-than a hundred copies, on the villas of Newport in 1876: the compiler
-thereof sought to satisfy the vanity of the original owners and the
-curiosity of a later generation; yet mid all these examples of the
-“novel” and the “unique,” there is not a single mansion that would
-satisfy any conceivable line of descendants.
-
-If the level of architecture was low in the country, it touched the
-bottom of the abyss in the city. As early as 1835 the multiple-family
-tenement had been introduced in New York as a means of producing
-congestion, raising the ground-rents, and satisfying in the worst
-possible way the need of the new immigrants for housing. The conditions
-of life in these tenements were infinitely lower than they had been
-in the most primitive farmhouse of the colonial period; their lack of
-light, lack of water, lack of sanitary facilities, and lack of privacy,
-created an admirable milieu for the propagation of vice and disease,
-and their existence in a period which was boasting loudly of the
-advance of science and industrialism shows, to say the least, how the
-myths which inspired the age stood between the eye and reality, and
-obscured the actual state of the modern industrial community.
-
-To the disgrace of the architectural profession in America, the
-worst features of tenement-house construction were standardized in
-the so-called dumb-bell tenement which won the first prize in the
-model tenement-house competition of 1879; and the tenements which
-were designed after this pattern in the succeeding years combined a
-maximum lack of privacy with a minimum of light and air. The gridiron
-street-design, the narrow frontage, the deep lot, all conspired to make
-good housing difficult in the larger cities: within this framework
-good house-design, indeed, still is difficult. The dumb-bell tenement
-of the Gilded Age, however, raised bad housing into an art; and the
-acquisition of this art in its later developments is now one of the
-stigmata of “progress” in a modern American city. I say this without
-irony; the matter is too grave for jest.
-
-During these same ’seventies, the benefits of poor housing were
-extended in New York to those with money enough to afford something
-better: the Paris flat was introduced. The legitimate excuse for the
-small apartment was the difficulty of obtaining household service,
-and the futility of keeping up large houses for small families: this,
-however, had nothing to do with the actual form that the apartment
-took, for, apart from the desire for congestion-rents, it is as easy to
-build apartments for two families as for twenty. The flat is a genuine
-convenience for the well-to-do visitor to a city; it gives him the
-atmosphere of a home without many of its major complications, and those
-who got the taste for this life in Paris were not altogether absurd in
-desiring to enjoy the same benefits in New York. Unfortunately, what
-suits a visitor does not necessarily meet the demands of a permanent
-resident: one may tolerate a blank wall for a week or a month without
-being depressed, particularly since a good part of a visitor’s time
-is spent outside his home; but to live year after year facing a blank
-wall or an equally-frowning façade opposite is to be condemned to the
-environment of a penitentiary.
-
-The result of building apartments in New York and elsewhere was not
-cheaper rents for smaller quarters: it was smaller quarters without
-the cheap rents. Those who wanted sunlight and a pleasant view paid a
-premium for it; those who did not get either paid more than enough
-for what they got. The result of building apartments which would
-satisfy only a visitor was to make every family visitors: before the
-acute housing shortage, yearly removals to new premises were the only
-palliative that made their occupancy tolerable. The amount of wear and
-tear and waste, the loss of energy and money and good spirits, produced
-by the inability of the architect to design adequately under the
-pecuniary standards of the Gilded Age was colossal. The urban nomad in
-his own way was as great a spendthrift as the pioneer of the prairie.
-Both of them had been unable to create a permanent civilization; and
-both of them paid the price for it.
-
-
-III
-
-During the first period of pioneering, mechanical improvements had
-affected the milieu of architecture, but not architecture itself, if
-one overlooks such ingenuities as the circular and octagon houses of
-the eighteen-thirties. Slowly, the actual methods of construction
-changed: the carpenter-builder, who had once performed every
-operation, gave way to the joiner, whose work profited by putty and
-paint, curtains and carpets--to the plasterer, who covered up the
-raw imperfect frame--and to the plumber. Weird ornamental forms for
-doors and window-architraves, for moldings and pendants, were supplied
-to the builder by the catalogs of the planing and scroll-saw mills.
-Invention produced novelties of contortion in wood, unique in ugliness
-and imbecile in design. Like the zinc and iron statues that graced
-the buildings of the Centennial Exposition, these devices record the
-absorption of art in a vain technology.
-
-One need not dwell upon the results of all these miserable efforts,
-conceived in haste and aborted for profit: the phenomenon was common
-to industrial civilization at this period, and can be observed in
-Battersea and Manchester as well as in New York and Pittsburgh. Mr.
-Thomas Hardy, who was trained as an architect, wrote the esthetic
-apology for industrialism; and in proclaiming the rightness of our
-architectural deserts, one cannot help thinking that he transferred to
-the Wessex countryside a little of the horrible depression he must have
-acquired in London.
-
-“Gay prospects,” exclaimed Mr. Hardy, “wed happily with gay times; but,
-alas! if the times be not gay! Men have more often suffered from the
-mockery of a place too smiling than from the oppression of surroundings
-oversadly tinged.... Indeed, it is a question if the exclusive reign of
-orthodox beauty is not approaching its last quarter. The new vale in
-Tempe may be a gaunt waste in Thule: human souls may find themselves in
-closer harmony with external things wearing a somberness distasteful
-to our race when it was young. Shall we say that man has grown so
-accustomed to his spiritual Bastille that he no longer looks forward
-to, and even shrinks from, a casual emergence into unusual brightness?”
-
-Even the best work of the period is blighted with this sombreness: the
-fact that so many of Richardson’s buildings have the heavy air of a
-prison shows us that the Gilded Age was not, indeed, gay, and that a
-spiritual Black Friday perpetually threatened the calendar of its days.
-
-
-IV
-
-If the romantic movement in America proved that the architect could
-capture only a small part of the field, and go no further than the
-interests of privilege allowed, the building of the Brooklyn Bridge
-showed how well industrialism could handle its problems when its
-purposes were not limited by the necessity for sloppy workmanship
-and quick turnover. The story of its building is a tribute to both
-science and humanity. When John Roebling, the designer of the bridge,
-died in the midst of his job, the business of construction was taken
-up by his son, and by his devotion to his task in season and out of
-season, Washington Roebling became an invalid. Confined to his house
-on Columbia Heights, for ten years the younger Roebling watched the
-work through a telescope, and directed it as a general would direct a
-battle. So goes the legend: it runs rather higher than the tales of
-mean prudence or mechanical skill which glorified Mr. Samuel Smiles’
-heroes.
-
-The bridge itself was a testimony to the swift progress of physical
-science. The strong lines of the bridge, and the beautiful curve
-described by its suspended cables, were derived from an elegant formula
-in mathematical physics--the elastic curve. If the architectural
-elements of the massive piers have perhaps too much the bare quality of
-engineering, if the pointed arches meet esthetic betrayal in the flat
-solidity of the cornices, if, in short, the masonry does not sing as
-Richardson alone perhaps could have made it sing, the steel work itself
-makes up for this, by the architectural beauty of its pattern; so that
-beyond any other aspect of New York, I think, the Brooklyn Bridge
-has been a source of joy and inspiration to the artist. In the later
-bridges the spanning members are sturdier and the supporting piers and
-cables are lighter and less essential; and they suffer esthetically by
-the very ease of their triumph over the difficulties of engineering.
-
-All that the age had just cause for pride in--its advances in science,
-its skill in handling iron, its personal heroism in the face of
-dangerous industrial processes, its willingness to attempt the untried
-and the impossible--came to a head in the Brooklyn Bridge. What was
-grotesque and barbarous in industrialism was sloughed off in the
-great bridges. These avenues of communication are, paradoxically, the
-only enduring monuments that witness a period of uneasy industrial
-transition; and to this day they communicate a feeling of dignity,
-stability, and unwavering poise.
-
-The Brooklyn Bridge was opened in 1884; Richardson died, after
-finishing the Pittsburgh Court House, in 1886. There was a short period
-during which the echoes of Richardson’s style resounded in the work
-of the Western architects; and then in New York two of Richardson’s
-own pupils, Messrs. McKim and White, who had caught the spirit of the
-period that was to follow the passing of the frontier, prepared an
-appropriate mold for its activities. By far the finest things in the
-late ’eighties are the shingled houses which Richardson and Stanford
-White and a few others developed for seaboard estates: they recovered
-the spirit of the early vernacular work, and continued the colonial
-tradition without even faintly recalling colonial forms. This new note,
-however, was scarcely sounded before it died out; and in the twenty
-years that followed the conflict between industrialism and romanticism
-was swallowed up and finally forgotten in the rise of a new mode.
-Richardson had not died too soon. The quality of mind and culture which
-shines through his work was opposed to nearly every manifestation of
-the period that succeeded him.
-
-From this time on, romanticism retained a place for itself only by
-forfeiting its claims to occupy the whole province of architecture. In
-churches and college halls where the traditional tie with the Middle
-Ages had never perhaps been completely broken, its triumphs have been
-genuine; but although Mr. J. G. Rogers’ Harkness Memorial at Yale,
-or Messrs. Goodhue and Cram’s St. Thomas’ Church, for example, leave
-little to be desired in themselves, they have established no precedent
-for the hundred other kinds of building which the modern community
-requires; and it is not without significance that in his most recent
-efforts Mr. Goodhue, for one, had abandoned the molds of romanticism.
-Unlike Richardson, the surviving romanticists now demand a certain
-insulation from the modern world; the more intelligent exponents of the
-movement believe with Dr. Ralph Adams Cram that there is no hope for
-its achievement throughout the community without a return to “Walled
-Towns.”
-
-Such a retreat is the equivalent of surrender. To hold to Gothic
-precedent in the hope of re-creating the medieval community is to
-hope that an ancient bottle will turn potassium permanganate into
-claret. The romanticists have never fully faced the social and economic
-problems that attend their architectural solutions: the result is that
-they have been dependent upon assistance from the very forces and
-institutions which, fundamentally, they aim to combat. Isolated on
-little islands, secure for the moment, romanticism must view the work
-on the mainland with a gesture of irate despair; and the only future it
-dares to face lies behind it!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SIX THE IMPERIAL FAÇADE
-
-
-I
-
-The decade between 1890 and 1900 saw the rise of a new period in
-American architecture. This period had, it is true, been dimly
-foreshadowed by the grandiose L’Enfant, but if the superficial forms
-resembled those of the early republic, and if the precedents of classic
-architecture again became a guide, the dawning age was neither a
-revival nor a continuation.
-
-In the meanwhile, fresh influences had entered. The generation of
-students who had studied in the Ecole des Beaux Arts after the Civil
-War was ready, at last, to follow the lone trail which Richard H. Hunt
-had blazed. Richardson’s most intimate disciples reacted against the
-stamp of his personality and sought a more neutral mode of expression,
-consecrated by established canons of good taste. On top of this, the
-introduction of steel-cage construction removed the necessity for solid
-masonry, and placed a premium upon the mask. The stage was set for a
-new act of the drama.
-
-All these influences shaped the style of our architecture when it
-arose; but the condition that gave it a substantial base was the rise
-of a new order in America’s economic life. Up to this time, the chief
-industrial problem had been to improve the processes of mechanical
-production and to stake out new areas for exploitation. One may compare
-these economic advances to the separate sorties of an army operating on
-a wide front: any lone adventurer might take his courage in his hands
-and exploit an invention, or sink an oil well, if he could find it.
-By 1890 the frontier had closed; the major resources of the country
-were under the control of the monopolist; it became more important
-to consolidate gains than freshly to achieve them. Separate lines of
-railroads were welded into systems; separate steel plants and oil
-plants were wrought into trusts; and where monopoly did not rest upon a
-foundation of natural advantage, the “gentleman’s agreement” began its
-service as a useful substitute. The popular movements which sought to
-challenge the forces of this new regime--the labor movement, socialism,
-populism--had neither analyzed the situation with sufficient care nor
-attracted the adherence of the majority. The defeat of Henry George as
-a local political candidate was symbolic: by 1888 a humane thinker
-like Edward Bellamy had already accepted the defeat, had embraced the
-idea of the trust, and had conceived a comprehensive utopia on the
-basis of letting the process of monopoly go the limit, so that finally,
-by a mere yank of the levers, the vast economic organizations of the
-country would become the “property” of the people.
-
-The drift to the open lands came to a full pause. The land-empire had
-been conquered, and its overlords were waxing in power and riches: the
-name “millionaire” became the patent of America’s new nobility. With
-the shift from industry to finance went a shift from the producing
-towns to the spending towns: architecture came to dwell in the stock
-exchanges, the banks, the shops, and the clubs of the metropolis; if it
-sought the countryside at all, it established itself in the villas that
-were newly laid out on hill and shore in the neighborhood of the great
-cities. The keys to this period are opulence and magnitude: “money to
-burn.”
-
-These years witnessed what the Roman historian, Ferrero, has called
-a “_véritable recommencement d’histoire_.” In the new centers of
-privilege there arose a scale of living and a mode of architecture
-which, with all its attendant miseries, depletions, and exploitations,
-recalled the Rome of the first and second centuries after Christ. It is
-needless to say that vast acres of buildings, factories, shops, homes,
-were erected which had no relation at all to the imperial regime; for
-not everyone participated in either the benefits or the depressions
-that attended the growth of monopoly; but the accent of this period,
-the dominant note, was an imperial one. While the commonplace building
-of the time cannot be ignored, it remains, so to say, out of the
-picture.
-
-
-II
-
-Hardly had the process of concentration and consolidation begun before
-the proper form manifested itself. The occasion for its appearance
-was the World’s Columbian Exposition, opened in 1893. In creating
-this fair, the enterprise and capacity for organization which the
-architects of Chicago had applied to the construction of the skyscraper
-transformed the unkempt wilderness of Jackson Park into the Great
-White City in the space of two short years. Here the architects of
-the country, particularly of New York and Chicago, appeared for the
-first time as a united profession, or, to speak more accurately, as
-a college. Led by the New Yorkers, who had come more decisively under
-European influence, they brought to this exposition the combination
-of skill and taste in all the departments of the work that had, two
-centuries earlier, created the magnificent formalities of Versailles.
-There was unity of plan in the grouping of the main buildings about
-the lagoon; there was unity of tone and color in the gleaming white
-façades; there was unity of effect in the use of classic orders and
-classic forms of decoration. Lacking any genuine unity of ideas and
-purposes--for Root had initially conceived of a variegated oriental
-setting--the architects of the exposition had achieved the effects of
-unity by subordinating their work to an established precedent. They
-chanted a Roman litany above the Babel of individual styles. It was a
-capital triumph of the academic imagination. If these main buildings
-were architecture, America had never seen so much of it at one time
-before. Even that belated Greco-Puritan, Mr. Charles Eliot Norton, was
-warm in praise.
-
-It would be foolish to quarrel with the style that was chosen for these
-exposition buildings, or to deny its propriety. Messrs. McKim, White,
-Hunt, and Burnham divined that they were fated to serve Renaissance
-despots and emperors with more than Roman power, and unerringly they
-chose the proper form for their activities. Whereas Rome had cast its
-spell over the architects of the early Renaissance because they wished
-once more to enter into its life, the life of its sages and poets and
-artists, it attracted the architects of the White City because of its
-external features--because of its stereotyped canons and rules--because
-of the relatively small number of choices it offered for a lapse in
-taste--because of its skill in conspicuous waste, and because of that
-very noncommittal quality in its massive forms which permitted the
-basilica to become a church, or the temple to become a modern bank.
-
-Of all the Renaissance architects, their impulses and interests were
-nearest, perhaps, to Robert Adam, whose church at West Wycombe could
-be turned into a ballroom by the simple act of removing the pews, and
-permitting the gay walls and decorations to speak for themselves.
-Behind the white staff façade of the World’s Fair buildings was
-the steel and glass structure of the engineer: the building spoke
-one language and the “architecture” another. If the coming of
-the skyscraper had turned masonry into veneer, here was a mode of
-architecture which was little but veneer.
-
-In their place, at the Fair, these classic buildings were all that
-could be demanded: Mr. Geoffrey Scott’s defense of the Baroque, in
-The Architecture of Humanism, applies particularly to its essential
-manifestations in the Garden and the Theater--and why not in the Fair?
-Form and function, ornament and design, have no inherent relation,
-one with the other, when the mood of the architect is merely playful:
-there is no use in discussing the anatomy of architecture when its
-only aim is fancy dress. As a mask, as a caprice, the classic orders
-are as justifiable as the icing on a birthday cake: they divert the
-eye without damaging the structure that they conceal. Unfortunately,
-the architecture of the Renaissance has a tendency to imitate the
-haughty queen who advised the commons to eat cake. Logically, it
-demands that a Wall Street clerk shall live like a Lombardy prince,
-that a factory should be subordinated to esthetic contemplation; and
-since these things are impossible, it permits “mere building” to
-become illiterate and vulgar below the standards of the most debased
-vernacular. Correct in proportion, elegant in detail, courteous in
-relation to each other, the buildings of the World’s Fair were,
-nevertheless, only the simulacra of a living architecture: they were
-the concentrated expression of an age which sought to produce “values”
-rather than goods. In comparison with this new style, the romanticism
-of the Victorian Age, with its avid respect for the medieval building
-traditions, was honesty and dignity itself.
-
-The Roman precedent, modified by the work of Louis XIV and Napoleon
-III, by Le Nôtre and Haussmann, formed the basis not merely for the
-World’s Fair, but for the host of city plans that were produced in the
-two decades that followed. It seemed for a while as if the architect
-might take the place of the engineer as city planner, and that the
-mangled regularity of the engineer’s gridiron plan, laid down without
-respect to topographic advantage or to use, might be definitely
-supplanted in the remodeled central districts and in the new extensions
-and suburbs of the American city. The evil of the World’s Fair triumph
-was that it suggested to the civic enthusiast that every city might
-become a fair: it introduced the notion of the City Beautiful as a
-sort of municipal cosmetic, and reduced the work of the architect to
-that of putting a pleasing front upon the scrappy building, upon the
-monotonous streets and the mean houses, that characterized vast areas
-in the newer and larger cities.
-
-If the engineer who had devoted himself to sewers and street-plans
-alone had been superficial, the architectural city planner who centered
-attention upon parkways alone, grand avenues alone, and squares like
-the Place de l’Etoile alone, was equally superficial. The civic center
-and the parkway represented the better and more constructive side
-of this effort: in Cleveland, in Pittsburgh, in Springfield, Mass.,
-harmonious groups of white buildings raised their heads above the
-tangle of commercial traffic, and in the restoration of L’Enfant’s
-plan for Washington, the realities of the imperial regime at length
-caught up with the dreamer born out of his due time. A good many of
-these plans, however, were pathetically immature. One of the reports
-for Manhattan, for example, devoted pages and pages to showing the
-improvement that would follow the demolition of the wall around Central
-Park--and the importance of clipped trees in the design of grand
-avenues!
-
-Plainly, the architect did not face with sufficient realism the
-colossal task with which he was confronted in the renovation of the
-city. He accepted his improvements too much at the value placed upon
-them by the leaders of Big Business--as a creator of land-values, as an
-element in increasing the commercial attractiveness of the city. Did
-not Mr. Daniel Burnham himself point to the improvements in Periclean
-Athens, not as the embodiment of Athenian citizenship and religion at
-its highest point, but as a measure for increasing the attractiveness
-of the city to visitors from abroad? Cut off from his true function to
-serve and beautify the community, made an accessory of business itself,
-like the merest salesman or advertising agent, it is no wonder that the
-architect speedily lost his leadership; and that the initiative went
-once again into the hands of the engineer.
-
-The main merit of all these efforts to perpetuate the World’s Fair is
-that they sought to achieve some of the dignity and decisiveness of
-the formal plan. Their weakness was that they neglected new elements,
-like the billboard, the skysign, the subway, the tall building,
-which undermined the effects of the plan even when it was achieved.
-In their efforts to escape from the welter of misguided commercial
-enterprise, the advocates of the city beautiful placed too great
-reliance upon spots of outward order and decency; they took refuge in
-the paper symmetry of axial avenues and round-points, as one finds
-them in Haussmann’s Paris, and neglected the deeper and more genuine
-beauties of, let us say, the High Street in Oxford or Chipping Camden,
-or of many another European town that had achieved completion in its
-essentials before the nineteenth century.
-
-In short, the advocates of the city beautiful sought a remedy on paper
-which could be purchased only by a thorough reorganization of the
-community’s life. If all this applies to the better side of the World’s
-Fair, it touches even more emphatically the worse.
-
-The twenty years between 1890 and 1910 saw the complete rehabilitation
-of the Roman mode, as the very cloak and costume of imperial
-enterprise. The main effort of architecture was to give an effect of
-dignity and permanence to the façades of the principal thoroughfares:
-the public buildings must dominate the compositions, numerous
-boulevards and avenues must concentrate the traffic at certain points
-and guide the stranger to the markets and amusements: where possible,
-as in the Chicago plan, by Messrs. Burnham and Bennett, avenues must be
-cut through the gridiron pattern of blocks in order to achieve these
-effects. If this imperial street system is somewhat arbitrary, and if
-the necessary work of grading, filling, demolishing, and purchasing
-existing property rights is extremely costly, the end, nevertheless,
-justifies the means--the architecture impresses and awes a populace
-that shares vicariously in it glories. Should the effect prove a little
-too austere and formidable, the monuments will be offset with circuses
-and hippodromes.
-
-In all this, the World’s Fair was a precise and classic example, for
-it reproduced in miniature the imperial order. When the panic of 1893
-kept people away from the exhibitions of art, industry, and culture,
-sideshows were promptly introduced by the astute organizers. Beyond
-the serene classic façades, which recalled the elevation of a Marcus
-Aurelius, sprawled the barkers, the freaks, and the tricksters, whose
-gaudy booths might have reminded the spectator of the other side of the
-imperial shield--the gaminism of Petronius Arbiter. The transformation
-of these white façades into the Gay White Ways came during the next
-decade; whilst the sideshows achieved a separate existence as “Coney
-Island.” On top of this came the development of the mildly gladiatorial
-spectacles of football and baseball: at first invented for playful
-exercise, they became a standard means of exhibition by more or less
-professional performers. The erection of numerous amphitheaters and
-arenas, such as the Yale Bowl, the Harvard Stadium, the Lewisohn
-Stadium, and their counterparts in the West, rounded out the imperial
-spectacle.
-
-By a happy congruence of forces, the large-scale manufacture of
-Portland cement, and the reintroduction of the Roman method of concrete
-construction, came during the same period. Can anyone contemplate
-this scene and still fancy that imperialism was nothing more than
-a move for foreign markets and territories of exploitation? On the
-contrary, it was a tendency that expressed itself in every department
-of Western civilization, and if it appears most naked, perhaps, in
-America, that is only because, as in the earlier periods, there was
-so little here to stand in its way. Mr. Louis Sullivan might well
-complain, in The Autobiography of an Idea, that imperialism stifled
-the more creative modes of architecture which might have derived from
-our fine achievements in science, from our tentative experiments in
-democracy. It seems inevitable, however, that the dominant fact in our
-civilization should stamp the most important monuments and buildings
-with its image. In justice to the great professors of the classic
-style, Messrs. McKim and Burnham and Carrere and Hastings, one must
-admit that the age shaped them and chose them and used them for its
-ends. Their mode of building was almost unescapably determined by the
-milieu in which they worked.
-
-The change in the social scene which favored an imperial setting was
-not without its effects upon the industries that supplied the materials
-for architecture, and upon the processes of building itself. Financial
-concentration in the stone quarries, for example, was abetted by the
-creation of a national system of rail transportation, and partly,
-perhaps, by the elaboration of the mechanical equipment for cutting
-and trimming stone beyond a point where a small plant could work
-economically. The result was that during this period numerous small
-local quarries, which had been called into existence by Richardson’s
-fine eye for color contrasts, were allowed to lapse. Vermont marble and
-Indiana limestone served better the traditions that had been created in
-the White City.
-
-The carrying of coals to Newcastle is always a pathetic practice; it
-remained for the imperial age to make it a subject for boasting. Just
-as many Connecticut towns whose nearby fields are full of excellent
-granite boulders, boast a bank or a library of remote marble, so
-New York City, which has a solid foundation of schist, gneiss, and
-limestone, can point to only a handful of buildings, notably the
-College of the City of New York and Mr. Goodhue’s Church of the
-Intercession, in which these excellent local materials were used. The
-curious result of being able by means of railway transportation to draw
-upon the ends of the earth for materials has been, not variety, but
-monotony. Under the imperial order the architect was forced to design
-structures that were identical in style, treatment, and material,
-though they were placed thousands of miles apart and differed in
-every important function. This ignorance of regional resources is not
-incompatible with grand effects, or even on occasion with decently good
-architecture. But it does not profit by that fine adaptation to site,
-that justness of proportion in the size of window and slope of roof,
-which is an earnest of the architect’s mastery of the local situation.
-Substitute Manila for the military colony of Timgad, or Los Angeles
-for Alexandria, and it is plain that we have here another aspect of
-Ferrero’s generalization. Even architects whose place of work was
-nearer to the site of their buildings were, nevertheless, compelled to
-copy the style of the more successful practitioners in New York and
-Chicago.
-
-In government, in industry, in architecture, the imperial age was
-one. The underlying policy of imperialism is to exploit the life
-and resources of separate regions for the benefit of the holders
-of privilege in the capital city. Under this rule, all roads lead
-literally to Rome. While, as the German historian, W. H. Riehl, points
-out, the provincial highroads served to bring the city out into the
-countryside, the railroads served to bring the major cities together
-and to drain the products of rural regions into the metropolis. It was
-no accident that the great triumphs of American architecture during
-the imperial period were the railroad stations; particularly the
-Pennsylvania and the Grand Central in New York, and the Union Station
-in Washington. Nor is it by mere chance that the Washington and the
-Pennsylvania stations are the monuments to two architects, McKim and
-Burnham, who worshiped most whole-heartedly at the imperial shrine.
-With capital insight, these men established the American Academy at
-Rome: they recognized their home.
-
-Esthetically considered, it is true, perhaps, that the finest element
-in the Pennsylvania station is the train hall, where the architect has
-dealt sincerely with his steel elements and has not permitted himself
-to cast a fond, retrospective eye upon the Roman baths. When all
-allowances are made, however, there remains less for criticism in the
-railway stations and the stadiums--those genuinely Roman bequests--than
-in any of the other imperial monuments. Indeed, so well does Roman
-architecture lend itself to the railroad station that one of the prime
-virtues of such a building, namely ease of circulation, was even
-communicated to the New York Public Library, where it is nothing but a
-nuisance, since it both increases the amount of noise and diminishes
-the amount of space for reading rooms that are already overcrowded.
-
-Here, indeed, is the capital defect of an established and formalized
-mode: it tends to make the architect think of a new problem in terms
-of an old solution for a different problem. Mr. Charles McKim, for
-example, indignantly withdrew from the competition over the New York
-Public Library because the demands of the librarian for a convenient
-and expeditious administration of his business interfered with the
-full-blown conception which Mr. McKim had in mind. All this happened
-after years of demonstration in the Boston Library of Messrs. McKim and
-White’s failure to meet that problem squarely; and it apparently was
-not affected by Mr. McKim’s experience with the great Columbia Library,
-which has ample space for everything except books. In short, the
-classic style served well enough only when the building to be erected
-had some direct relation to the needs and interests of the Roman
-world--the concourse of idlers in the baths or the tiers of spectators
-in the circuses and hippodromes. When it came face to face with our
-own day, it had but little to say, and it said that badly, as anyone
-who will patiently examine the superimposed orders on the American
-Telegraph Building in New York will discover for himself.
-
-
-III
-
-With the transition from republican to imperial Rome, numerous
-monuments were erected to the Divine Cæsar. Within a much shorter time
-than marked the growth of the imperial tradition in America, a similar
-edification of patriotic memories took place.
-
-In the restoration of the original plan of Washington, which began in
-1901, the axis of the plan was so altered as to make it pass through
-the Washington Monument; and at the same time the place of the Lincoln
-Memorial, designed by the late Mr. Henry Bacon, a pupil of Mr. McKim’s,
-was assigned. This was the first of a whole series of temples devoted
-to the national deities. In the Lincoln Memorial, in the McKinley
-Memorial at Niles, Ohio, in the Hall of Fame at New York University,
-and in their prototype, Grant’s Tomb, one feels not the living beauty
-of our American past, but the mortuary air of archæology. The America
-that Lincoln was bred in, the homespun and humane and humorous America
-that he wished to preserve, has nothing in common with the sedulously
-classic monument that was erected to his memory. Who lives in that
-shrine, I wonder--Lincoln, or the men who conceived it: the leader who
-beheld the mournful victory of the Civil War, or the generation that
-took pleasure in the mean triumph of the Spanish-American exploit, and
-placed the imperial standard in the Philippines and the Caribbean?
-
-On the plane of private citizenship, a similar movement took place:
-while before 1890 one can count the tombs in our cemeteries that boast
-loudly of the owner’s earthly possessions and power, from that time
-onward the miniature temple-mausoleum becomes more and more frequent.
-In fact, an entire history of architecture could be deduced from our
-cemeteries; all that has so far been described could be marked in the
-progress from the simple slab, carved in almost Attic purity with a
-weeping willow or a cubistic cherub, that characterized the eighteenth
-century, to the bad lettering and the more awkward headstones of the
-early nineteenth century; and from this to the introduction of polished
-granite and iron ornament in the post-Civil War cemetery, down to the
-mechanically perfect mausoleum, where the corpses are packed like
-the occupants of a subway train, that some of our more effusively
-progressive communities boast of today. As we live, so we die: no
-wonder Shelley described Hell as a place much like London.
-
-The Roman development of New York, Chicago, Washington, and the
-lesser metropolises, had an important effect upon the homes of the
-people. Historically, the imperial monument and the slum-tenement go
-hand in hand. The same process that creates an unearned increment
-for the landlords who possess favored sites, contributes a generous
-quota--which might be called the unearned excrement--of depression,
-overcrowding, and bad living, in the dormitory districts of the city.
-This had happened in imperial Rome; it had happened again in Paris
-under Napoleon III, where Haussmann’s sweeping reconstructions created
-new slums in the districts behind the grand avenues, quite as bad,
-if far less obvious, as those that had been cleared away; and it
-happened once again in our American cities. Whereas in Rome a certain
-limit, however, was placed upon the expansion of the city because
-of the low development of vehicular traffic, the rise of mechanical
-transportation placed no bounds at all on the American city. If Rome
-was forced to create huge engineering projects like aqueducts and
-sewers in order to cleanse the inhabitants and remove the offal of
-its congested districts, the American city followed the example of the
-modern Romes like London and Paris by devising man-sewers, in which the
-mass of plebeians could be daily drained back and forth between their
-dormitories and their factories.
-
-So far from relieving congestion, these colossal pieces of engineering
-only made more of it possible: by pouring more feeder lines into the
-central district of New York, Boston, Chicago, or where you will,
-rapid transit increased the housing congestion at one end and the
-business-congestion at the other. As for the primary sewer system
-devised for the imperial metropolis, it could scarcely even claim, with
-rapid transit, that it was a valuable commercial investment. The water
-outlets of New York are so thoroughly polluted that not merely have the
-shad and the oyster beds vanished from the Hudson River, where both
-once flourished, but it is a serious question whether the tides can
-continue to transport their vast load of sewage without a preliminary
-reduction of its content. Like the extension of the water conduits into
-the Adirondacks, all these necessary little improvements add to the per
-capita cost of living in an imperial metropolis, without providing a
-single benefit that a smaller city with no need for such improvements
-does not enjoy. In the matter of public parks, for example, the
-Committee on Congestion in New York, in 1911, calculated that the park
-space needed for the East Side alone, on the scale provided by the city
-of Hartford, would be greater than the entire area of Manhattan Island.
-In short, even for its bare utilitarian requirements, the mass-city, as
-the Germans call it, costs more and gives less than communities which
-have not had imperial greatness inflicted upon them.
-
-As to the more positive improvements under the imperial regime, history
-leaves no doubt as to their dubious character, and current observation
-only reinforces history’s lesson. In discussing the growth of the
-tenement in Rome after the Great Fire, Friedlander says:
-
-“The motives for piling up storeys were as strong as ever: the site
-for Cæsar’s Forum had cost over £875,000 compensation to tenants and
-ground landlords. Rome had loftier houses than modern capital. A
-disproportionately large part of the area available for building was
-monopolized by the few, in consequence of the waste of space in the
-plethoric architecture of the day, and a very considerable portion
-was swallowed up by the public places, such as the imperial forums,
-which took up six hectares, as well as by the traffic regulations and
-extensions of the streets. The transformation and decoration of Rome
-by the Cæsars enhanced the scarcity of housing, as did Napoleon III’s
-improvements in Paris. A further adjutory cause of the increase in
-the price of dwellings was the habit of speculation in house property
-(which Crassus had practiced in great style) and the monopoly of the
-proprietors, in consequence of which houses were let and sublet.”
-
-It would be tedious to draw out the parallel: given similar social
-conditions in America we have not been able to escape the same social
-results, even down to the fact that the palliatives of private
-philanthropy flourish here again as they had not flourished anywhere on
-the same scale since the Roman Empire. So much for imperial greatness.
-When an architect like Mr. Edward Bennett can say, as he did in The
-Significance of the Fine Arts: “House the people densely, if necessary,
-but conserve great areas for recreation,” we need not be in doubt as to
-who will profit by the density and who will profit, at the other end,
-by the recreation. It is not merely that the park must be produced
-to remedy the congestion: it is even more that the congestion must
-be produced in order to provide for the park. To profit by both the
-disease and the remedy is one of the master-strokes of imperialist
-enterprise. Mr. Daniel Burnham said of the World’s Fair, according to
-Mr. Bennett and Mr. Charles Moore, “that it is what the Romans would
-have wished to create in permanent form.” One may say of our imperial
-cities that they are what the Romans did create--but whether the form
-will be permanent or not is a matter we may leave to the sardonic
-attentions of history.
-
-For my own part, I think we have at last acquired a criterion which
-will enable us to sum up the architecture of the imperial age, and
-deal justly with these railroad stations and stadiums, these sewers
-and circuses, these aqueducts and parkways and grand avenues. Our
-imperial architecture is an architecture of compensation: it provides
-grandiloquent stones for people who have been deprived of bread
-and sunlight and all that keeps man from becoming vile. Behind the
-monumental façades of our metropolises trudges a landless proletariat,
-doomed to the servile routine of the factory system; and beyond the
-great cities lies a countryside whose goods are drained away, whose
-children are uprooted from the soil on the prospect of easy gain and
-endless amusements, and whose remaining cultivators are steadily
-drifting into the ranks of an abject tenantry. This is not a casual
-observation: it is the translation of the last three census reports
-into plain English. Can one take the pretensions of this architecture
-seriously; can one worry about its esthetics or take full delight
-in such finer forms as Mr. Pope’s Temple of the Scottish Rite in
-Washington, or Mr. Bacon’s Lincoln Memorial? Yes, perhaps--if one
-refuses to look beyond the mask.
-
-Even in some of its proudest buildings, the imperial show wears thin;
-and one need not peer into the slums beyond in order to realize its
-defects. The rear of the Metropolitan Museum or the Brooklyn Museum,
-for example, might be the rear of a row of Bronx tenements or Long
-Island City factories, so gaunt and barren and hideous is their
-aspect. If the imperial age was foreshadowed in the World’s Fair, it
-has received its apotheosis in the museum. In contrast to the local
-museums one still finds occasionally in Europe, which are little more
-than extensions of the local curio cabinet, the imperial museum is
-essentially a loot-heap, a comprehensive repository for plunder. The
-sage Viollet-le-Duc once patly said that he preferred to see his apples
-hanging on a tree, rather than arranged in rows in the fruit shop: but
-the animus of the museum is to value the plucked fruit more than the
-tree that bore it.
-
-Into the museum come the disjecta membra of other lands, other
-cultures, other civilizations. All that had once been a living faith
-and practice is here reduced to a separate specimen, pattern, or form.
-For the museum, the world of art has already been created: the future
-is restricted to a duplication of the perfected past. This animus is
-identic with that which made the Romans so skillful in copying Greek
-statues and so dull in carving their own; a desirable habit of humility
-were it not for the fact that the works of art in the past could not
-have been created had our ancestors been so punctual in respect to
-finished designs. The one thing the museum cannot attempt to do is to
-supply a soil for living art: all that it can present is a pattern
-for reproduction. To the extent that an insincere or imitative art is
-better than no art at all, the Imperial Age marked an advance: to the
-extent, however, that a living art is a fresh gesture of the spirit,
-the museum confessed all too plainly that the age had no fresh gestures
-to make; on that score, it was a failure, and the copying of period
-furniture and the design of period architecture were the livid proofs
-of that failure.
-
-The museum is a manifestation of our curiosity, our acquisitiveness,
-our essentially predatory culture; and these qualities were copiously
-exhibited in the architecture of imperialism. It would be foolish to
-reproach the great run of architects for exploiting the characteristics
-of their age; for even those who in belief and design have remained
-outside the age--such resolute advocates of a medieval polity as Dr.
-Ralph Adams Cram--have not been able to divert its currents. In so
-far as we have learned to care more for empire than for a community
-of freemen, living the good life, more for dominion over palm and
-pine than for the humane discipline of ourselves, the architect has
-but enshrined our desires. The opulence, the waste of resources
-and energies, the perversion of human effort represented in this
-architecture are but the outcome of our general scheme of working and
-living. Architecture, like government, is about as good as a community
-deserves. The shell that we create for ourselves marks our spiritual
-development as plainly as that of a snail denotes its species. If
-sometimes architecture becomes frozen music, we have ourselves to thank
-when it is a pompous blare of meaningless sounds.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SEVEN THE AGE OF THE MACHINE
-
-
-I
-
-Since 1910 the momentum of the Imperial Age seems to have slackened a
-little: at any rate, in architecture it has lost much of the original
-energy which had been given to it by the success of the Chicago
-Exposition. It may be, as Henry Adams hinted, that the rate of change
-in the modern world has altered, so that processes which required
-centuries for their consummation before the coming of the dynamo have
-been accelerated into decades.
-
-With events and buildings so close to us, it is almost impossible
-to rate their relative importance; all that I can do in the present
-chapter is to single out one or two of the more important threads
-which, it seems to me, are bound to give the predominant color to the
-fabric of our architecture. It is fairly easy to see, however, why the
-imperial order has not stamped every aspect of our building: for one
-thing, eclecticism has not merely persisted, but the new familiarity
-that the American architect has gained with authentic European and
-Asiatic work outside the province of the classic has increased the
-range of eclecticism. So the baroque architecture of Spain, which
-flourished so well in Mexico, and the ecclesiastical architecture of
-Byzantium and Syria, have added a new charm to our motlied wardrobe:
-from the first came new lessons in ornament and color, applied with
-great success by Mr. Bertram Goodhue in the Panama-Pacific Exposition,
-and now budding lustily in southern villas and gardens; and from
-the second the architect is learning the importance of mass and
-outline--the essentials in monolithic construction.
-
-Apart from this, however, the imperial regime has been stalled by its
-own weight. The cost of cutting through new streets, widening grand
-avenues, and in general putting on a monumental front has put the pure
-architect at a disadvantage: there is the same disparity between his
-plans and the actual aims of the commercial community as there is,
-quite often, between the prospectus and the actual organization of an
-industry. Within the precincts of the modern city, the engineer, whose
-utilitarian eye has never blinked at the necessity for profitable
-enterprise, and whose interest in human beings as loads, weights,
-stresses, or units pays no attention to their qualitative demands as
-human beings--within these precincts, I say, the engineer has recovered
-his supremacy.
-
-Here, in fact, is the paradox of American architecture. In our suburban
-houses we have frequently achieved the excellence of Forest Hills and
-Bronxville; in our public buildings we tend more easily to approach the
-strength and originality of Mr. Goodhue’s State Capitol for Nebraska;
-in fact, never before have the individual achievements of American
-architects been so rich, so varied, and so promising. In that part
-of architecture which lies outside the purlieus of our commercial
-system--I mean the prosperous country homes and college buildings and
-churches and municipal institutions--a tradition of good building and
-tactful design has been established. At this point, unfortunately, the
-scope of the architect has become narrowed: the forces that create the
-great majority of our buildings lie quite outside the cultivated field
-in which he works. Through the mechanical reorganization of the entire
-milieu, the place of architecture has become restricted; and even when
-architecture takes root in some unnoticed crevice, it blooms only to be
-cut down at the first “business opportunity.”
-
-The processes which are inimical to architecture are, perhaps, seen
-at their worst in the business district of the metropolis; but more
-and more they tend to spread throughout the rest of the community. Mr.
-Charles McKim, for example, was enthusiastic over Mr. Burnham’s design
-for the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago, and predicted that
-it would long be a monument to his genius. “But unfortunately,” as Mr.
-Burnham’s biographer says, “unfortunately for Mr. McKim’s reputation
-as a prophet, he was unappreciative of the rapid growth of Chicago,
-the consequent appreciation in the value of real estate in the Loop
-district, and the expansive force of a great bank. This beautiful
-building is doomed to be replaced by one which will tower into the
-air to the permissible height of structures in the business section
-of Chicago.” The alternative to this destruction is an even more
-ignominious state of preservation; such a state as the Knickerbocker
-Trust Company building achieved in New York, or the old Customs
-House in Boston, both of which have been smothered under irrelevant
-skyscrapers. Even where economic necessity plays no distinct part,
-the forms of business take precedence over the forms of humanism--as
-in the Shipping Board’s York Village, where as soon as the direction
-of the community planner was removed a hideous and illiterate row of
-shop-fronts was erected, instead of that provided by the architect, in
-spite of the fact that the difference in cost was negligible.
-
-Unfortunately for architecture, every district of the modern city
-tends to become a business district, in the sense that its development
-takes place less in response to direct human needs than to the chances
-and exigencies of sale. It is not merely business buildings that are
-affected by the inherent instability of enterprises to which profit
-and rent have become Ideal Ends: the same thing is happening to the
-great mass of houses and apartments which are designed for sale.
-Scarcely any element in our architecture and city planning is free
-from the encroachment, direct or indirect, of business enterprise.
-The old Boulevard in New York, for example, which was laid out by the
-Tweed ring long before the land on either side was used for anything
-but squatters’ farms, was almost totally disrupted by the building
-of the first subways, and it has taken twenty years to effect even a
-partial recovery. The widening of part of Park Avenue by slicing off
-its central grass plot has just been accomplished, in order to relieve
-traffic congestion; and it needs only a little time before underground
-and overground traffic will cause the gradual reduction of our other
-parkways--even those which now seem secure.
-
-The task of noting the manifold ways in which our economic system has
-affected architecture would require an essay by itself: it will be more
-pertinent here, perhaps, to pay attention to the processes through
-which our economic system has worked; and in particular to gauge the
-results of introducing mechanical methods of production, and mechanical
-forms into provinces which were once wholly occupied by handicraft.
-The chief influence in eliminating the architect from the great bulk
-of our building is the machine itself: in blotting out the elements of
-personality and individual choice it has blotted out the architect,
-who inherited these qualities from the carpenter-builder. Mr. H. G.
-Wells, in The New Macchiavelli, described Altiora and Oscar Bailey as
-having the temperament that would cut down trees and put sanitary glass
-lamp-shades in their stead; and this animus has gone pretty far in both
-building and city planning, for the reason that lamp-shades may be
-manufactured quickly for sale, and trees cannot. It is time, perhaps,
-that we isolated the machine and examined its workings. What is the
-basis of our machine-ritual, and what place has it in relation to the
-good life?
-
-
-II
-
-Before we discuss the influence of machinery upon building, let us
-consider the building itself as an architectural whole.
-
-Up to the nineteenth century, a house might be a shelter and a work of
-art. Once it was erected, it had few internal functions to perform: its
-physiological system, if we may use a crude and inaccurate metaphor,
-was of the lowest order. An open fire with a chimney, windows that
-opened and closed--these were its most lively pretensions. Palladio,
-in his little book on the Five Orders, actually has suggestions for
-cooling the hot Italian villa by a system of flues conducted into an
-underground chamber from which cold air would circulate; but this
-ingenious scheme was on the plane of Leonardo’s flying machine--an
-imaginative anticipation, I suppose, rather than a project.
-
-With the exception of Wren’s suggestions for ventilating the Houses of
-Parliament, and Sir Humphrey Davy’s actual installation of apparatus
-for this purpose, it was not until the last quarter of the nineteenth
-century that engineers turned their minds to this problem, in America.
-Yankee ingenuity had devised central heating before the Civil War,
-and one of the first numbers of Harper’s Weekly contained an article
-deploring the excessive warmth of American interiors; and at one time
-or another during the century, universal running water, open plumbing,
-gas, electric lighting, drinking fountains, and high speed electric
-elevators made their way into the design of modern buildings. In Europe
-these changes came reluctantly, because of the existence of vast
-numbers of houses that had been built without a mechanical equipment;
-so that many a student at the Beaux Arts returned from an attic in the
-Latin quarter where water was carried in pails up to the seventh story,
-to design houses in which the labor-saving devices became an essential
-element in the plan. It is only now, however, during the last two
-decades, that the full effect of these innovations has been felt.
-
-The economic outcome of all these changes can be expressed
-mathematically; and it is significant. According to an estimate by Mr.
-Henry Wright in the Journal of the American Institute of Architects,
-the structure of the dwelling house represented over ninety per cent
-of the cost in 1800. Throughout the century there was a slow, steady
-increase in the amount necessary for site, fixtures, and appliances,
-until, in 1900, the curve takes a sharp upward rise; with the result
-that in 1920 the cost of site and mechanical equipment has risen
-to almost one-half the total cost of the house. If these estimates
-apply to the simple dwelling house, they apply, perhaps, with even
-greater force to the tenement, the office building, the factory, and
-the loft: here the cost of ventilation, of fireproof construction,
-of fire-prevention and fire-escaping devices, makes the engineering
-equipment bulk even more heavily.
-
-Whereas in the first stages of industrial development the factory
-affected the environment of architecture, in its latest state
-the factory has become the environment. A modern building is an
-establishment devoted to the manufacture of light, the circulation
-of air, the maintenance of a uniform temperature, and the vertical
-transportation of its occupants. Judged by the standards of the
-laboratory, the modern building is, alas! an imperfect machine: the
-engineers of a certain public service corporation, for example,
-have discovered that the habit of punching windows in the walls of
-the building-machine is responsible for great leakages which make
-difficult the heating and cooling of the plant; and they hold that the
-maximum efficiency demands the elimination of windows, the provision of
-“treated” air, and the lighting of the building throughout the day by
-electricity.
-
-All this would perhaps seem a little fantastic, were it not for the
-fact that we have step by step approached the reality. Except for our
-old-fashioned prejudice in favor of windows, which holds over from a
-time when one could see a green field or a passing neighbor by sitting
-at one, the transformation favored by the engineers has already been
-accomplished. Just because of the ease in installing fans, lights,
-and radiators in a modern building, a good part of the interiors
-of our skyscrapers are fed day and night with artificial light and
-ventilation. The margin of misuse under this method of construction
-is necessarily great; the province of design, limited. Instead of the
-architect’s paying attention to exposure, natural circulation, and
-direct daylight, and making a layout which will achieve these necessary
-ends, he is forced to center his efforts on the maximum exploitation
-of land. Where the natural factors are flouted or neglected, the
-engineer is always ready to provide a mechanical substitute--“just as
-good as the original” and much more expensive.
-
-By systematically neglecting the simplest elements of city planning,
-we have provided a large and profitable field for all the palliative
-devices of engineering: where we eliminate sunlight we introduce
-electric light; where we congest business, we build skyscrapers; where
-we overcrowd the thoroughfares with traffic we burrow subways; where
-we permit the city to become congested with a population whose density
-would not be tolerated in a well-designed community, we conduct water
-hundreds of miles by aqueducts to bathe them and slake their thirst;
-where we rob them of the faintest trace of vegetation or fresh air, we
-build metalled roads which will take a small portion of them, once a
-week, out into the countryside. It is all a very profitable business
-for the companies that supply light and rapid transit and motor
-cars, and the rest of it; but the underlying population pays for its
-improvements both ways--that is, it stands the gratuitous loss, and it
-pays “through the nose” for the remedy.
-
-These mechanical improvements, these labyrinths of subways, these
-audacious towers, these endless miles of asphalted streets, do not
-represent a triumph of human effort: they stand for its comprehensive
-misapplication. Where an inventive age follows methods which have no
-relation to an intelligent and humane existence, an imaginative one
-would not be caught by the necessity. By turning our environment over
-to the machine we have robbed the machine of the one promise it held
-out--that of enabling us to humanize more thoroughly the details of our
-existence.
-
-
-III
-
-To return to architecture. A further effect of the machine process on
-the internal economy of the modern building is that it lends itself to
-rapid production and quick turnover. This has been very well put by Mr.
-Bassett Jones, in an article in The American Architect, which is either
-a hymn of praise to the machine, or a cool parade of its defects,
-according to the position one may take.
-
-“As the building more and more takes on the character of the machine,”
-says Mr. Jones, “so does its design, construction, and operation
-become subject to the same rules that govern ... a locomotive. Our
-grandfathers built for succeeding generations. The rate of development
-was slow, and a building which would satisfy the demands made upon it
-for a century would necessarily be of a substantial nature. But with
-us in a single generation even the best we can do with all the data
-and facilities at our command is out of date almost before it shows
-signs of appreciable wear. So a building erected today is outclassed
-tomorrow. The writer well remembers the late Douglas Robinson, when
-outlining the location and property to be improved by the construction
-of a building some twenty years ago, ending his directions with the
-proviso that it must be ‘the cheapest thing that will hold together
-for fifteen years’! When the amortization charges must be based on so
-short a period as this, and with land taxes constantly increasing,
-it becomes obvious that construction must be based upon a cubic foot
-valuation that prohibits the use of any but the cheapest materials
-and methods.... Even the cost of carrying the required capital
-inactive during the period of production has its effect in speeding up
-production to the point where every part of the building that, by any
-ingenuity of man, can be machine-made must be so made.”
-
-Since the features that govern the construction of modern buildings are
-conditioned by external canons of mechanism, purpose and adaptation
-to need play a small part in the design, and the esthetic element
-itself enters largely by accident. The plan of the modern building
-is not fundamental to its treatment; it derives automatically from
-the methods and materials employed. The skyscraper is inevitably a
-honeycomb of cubes, draped with a fireproof material: as mechanically
-conceived, it is readily convertible: the floors are of uniform height
-and the windows of uniform spacing, and with no great difficulty
-the hotel becomes an office building, the office building a loft;
-and I confidently look forward to seeing the tower floors become
-apartments--indeed this conversion has already taken place on a small
-scale. Where the need of spanning a great space without using pillars
-exists, as in a theater or an auditorium, structural steel has given
-the architect great freedom; and in these departments he has learned
-to use his material well; for here steel can do economically and
-esthetically what masonry can do only at an unseemly cost, or not at
-all.
-
-What is weak in some of our buildings, however, is not the employment
-of certain materials, but the application of a single formula to every
-problem. In the bare mechanical shell of the modern skyscraper there
-is precious little place for architectural modulation and detail; the
-development of the skyscraper has been towards the pure mechanical
-form. Our first tall buildings were designed for the most part by
-men who thought in terms of established architectural forms: Burnham
-and Root’s Monadnock Building, in Chicago, which has exerted such a
-powerful influence over the new school of German architects, was an
-almost isolated exception; and, significantly enough, it did not employ
-the steel skeleton! The academic architects compared the skyscraper
-to a column, with a base, a shaft, and a capital; and they sought to
-relieve its empty face with an elaborate modeling of surface, like
-that of the old Flatiron Building. Then the skyscraper was treated as
-a tower, and its vertical lines were accented by piers which simulated
-the acrobatic leap of stone construction: the Woolworth Tower and
-the Bush Tower were both designed in this fashion, and, in spite of
-numerous defects in detail, they remain with the new Shelton Hotel in
-New York among the most satisfactory examples of the skyscraper.
-
-Neither column nor buttress has anything to do with the internal
-construction of the skyscraper; both forms are “false” or “applied.”
-Under the veracious lead of the late Mr. Louis Sullivan, the buildings
-of the machine period have accepted the logic of the draped cube,
-and the only gestures of traditional architecture that remain are
-the ornaments that cling to the very highest and the very lowest
-stories. Those buildings which do not follow this logic for the most
-part accentuate the clumsy unimaginativeness of the designer: the new
-Standard Oil building in New York, with its vestigial orders, shows an
-interesting profile across the harbor almost in spite of itself, but at
-a closer range will not bear criticism.
-
-An ornamentalist, like Mr. Louis Sullivan, is perhaps at his best
-against the simple planes of the modern building: but a different
-order of imagination, an imagination like that of the Norman builders,
-is powerless in the face of this problem--or it becomes brutal. If
-modern building has become engineering, modern architecture retains a
-precarious foothold as ornament, or to put it more frankly, as scene
-painting. Indeed, what is the bare interior of a modern office or
-apartment house but a stage, waiting for the scenery to be shifted,
-and a new play to be put on. It is due to this similarity, I believe,
-that modern interior decoration has so boldly accepted the standards
-and effects of stage-design. A newspaper critic referred to Mr.
-Norman-Bel Geddes as having lined the interior of the Century Theater
-with a cathedral: well, in the same way, the interior of a modern
-skyscraper is lined with a factory, an office, or a home.
-
-It is not for nothing that almost every detail of the mechanized
-building follows a standard pattern and preserves a studious anonymity.
-Except for the short run of the entrance, the original architect has no
-part in its interior development. If the architect himself is largely
-paralyzed by his problem, what shall we say of the artisans, and of the
-surviving handicraft workers who still contribute their quota of effort
-to the laying of bricks and stones, to the joining of pipes, to the
-plastering of ceilings? Gone are most of their opportunities for the
-exercise of skilled intelligence, to say nothing of art: they might as
-well make paper-boxes or pans for all the personal stamp they can give
-to their work. Bound to follow the architect’s design, as the printer
-is supposed to follow the author’s words, it is no wonder that they
-behave like the poor drudge in the Chicago Exposition who left bare
-or half-ornamented the columns which the architect had not bothered
-to duplicate in full in the haste of finishing his drawing. Is it any
-wonder, too, that the last vestige of guild standards is gone: that the
-politics of industry, the bargaining for better wages and fewer hours,
-concerns them more than their control over their job and the honor and
-veracity of their workmanship? What kind of work can a man put into
-“the cheapest building that will last fifteen years”?
-
-
-IV
-
-The chief justification for our achievements in mechanical architecture
-has been brought forth by those who believe it has provided the
-basis for a new style. Unfortunately, the enthusiasts who have put
-the esthetic achievements of mechanical architecture in a niche by
-themselves, and who have serenely disregarded all its lapses and
-failures and inefficiencies, have centered their attention mainly upon
-its weakest feature--the skyscraper. I cannot help thinking that they
-have looked in the wrong place. The economic and social reasons for
-regarding the skyscraper as undesirable have been briefly alluded to;
-if they needed any further confirmation, a week’s experience of the
-miseries of rapid transit would perhaps be sufficient. It remains to
-point out that the esthetic reasons are just as sound.
-
-All the current praise of the skyscraper boils down to the fact that
-the more recent buildings have ceased to be as bad as their prototypes.
-Granted. The uneasy hemming and hawing of ornament, which once agitated
-the whole façade, has now been reduced to a concentrated gesture; and
-the zoning ordinances that have been established in many large American
-cities have transformed the older, top-heavy building into a tower or
-a pyramid. That this is something of an advance is beyond dispute; in
-New York one need only compare the Fisk Tire Building with the United
-States Tire Building, representing respectively the later and the
-earlier work of the same architects, to see what a virtue can be made
-of legal necessity. A great architecture, however, is something to be
-seen and felt and lived in. By this criterion most of our pretentious
-buildings are rather pathetic.
-
-When one approaches Manhattan Island, for instance, from the Staten
-Island Ferry or the Brooklyn Bridge, the great towers on the tip of
-the island sometimes look like the fairy stalagmites of an opened
-grotto; and from an occasional vantage point on the twentieth floor of
-an office building one may now and again recapture this impression.
-But need I point out that one can count on one’s fingers the number
-of buildings in New York or Chicago that one can approach from the
-street in similar fashion? For the millions who fill the pavements and
-shuttle back and forth in tubes, the skyscraper as a tall, cloudward
-building does not exist. Its esthetic features are the entrance, the
-elevator, and the window-pocked wall; and if there has been any unique
-efflorescence of a fresh style at these points, I have been unable to
-discover it.
-
-What our critics have learned to admire in our great buildings is their
-photographs--and that is another story. In an article chiefly devoted
-to praise of the skyscraper, in a number of The Arts, the majority of
-the illustrations were taken from a point that the man in the street
-never reaches. In short, it is an architecture, not for men, but for
-angels and aviators!
-
-If buildings are to be experienced directly, and not through the
-vicarious agency of the photograph, the skyscraper defeats its own
-ends; for a city built so that tall buildings could be approached and
-appreciated would have avenues ten times the width of the present ones;
-and a city so generously planned would have no need for the sort of
-building whose sole economic purpose is to make the most of monopoly
-and congestion. In order to accommodate the office-dwellers in the
-Chicago Loop, for example, if a minimum of twenty stories were the
-restriction, the streets would have to be 241 feet wide, according to
-a calculation of Mr. Raymond Unwin, in the Journal of the American
-Institute of Architects.
-
-One need not dwell upon the way in which these obdurate, overwhelming
-masses take away from the little people who walk in their shadows any
-semblance of dignity as human beings; it is perhaps inevitable that one
-of the greatest mechanical achievements in a thoroughly dehumanized
-civilization should, no doubt unconsciously, achieve this wry purpose.
-It is enough to point out that the virtues of the skyscraper are mainly
-exercises in technique. They have precious little to do with the human
-arts of seeing, feeling, and living, or with the noble architectural
-end of making buildings which stimulate and enhance these arts.
-
-A building that one cannot readily see, a building that reduces
-the passerby to a mere mote, whirled and buffeted by the winds of
-traffic, a building that has no accommodating grace or perfection in
-its interior furnishing, beyond its excellent lavatories--in what
-sense is such a building a great work of architecture, or how can
-the mere manner of its construction create a great style? One might
-as well say, with Robert Dale Owen, that the brummagem gothic of the
-Smithsonian Institution was a return to organic architecture. Consider
-what painful efforts of interior decoration are necessary before the
-skyscraper-apartment can recapture the faded perfume of the home.
-Indeed, it takes no very discerning eye to see that in a short time
-we shall be back again in interiors belonging to the period of the
-ottoman and the whatnot, in order to restore a homely sense of comfort
-and esthetic ease to the eviscerated structure of the modern fireproof
-apartment. What chiefly distinguishes our modern American work in this
-department from that of the disreputable ’eighties is that the earlier
-architects were conscious of their emptiness, and attempted feverishly
-to hide it: whereas our moderns do not regard emptiness as a serious
-lapse, and are inclined to boast about it.
-
-There is a sense, of course, in which these modern colossi express our
-civilization. It is a romantic notion, however, to believe that this
-is an important or beautiful fact. Our slums express our civilization,
-too, and our rubbish heaps tell sermons that our stones conceal. The
-only expression that really matters in architecture is that which
-contributes in a direct and positive way to the good life: that is
-why there is so much beauty to the square foot in an old New England
-village, and so little, beyond mere picturesqueness, in the modern
-metropolis. A building stands or falls, even as a pure work of art, by
-its just relation to the city around it. Without a sense of scale--and
-the skyscraper has destroyed our sense of scale--the effect of any
-single building is nullified.
-
-
-V
-
-The provinces in which mechanical architecture has been genuinely
-successful are those in which there have been no conventional
-precedents, and in which the structure has achieved a sense of
-absolute form by following sympathetically the limitations of
-material and function. Just as the bridge summed up what was best in
-early industrialism, so the modern subway station, the modern lunch
-room, the modern factory, and its educational counterpart, the modern
-school, have often been cast in molds which would make them conspicuous
-esthetic achievements. In the Aristotelian sense, every purpose
-contains an inherent form; and it is only natural that a factory or
-lunchroom or grain elevator, intelligently conceived, should become a
-structure quite different in every aspect from the precedents that are
-upheld in the schools.
-
-It would be a piece of brash esthetic bigotry to deny the esthetic
-values that derive from machinery: the clean surfaces, the hard lines,
-the calibrated perfection that the machine has made possible carry
-with them a beauty quite different from that of handicraft--but often
-it is a beauty. Our new sensitiveness to the forms of useful objects
-and purely utilitarian structures is an excellent sign; and it is not
-surprising that this sensitiveness has arisen first among artists.
-Many of our power-plants are majestic; many of our modern factories
-are clean and lithe and smart, designed with unerring logic and
-skill. Put alongside buildings in which the architect has glorified
-his own idiosyncrasy or pandered to the ritual of conspicuous waste,
-our industrial plants at least have honesty and sincerity and an
-inner harmony of form and function. There is nothing peculiar to
-machine-technology in these virtues, however, for the modern factory
-shares them with the old New England mill, the modern grain elevator
-with the Pennsylvania barn, the steamship with the clipper, and the
-airplane hangar with the castle.
-
-The error with regard to these new forms of building is the attempt
-to universalize the mere process or form, instead of attempting to
-universalize the scientific spirit in which they have been conceived.
-The design for a dwelling-house which ignores everything but the
-physical necessities of the occupants is the product of a limited
-conception of science which stops short at physics and mechanics, and
-neglects biology, psychology, and sociology. If it was bad esthetics
-to design steel frames decorated with iron cornucopias and flowers,
-it is equally bad esthetics to design homes as if babies were hatched
-from incubators, and as if wheels, rather than love and hunger, made
-the world go round. During the first movement of industrialism it was
-the pathetic fallacy that crippled and warped the new achievements of
-technology; today we are beset by the plutonic fallacy, which turns all
-living things it touches into metal.
-
-In strict justice to our better sort of mechanical architecture, I
-must point out that the error of the mechanolators is precisely the
-opposite error to that of the academies. The weakness of conventional
-architecture in the schools of the nineteenth century was the fact
-that it applied only to a limited province: we knew what an orthodox
-palace or post office would be like, and we had even seen their guilty
-simulacra in tenement-houses and shopfronts; but no one had ever dared
-to imagine what a Beaux Arts factory would be like; and such approaches
-to it as the pottery works in Lambeth only made the possibility more
-dubious. The weakness of our conventional styles of architecture was
-that they stopped short at a province called building--which meant the
-province where the ordinary rules of esthetic decency and politeness
-were completely abandoned, for lack of a precedent.
-
-The modernist is correct in saying that the mass of building ought
-to speak the same language; it is well for him to attempt to follow
-Mr. Louis Sullivan, in his search for a “rule so broad as to admit
-of no exceptions.” Where the modernist becomes confused, however, is
-in regarding the _dictionary_ of modern forms, whose crude elements
-are exhibited in our factories and skyscrapers and grain elevators,
-as in any sense equivalent for their creative expression. So far our
-mechanical architecture is a sort of structural Esperanto: it has a
-vocabulary without a literature, and when it steps beyond the elements
-of its grammar it can only translate badly into its own tongue the
-noble poems and epics that the Romans and Greeks and medieval builders
-left behind them.
-
-The leaders of modernism do not, indeed, make the mistake that some of
-their admirers have made: Mr. Frank Lloyd Wright’s pleasure pavilions
-and hotels do not resemble either factories or garages or grain
-elevators: they represent the same tendencies, perhaps, but they do so
-with respect to an entirely different set of human purposes. In one
-important characteristic, Mr. Wright’s style has turned its back upon
-the whole world of engineering: whereas the steel cage lends itself to
-the vertical skyscraper, Mr. Wright’s designs are the very products
-of the prairie, in their low-lying, horizontal lines, in their flat
-roofs, while at the same time they defy the neutral gray or black or
-red of the engineering structure by their colors and ornament.
-
-In sum, the best modern work does not merely respect the machine:
-it respects the people who use it. It is the lesser artists and
-architects who, unable to control and mold the products of the machine,
-have glorified it in its nakedness, much as the producer of musical
-comedies, in a similar mood of helpless adulation, has “glorified” the
-American girl--as if either the machine or the girl needed it.
-
-It has been a genuine misfortune in America that, as Mr. Sullivan
-bitterly pointed out in The Autobiography of an Idea, the growth of
-imperialism burked the development of a consonant modern style. In
-Europe, particularly in Finland, Germany, and the Netherlands, the best
-American work has been appreciated and followed up, and as so often
-happens, exaggerated; so that the esthetic appreciation of the machine
-has been carried across the Atlantic and back again, very much in the
-way that Emerson’s individualism was transformed by Nietzsche and
-became the mystic doctrine of the Superman. Some of the results of this
-movement are interesting and valid: the work of the Dutch architects,
-for example, in the garden suburbs around Amsterdam: but what pleases
-one in these new compositions is not the mechanical rigor of form but
-the playfulness of spirit--they are good architecture precisely because
-they are something more than mere engineering. Except for a handful of
-good precedents, our mechanical work in America does not express this
-vitality. The machine has stamped us; and we have not reacted.
-
-Moreover, in the building of separate houses in the city and its
-suburbs, where the demands of mechanical efficiency are not so drastic
-as they are in the office building, the effect of the machine process
-has been to narrow the scope of individual taste and personality.
-The designer, whether he is the architect, the owner, or the working
-contractor, works within a tradition whose bearing lies beyond him.
-Outside this mechanical tradition we have had many examples of good
-individual work, like the stone houses that have been erected around
-Philadelphia, and the more or less native cement and adobe houses in
-New Mexico and California: but the great mass of modern houses are no
-longer framed for some definite site and some definite occupants: they
-are manufactured for a blind market. The boards are cut to length in
-the sawmill, the roofing is fabricated in a roofing plant, the window
-frames are cut in standard sizes and put together in the framing
-factory, the balustrade is done in a turning mill, the very internal
-fittings like china closets and chests are made in a distant plant,
-after one of a dozen patterns fixed and exemplified in the catalog.
-The business of the building worker is reduced to a mere assemblage
-of parts; and except for the more expensive grades of work, the
-architect is all but eliminated. The charming designs that the European
-modernists make testify to the strength of their long architectural
-tradition even in the face of machinery; the truth is that they fit
-our modern methods of house-production scarcely much better than the
-thatched cottage of clay and wattle. The nemesis of mechanism is that
-it inexorably eliminates the architect--even the architect who worships
-its achievements!
-
-So much of the detail of a building is established by factory standards
-and patterns that even the patron himself has precious little scope
-for giving vent to his impulses in the design or execution of the
-work; for every divergence from a standardized design represents an
-additional expense. In fact, the only opportunity for expressing his
-taste and personality is in choosing the mode in which the house is to
-be built: he must find his requirements in Italy, Colonial America,
-France, Tudor England, or Spain--woe to him if he wants to find them
-in twentieth-century America! Thus the machine process has created a
-standardized conception of style: of itself it can no more invent a new
-style than a mummy can beget children. If one wishes a house of red
-brick it will be Georgian or Colonial; that is to say, the trimming
-will be white, the woodwork will have classic moldings, and the
-electric-light fixtures will be pseudo-candlesticks in silvered metal.
-If one builds a stucco house, one is doomed by similar mechanical
-canons to rather heavy furniture in the early Renaissance forms,
-properly duplicated by the furniture makers of Grand Rapids--and so on.
-The notion of an American stucco house is so foreign to the conception
-of the machine mode that only the very poor, and the very rich, can
-afford it. Need I add that Colonial or Italian, when it falls from the
-mouth of the “realtor” has nothing to do with authentic Colonial or
-Italian work?
-
-Commercial concentration and the national market waste resources by
-neglect, as in the case of the Appalachian forests they squandered
-them by pillage. Standardized materials and patterns and plans and
-elevations--here are the ingredients of the architecture of the machine
-age: by escaping it we get our superficially vivacious suburbs; by
-accepting it, those vast acres of nondescript monotony that, call
-them West Philadelphia or Long Island City or what you will, are but
-the anonymous districts of Coketown. The chief thing needful for the
-full enjoyment of this architecture is a standardized people. Here our
-various educational institutions, from the advertising columns of the
-five-cent magazine to the higher centers of learning, from the movie to
-the radio, have not perhaps altogether failed the architect.
-
-The manufactured house is set in the midst of a manufactured
-environment. The quality of this environment calls for satire rather
-than description; and yet a mere catalog of its details, such as Mr.
-Sinclair Lewis gave in Babbitt, is almost satire in itself. In this
-environment the home tends more and more to take last place: Mr. Henry
-Wright has in fact humorously suggested that at the present increasing
-ratio of site-costs--roads, sewers, and so forth--to house-costs, the
-house itself will disappear in favor of the first item by 1970. The
-prophetic symbol of this event is the tendency of the motor-car and
-the temple-garage to take precedence over the house. Already these
-incubi have begun to occupy the last remaining patch of space about the
-suburban house, where up to a generation ago there was a bit of garden,
-a swing for the children, a sandpile, and perhaps a few fruit trees.
-
-The end of a civilization that considers buildings as mere machines is
-that it considers human beings as mere machine-tenders: it therefore
-frustrates or diverts the more vital impulses which would lead to the
-culture of the earth or the intelligent care of the young. Blindly
-rebellious, men take revenge upon themselves for their own mistakes:
-hence the modern mechanized house, with its luminous bathroom, its
-elegant furnace, its dainty garbage-disposal system, has become
-more and more a thing to get away from. The real excuse for the
-omnipresent garage is that in a mechanized environment of subways and
-house-machines some avenue of escape and compensation must be left
-open. Distressing as a Sunday automobile ride may be on the crowded
-highways that lead out of the great city, it is one degree better than
-remaining in a neighborhood unsuited to permanent human habitation. So
-intense is the demand for some saving grace, among all these frigid
-commercial perfections, that handicraft is being patronized once more,
-in a manner that would have astonished Ruskin, and the more audacious
-sort of interior decorator is fast restoring the sentimentalities in
-glass and wax flowers that marked the Victorian Age. This is a pretty
-comment upon the grand achievements of modern industry and science; but
-it is better, perhaps, that men should be foolish than that they should
-be completely dehumanized.
-
-The architecture of other civilizations has sometimes been the brutal
-emblem of the warrior, like that of the Assyrians: it has remained for
-the architecture of our own day in America to be fixed and stereotyped
-and blank, like the mind of a Robot. The age of the machine has
-produced an architecture fit only for lathes and dynamos to dwell
-in: incomplete and partial in our applications of science, we have
-forgotten that there is a science of humanity, as well as a science
-of material things. Buildings which do not answer to this general
-description are either aristocratic relics of the age of handicraft,
-enjoyed only by the rich, or they are fugitive attempts to imitate
-cheaply the ways and gestures of handicraft.
-
-We have attempted to live off machinery, and the host has devoured us.
-It is time that we ceased to play the parasite: time that we looked
-about us, to see what means we have for once more becoming men. The
-prospects of architecture are not divorced from the prospects of the
-community. If man is created, as the legends say, in the image of
-the gods, his buildings are done in the image of his own mind and
-institutions.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER EIGHT ARCHITECTURE AND CIVILIZATION
-
-
-I
-
-In the course of this survey we have seen how architecture and
-civilization develop hand in hand: the characteristic buildings of
-each period are the memorials to their dearest institutions. The
-essential structure of the community--the home, meeting-place, the
-work-place--remains; but the covering changes and passes, like the
-civilization itself, when new materials, new methods of work, new ideas
-and habits and ways of feeling, come into their own.
-
-If this interpretation of the rôle of architecture is just, there
-is little use in discussing the needs and promises of architecture
-without relating the shell itself to the informing changes that may
-or may not take place in the life of the community itself. To fancy
-that any widespread improvement of architecture lies principally with
-the architects is an esthetic delusion: in a barren soil the most
-fertile geniuses are cut off from their full growth. We have not
-lacked architects of boldness and originality, from Latrobe to Louis
-H. Sullivan: nor have we lacked men of great ability, from Thomas
-Jefferson to Bertram Goodhue; nor yet have we lacked men who stood
-outside the currents of their time and kept their own position, from
-Richardson to Dr. Cram. With all these capacities at our disposal,
-our finest efforts in building remain chaotic and undisciplined and
-dispersed--the reflection of our accumulated civilization.
-
-Our architectural development is bound up with the course of our
-civilization: this is a truism. To the extent that we permit our
-institutions and organizations to function blindly, as our bed is
-made, so must we lie on it; and while we may nevertheless produce
-isolated buildings of great esthetic interest, like Messrs. Cram
-and Goodhue’s additions to West Point, like The Shelton, like a
-hundred country estates, the matrix of our physical community will
-not be affected by the existence of separate jewels; and most of our
-buildings will not merely be outside the province of the architectural
-profession--they will be the product of minds untouched, for the most
-part, by humane standards. Occasionally the accidental result will be
-good, as has happened sometimes in our skyscrapers and factories and
-grain elevators; but an architecture that must depend upon accidental
-results is not exactly a triumph of the imagination, still less is it
-a triumph of exact technology.
-
-Looking back upon the finished drama, it is convenient to regard our
-community and our builders as creatures of their environment: once
-their choices are made, they seem inevitable. On this account even the
-pomp of the imperial architects can be justified, as the very voice
-and gesture of the period they consummated. Looking forward, however,
-this convenient fiction of inevitability is no longer serviceable: we
-are in the realm of contingency and choice; and at any moment a new
-factor may be introduced which will alter profoundly the economic and
-social life of the community. The Great War in Europe, the revolution
-in Russia, the spread of motor transportation in America, the idea of
-non-coöperation in India--I select these at random as matters which
-during the last generation have altered profoundly the unceasing “drift
-of things.”
-
-The future of our civilization depends upon our ability to select and
-control our heritage from the past, to alter our present attitudes
-and habits, and to project fresh forms into which our energies may be
-freely poured. On our ability to re-introduce old elements, as the
-humanists of the late Middle Ages brought back the classic literature
-and uncovered the Roman monuments, or to introduce new elements, as the
-inventors and engineers of the last century brought in physical science
-and the machine-tool technology, our position as creators depends.
-During the last century our situation has changed from that of the
-creators of machinery to that of creatures of the machine system; and
-it is perhaps time that we contrived new elements which will alter once
-more the profounder contours of our civilization.
-
-Unfortunately for our comfort and peace of mind, any real change in our
-civilization depends upon much more complicated, and much more drastic
-measures than the old-fashioned reformer, who sought to work a change
-of heart or to alter the distribution of income, ever recognized; and
-it will do little good to talk about a “coming renaissance” unless we
-have a dim idea of the sort of creature that is to be born again. Our
-difficulty, it seems to me, is due to the fact that the human sciences
-have lagged behind the physical ones; and up to the present time our
-good intentions have been frustrated for the lack of the necessary
-instruments of analysis. It may be helpful and amusing, however, to
-see what we can do in this department with the instruments that are
-already at hand.
-
-In every community, as Frédéric Le Play first pointed out, there are
-three elements: the place, the work, and the people; the sociologist’s
-equivalent of environment, function, and organism. Out of the
-interaction of the folk and their place, through the work, the simple
-life of the community develops. At the same time, each of these
-elements carries with it its specific spiritual heritage. The people
-have their customs and manners and morals and laws; or as we might say
-more briefly, their institutions; the work has its technology, its
-craft-experience, from the simple lore of peasant and breeder to the
-complicated formulæ of the modern chemists and metallurgists; while the
-deeper perception of the “place,” through the analysis of the falling
-stone, the rising sun, the running water, the decomposing vegetation,
-and the living animal gives rise to the tradition of “learning” and
-science.
-
-With this simple outline in mind, the process that created our present
-mechanical civilization becomes a little more plain; and we can
-appreciate, perhaps, the difficulties that stand in the way of any
-swift and easy transformation.
-
-Thus our present order was due to a mingled change in every aspect of
-the community: morally, it was protestantism; legally, the rise of
-representative government; socially, the introduction of “democracy”;
-in custom, the general breakdown of the family unit; industrially, it
-meant the collapse of the guilds and the growth of the factory-system;
-scientifically, the spread of physical science, and the increased
-knowledge of the terrestrial globe--and so on.
-
-Each of these facets of the community’s life was the object of separate
-attention and effort: but it was their totality which produced the
-modern order. Where--among other reasons--the moral preparation for
-mechanical civilization was incomplete, as in the Catholic countries,
-the industrial revolution was also late and incomplete; where the
-craft-tradition remained strong, as in the beech forests of the
-Chilterns, the industrial change made fewer inroads into the habits of
-the community, than, let us say, in Lancashire, where modern industry
-was untempered and unchallenged.
-
-If the circumstances which hedge in our architecture are to be
-transformed, it is not sufficient, with Mr. Louis Sullivan, to say
-that we must accept and enthrone the virtues of democracy; still
-less is there any meaning in the attempt of the Educational Committee
-of the American Institute of Architects to educate public taste in
-the arts. Nor is there any genuine esthetic salvation in the demand
-of the modernists that we embrace in more whole-hearted fashion the
-machine. Our architecture has been full of false starts and unfulfilled
-promises, precisely because the ground has not been worked enough
-beforehand to receive the new seeds.
-
-If we are to have a fine architecture, we must begin at the other end
-from that where our sumptuously illustrated magazines on home-building
-and architecture begin--not with the building itself, but with the
-whole complex out of which architect, builder, and patron spring,
-and into which the finished building, whether it be a cottage or
-a skyscraper, is set. Once the conditions are ripe for a good
-architecture, the plant will flower by itself: it did so in the Middle
-Ages, as a hundred little towns and villages between Budapest and
-Glastonbury still testify; it did so again within a limited area among
-the swells of the Renaissance; and it is springing forth lustily today
-in the garden cities of England, the Netherlands, and the Baltic
-countries. The notion that our architecture will be improved by courses
-of appreciation in our museums and colleges is, to put it quite mildly,
-one of the decadent deceits of snobbery. It is only paper flowers that
-grow in this fashion.
-
-
-II
-
-In order to get our bearings, we shall pull apart, one by one, the
-principal elements in our heritage of civilization in the United
-States, and examine them separately. This is a dangerous convenience,
-however, and I must emphasize that these strands are tightly
-intertwined and bound up. It is only in thought that one can take
-them apart. No one has ever encountered man, save on the earth; no
-one has ever seen the earth, save through the eyes of a man. There
-is no logical priority in place, work, and people. In discussing the
-community one either deals with it as a whole, or one’s discussion is
-incomplete and faulty.
-
-
-III
-
-The capital sign of the early settlements beyond the seashore was
-the clearing; and since the great majority of newcomers lived by
-agriculture, the forest itself appeared merely as an obstacle to
-be removed. The untouched woods of America were all too lush and
-generous, and if an occasional Leatherstocking loved them, the new
-settler saw only land to clear and wood to burn. In the New England
-village, the tradition of culture was perhaps applied to the land
-itself, and elsewhere there are occasional elements of good practice,
-in the ordered neatness of boulder-fences. For the most part, however,
-the deliberate obliteration of the natural landscape became a great
-national sport, comparable to the extermination of bison which the
-casual western traveler devoted himself to at a later date.
-
-The stripping of the Appalachian forest was the first step in our
-campaign against nature. By 1860 the effect was already grave enough
-to warn an acute observer, like George Perkins Marsh, of the danger to
-our civilization, and to prompt him in Earth and Man, to remind his
-countrymen that other civilizations about the Mediterranean and the
-Adriatic had lost their top-soil and ruined their agriculture through
-the wanton destruction of their forests.
-
-In the meanwhile, a new factor had entered. If before the nineteenth
-century we cleared the forest to make way for the farm, with the
-entrance of the industrial pioneer we began to clear the farm to parcel
-out the city. We have called this process the settlement of America,
-but the name is anomalous, for we formed the habit of using the land,
-not as a home, a permanent seat of culture, but as a means to something
-else--principally as a means to the temporary advantages of profitable
-speculation and exploitation.
-
-James Mackay, a charitable Scotch observer in the middle of the
-nineteenth century, explained our negligence of the earth by the fact
-that we pinned our affections to institutions rather than places, and
-cared not how the landscape was massacred as long as we lived under the
-same flag and enjoyed the same forms of government. There is no doubt a
-little truth in this observation; but it was not merely our attachment
-to republican government that caused this behavior: it was even more,
-perhaps, our disattachment from the affiliations of a settled life. The
-pioneer, to put it vulgarly, was on the make and on the move; it did
-not matter to him how he treated the land, since by the time he could
-realize its deficiencies he had already escaped to a new virgin area.
-“What had posterity done for him?”
-
-The pioneers who turned their backs on a civilized way of life in
-order to extend the boundaries of civilization, left us with a heavy
-burden--not merely blasted and disorderly landscapes, but the habit of
-tolerating and producing blasted and disorderly landscapes. As Cobbett
-pointed out in his attempt to account for the unkempt condition of the
-American farm, the farmer in this country lacked the example of the
-great landed estates, where the woods had become cultivated parks, and
-the meadowland had become lawns. Without this cultivated example in the
-country, it is no wonder that our cities have been littered, frayed at
-the edges, ugly; no wonder that our pavements so quickly obliterate
-trees and grass; no wonder that so many towns are little more than
-gashes of metal and stone.
-
-Those who had been bred on the land brought into the city none of that
-disciplined care which might have preserved some of its amenities. They
-left the smoke of the clearings, which was a sign of rural “progress”;
-they welcomed the smoke of the towns, and all that accompanied it.
-
-It is scarcely a paradox to say that the improvement of our cities
-must proceed inwards from the countryside; for it is largely a matter
-of reversing the process which converts the farm into incipient blocks
-of real estate. Once we assimilate the notion that soil and site
-have uses quite apart from sale, we shall not continue to barbarize
-and waste them. Consider how the water’s edge of lower Manhattan was
-developed without the slightest regard for its potential facilities for
-recreation; how the Acropolis of Pittsburgh, the Hump, was permitted to
-turn into a noisome slum; how the unique beauty of Casco Bay has been
-partly secured only by Portland’s inferiority as a shipping center.
-Indeed, all up and down the country one can pick up a thousand examples
-of towns misplaced, of recreation areas becoming factory sites, of
-industries located without intelligent reference to raw materials or
-power or markets or the human beings who serve them, of agricultural
-land being turned prematurely into suburban lots, and of small rural
-communities which need the injection of new industries and enterprises,
-languishing away whilst a metropolis not fifty miles away continues to
-absorb more people, who daily pay a heavy premium for their congestion.
-
-I have already drawn attention to the waste of local materials in
-connection with our manufacture of buildings, our concentration of
-markets, and our standardization of styles. It is plain that our
-architects would not have to worry so painfully about the latest
-fashion-page of architectural tricks, if they had the opportunity to
-work more consistently with the materials at hand, using brick where
-clay was plentiful, stone where that was of good quality, and cement
-where concrete adapted itself to local needs--as it does so well
-near the seashore, and, for a different reason, in the south. Wood,
-one of our most important materials for both exterior and interior,
-has suffered by just the opposite of neglect: so completely have our
-Appalachian forests been mined, and so expensive are the freight
-charges for the long haul from the Pacific coast, that good housing
-in the east depends to no little extent upon our ability to recover
-continuous local supplies of timber throughout the Appalachian region.
-
-(It is characteristic of our mechanical and metropolitan civilization
-that one of the great sources of timber waste is the metropolitan
-newspaper: and one of the remoter blessings of a sounder regional
-development is that it would, perhaps, remove the hourly itch for the
-advertising sheet, and by the same token would provide large quantities
-of wood for housing, without calling for the destruction of ten acres
-of spruce for the Sunday edition alone! I give the reader the privilege
-of tracing the pleasant ramifications of this notion.)
-
-To see the interdependence of city and country, to realize that the
-growth and concentration of one is associated with the depletion and
-impoverishment of the other, to appreciate that there is a just and
-harmonious balance between the two--this capacity we have lacked.
-Before we can build well on any scale we shall, it seems to me, have
-to develop an art of regional planning, an art which will relate city
-and countryside in a new pattern from that which was the blind creation
-of the industrial and the territorial pioneer. Instead of regarding
-the countryside as so much grist doomed to go eventually into the
-metropolitan mill, we must plan to preserve and develop all our natural
-resources to the limit.
-
-It goes without saying that any genuine attempt to provide for the
-social and economic renewal of a region cannot be constrained to
-preserve vested land-values and property rights and privileges;
-indeed, if the land is to be fully loved and cared for again we must
-recover it in something more than name only. The main objection to
-keeping our natural resources in the hands of the community, namely,
-that private capital is more zealous at exploitation, is precisely the
-reason for urging the first course. Our land has suffered from zeal in
-exploitation; and it would be much better, for example, that our water
-power resources should remain temporarily undeveloped, than that they
-should be incontinently used by private corporations to concentrate
-population in the centers where a high tariff can be charged. The
-number of things that are waiting to be done--the planting of town
-forests, the communal restoration of river banks and beaches, the
-transformation of bare roads into parkways--will of course differ in
-each region and locality; and my aim here is only to point to a general
-objective.
-
-The beginnings of genuine regional planning have already been made
-in Ontario, Canada, where the social utilization of water-power has
-directly benefited the rural communities, and given them an independent
-lease on life. In the United States, Mr. Benton Mackaye has sketched
-out a bold and fundamental plan for associating the development of a
-spinal recreational trail with an electric power development for the
-whole Appalachian region, along the ridgeway; both trail and power
-being used as a basis for the re-afforestation and the re-peopling
-of the whole upland area, with a corresponding decentralization
-and depopulation of the overcrowded, spotty coastal region. Such a
-scheme would call for a pretty thorough dislocation of metropolitan
-values; and if it is slow in making headway, that is only because its
-gradual institution would mean that a new epoch had begun in American
-civilization. At the present time it is hard to discover how tangible
-these new hopes and projects may be: it is significant, however, that
-the Housing and Regional Planning Commission of the State of New York
-was called into existence by the necessity for finding a way out of our
-metropolitan tangle; and it is possible that a new orientation in power
-and culture is at hand.
-
-In a loose, inconsecutive way, the objectives of regional planning
-have been dealt with by the conservation movement during the last
-century; and if the art itself has neither a corpus of experience
-nor an established body of practitioners, this is only to say that
-it has, as it were, broken through the surface in a number of places
-and that it remains to be gathered up and intelligently used. When
-regional planning starts its active career, it will concern itself to
-provide a new framework for our communities which will redistribute
-population and industry, and recultivate the environment--substituting
-forestry for timber-mining, stable agriculture for soil-mining, and in
-general the habit of dressing and keeping the earth for our traditional
-American practice of stripping and deflowering it. Architecture begins
-historically when the “Bauer” who plants becomes the “Bauer” who
-builds; and if our architecture is to have a substantial foundation, it
-is in a refreshened countryside that we will perhaps find it.
-
-
-IV
-
-Let us now turn to industry. The medieval order was disrupted in
-America before it could fully take root. As a result we have no
-craft-tradition that is properly native, with the exception of the
-shipbuilders and furniture-makers of New England, whose art has been on
-the wane since the second quarter of the nineteenth century. We have
-covered up this deficiency by importing from generation to generation
-foreign workmen, principally Germans and Italians, in whose birthplaces
-the art of using wood and stone has not been entirely lost; but we
-are still far from having created an independent craft-tradition
-of our own. If art is the fine efflorescence of a settled life,
-invention is the necessity of the roving pioneer who every day faces
-new difficulties and new hazards; and accordingly we have devoted our
-energies to the machine, and to the products of the machine. All that
-we cannot do in this medium we regard as “mere” art, and put it apart
-from the direct aims and practices of everyday life.
-
-Our skill in working according to exact formulæ with machines and
-instruments of precision is not to be belittled: socially directed it
-would put an end to a hundred vapid drudgeries, and it would perhaps
-give the pervasive finish of a style to structures whose parts are
-now oddly at sixes and sevens. Unfortunately for us and for the
-world in general the machine did not come simply as a technological
-contribution: it appeared when the guild had broken down and when
-the joint stock company had gotten its piratical start as a Company
-of Gentleman-Adventurers. As a result, our mechanical age was given
-an unsocial twist; and inventions which should have worked for the
-welfare of the community were used for the financial aggrandizement
-of investors and monopolizers. In architecture, all the skill of the
-technologist and all the taste of the artist have become subservient
-to the desire of the financier for a quick turnover of capital, and
-the ground landlord for the maximum exploitation of the land. The
-sole chances for good workmanship occur when, by a happy accident of
-personality or situation, the patron asks of the architect and engineer
-only the best that they can give.
-
-It is this side of exaggeration to say that today a building is one
-kind of manufactured product on a counter of manufactured products;
-but with a difference; for the internal processes of construction
-are still, in spite of all our advances, handicrafts. An interesting
-result, as Mr. F. L. Ackermann has pointed out, follows from this
-fact: namely, that the pace of building tends to lag behind the pace
-at which other goods are produced under the machine-system; and if
-this is the case, the quantitative production of buildings is bound
-to be too low, while their cost is bound, by the same process, to be
-disproportionately high.
-
-The remedy seized by the engineer, as I have pointed out, is to
-introduce the process of standardization and mechanization wherever
-possible. This heightens the pace of building, and by and large it
-quickens the rate of deterioration in the thing built: both processes
-increase the turnover of buildings, and so tend to make the art of
-building approach the rhythm established by our price-system for the
-other mechanical arts; since, under the price-system, the manufacturer
-must create a continued demand for his products or risk flooding the
-market. The two ways of creating a demand are to widen the area of sale
-or to increase the rate of consumption. Shoddy materials and shoddy
-workmanship are the most obvious means of accomplishing the second end;
-but fashion plays a serious part, and maladaptation to use, though less
-frequently noted, cannot be ignored.
-
-All these little anomalies and inconveniences have come with
-machinery, not of course because the machine is inherently wasteful
-and fraudulent, but because our social order has not been adapted to
-its use. Our gains have been canceled, for the reason that the vast
-expansion of our productive powers has necessitated an equally vast
-expansion in our consumptive processes. Hence in many departments of
-building, the advantage of machinery has been almost nullified; and if
-handicraft has been driven out, it is less because it is inefficient
-than because the pace of production and consumption under handicraft is
-so much retarded.
-
-When Ruskin began to agitate for the revival of handicraft it looked
-as if our industrial system were bound to triumph everywhere, and as
-if Ruskin’s protest were the last weak chirp of romanticism. At the
-present time, however, the issue is not so simple as it seemed to the
-builders of the Crystal Palace; nor are the choices so narrow. What
-seemed a fugitive philosophy when applied to the machine by itself has
-turned out to be a rigorous and intelligent criticism, when applied to
-the machine-system. The use of the machine in provinces where it has
-no essential concern, the network of relationships that have followed
-the financial exploitation of machinery--these things have led to a
-revolt, in which the engineers themselves have participated. It is not
-machinery alone that causes standardization, we begin to see, but the
-national market; it is not the machine that makes our cheaper houses
-blank and anonymous, but the absence of any mediating relation between
-the user and the designer--except through the personality of the
-builder, who builds for sale.
-
-Apart from this, in certain industries like wood-turning and
-furniture-making the introduction of the gasoline engine and the
-electric motor has restored the center of gravity to the small factory,
-set in the countryside, and to the individual craftsman or group,
-working in the small shop. Professor Patrick Geddes has characterized
-the transition from steam to electricity as one from the paleotechnic
-to the neotechnic order; and intuitive technological geniuses, like
-Mr. Henry Ford, have been quick to see the possibilities of little
-factories set in the midst of the countryside. Mechanically speaking,
-the electric motor has in certain industries and operations placed
-the individual worker on a par with the multiple-machine factory,
-even as motor transportation is reducing the advantages of the big
-city over the small town or village. It is therefore not unreasonable
-to look forward to a continuation of this development, which will
-enable groups of building workers to serve their immediate region
-quite as economically as would a multitude of national factories,
-producing goods blindly for a blind national market. With direct sale
-and service, from local sawmills and local furniture-making shops,
-the older handicrafts themselves might reënter once more through the
-back door--as indeed they have already begun to do in response to the
-demands of the wealthy.
-
-I am not suggesting here that handicraft is likely to replace
-machinery: what I am suggesting is the immediate and tangible
-possibility that machinery itself may lend itself in its modern
-forms to a more purposive system of production, like that fostered
-by handicraft; and under this condition the antagonism and disparity
-between the two forms of production need not be so great as they are at
-present. In a little valley I happen to be acquainted with, there is
-enough running water to supply five families with electric light from
-a single power plant; unfortunately, five families cannot combine for
-such a purpose in the state I am speaking of without a power-franchise;
-and so the only source of electric light is a distant commercial
-power plant using coal. Here is an obvious case where commercial
-monopoly runs contrary to economy and where the benefits of modern
-technology are forfeited in the working of our financial system. Once
-we understand that modern industry does not necessarily bring with it
-financial and physical concentration, the growth of smaller centers and
-a more widespread distribution of the genuine benefits of technology
-will, I think, take place.
-
-It is true that the movement of the last hundred years has been away
-from handicraft; but a hundred years is a relatively short time, and
-at least a part of the triumph of machinery has been due to our naïve
-enjoyment of it as a plaything. There is a wide difference between
-doing away with hand-labor, as in sawing wood or hoisting a weight,
-and eliminating handicraft by using machine tools for operations which
-can be subtly performed only by hand. The first practice is all to
-the good: the second essentially misunderstands the significance of
-handicraft and machinery, and I must dwell on this point for a moment,
-since it is responsible for a good deal of shoddy thinking on the
-future of art and architecture.
-
-
-V
-
-On the human side, the prime distinction overlooked by the mechanists
-is that machine work is principally toil: handicraft, on the other
-hand, is a form of living. The operations of the mechanical arts are
-inherently servile, because the worker is forced to keep the pace
-set by the machine and to follow the pattern set by the designer,
-someone other than himself; whereas the handicrafts are relatively
-free, in that they allow a certain leeway to different types of work
-and different ways of tackling a job. These distinctions are bound up
-with a difference in the forms that are used; and it is through these
-esthetic differences that we may, perhaps, best see how the personal
-and mechanical may be apportioned in the architecture of the future.
-
-The key to handicraft esthetics, it seems to me, is a sort of vital
-superfluity. The carpenter is not content with his planed surface; nor
-is the mason satisfied with the smooth stone; nor does the painter
-impartially cover the bare wall: no, each worker must elaborate the
-bare utilitarian object until the capital becomes a writhing mass of
-foliage, until the domed ceiling becomes the gate of heaven, until
-each object gets the imprint of the fantasies that have ripened in the
-worker’s head. The craftsman literally possesses his work, in the sense
-that the Bible says a body is possessed by a familiar spirit.
-
-Occasionally, this elaboration passes the point at which it would
-give the highest esthetic delight to the beholder; nevertheless, the
-craftsman keeps pouring himself into his job: he must fill up every
-blank space, and will not be denied, for carving wood or hacking stone,
-when it is done with a free spirit, is a dignified and enjoyable way
-of living. Those of us who have become acclimated to industrialism
-sometimes find the effulgence and profusion of craftsmanship a little
-bewildering: but if our enjoyment of the portals of a medieval
-cathedral or the façade of an East Indian house is dulled by the myopic
-intricacy of the pattern, our appreciation of the craftsman’s fun and
-interest should be heightened. Granting that art is an end in itself,
-is it not an end to the worker as well as the spectator? A great part
-of craftsmanship needs no other justification than that it bears the
-mark of a joyous spirit.
-
-When we compare an ideal product of handicraft, like a Florentine table
-of the sixteenth century, with an ideal product of mechanical art--say
-a modern bathroom--the contrasting virtues and defects become plain.
-The conditions that make possible good machine-work are, first of all,
-a complete calculation of consequences, embodied in a working drawing
-or design: to deviate by a hair’s breadth from this calculation is to
-risk failure. The qualities exemplified in good machine-work follow
-naturally from the implements: they are precision, economy, finish,
-geometric perfection. When the workman’s personality intervenes in the
-process, it is carelessness. If he leave his imprint, it is a flaw.
-
-A good pattern in terms of the machine is one that fulfills the bare
-essentials of an object: the chairishness of a chair, the washiness of
-a basin, the enclosedness of a house, and any superfluity that may be
-added by way of ornament is a miscarriage of the machine-process, for
-by adding dull work to work that is already dull it defeats the end for
-which machinery may legitimately exist in a humane society; namely, to
-produce a necessary quantity of useful goods with a minimum of human
-effort.
-
-Craftsmanship, to put the distinction roughly, emphasizes the worker’s
-delight in production: anyone who proposed to reduce the amount of time
-and effort spent by the carver in wood or stone would be in effect
-attempting to shorten the worker’s life. Machine-work, on the other
-hand, tends at its best to diminish the inescapable drudgeries of
-production: any dodge or decoration that increases the time spent in
-service to the machine adds to the physical burden of existence. One is
-a sufficient end; the other is, legitimately, only a means to an end.
-
-Our modern communities are far from understanding this distinction.
-Just as in art we multiply inadequate chromolithographs and starve
-the modern artist, so in architecture a good part of machine-work is
-devoted to the production of fake handicraft, like the molded stone
-ornamentation used in huge Renaissance fireplaces, designed frequently
-for small modern apartments that are superheated by steam. In turn,
-the surviving worker who now practices handicraft has been debased
-into a servile drudge, using his skill and love, like his predecessors
-in Imperial Rome, to copy the original productions of other artists
-and craftsmen. Between handicraft that is devoted to mechanical
-reproduction and machinery that is set to reproduce endless simulacra
-of handicraft, our esthetic opportunities in art and architecture are
-muffed again and again. An occasional man of talent, like Mr. Samuel
-Yellin, the iron-worker, will survive; but the great run of craftsmen
-do not.
-
-Now, with due respect to the slickness and perfection of the best
-machine-work, we enjoy it because of the use that it fulfills: it may
-incidentally achieve significant form, but no one retains a pickle
-bottle, beautifully shaped though Messrs. Heinz and Co.’s are, for this
-reason: it was meant for pickles and it vanishes with the pickles.
-This is not merely true of today: it is true of all ages: the common
-utensils of life return to the dust, whereas those things that hold
-the imprint of man’s imagination--the amphoræ of the Greek potters,
-the fragile crane-necked bottles of the Persians, the seals of the
-Egyptians--are preserved from the rubbish heap, no matter how frail
-they may be or how small their intrinsic value.
-
-There is something in man that compels him to respect the human imprint
-of art: he lives more nobly surrounded by his own reflections, as a
-god might live. The very rage of iconoclasm which the Mohammedans and
-Puritans and eighteenth-century liberals exhibited betrayed a deep
-respect for the power of art; for we destroy the things that threaten
-our existence. Art, in a certain sense, is the spiritual varnish
-that we lay on material things, to insure their preservation: on its
-lowest terms, beauty is justified because it has “survival value.”
-The fact that houses which bear the living imprint of the mind are
-irreplaceable is what prevents them from being quickly and callously
-replaced. Wren’s churches are preserved beyond their period of
-desuetude by Wren’s personality. This process is just the opposite to
-that fostered by the machine-system, and it explains why, in the long
-run, machine-work may be unsatisfactory and uneconomical--too quickly
-degraded.
-
-Art, in fact, is one of the main ways in which we escape the vicious
-circle of economic activity. According to the conventional economist,
-our economic life has but three phases: production, distribution,
-and consumption. We work to eat so that we may eat to work. This is
-a fairly accurate portrait of life in an early industrial town; but
-it does not apply to the economic processes of a civilized community.
-Everywhere, even in regions of difficulty, something more comes out of
-production than the current income and the current saving of capital:
-sometimes it is leisure and play, sometimes it is religion, philosophy,
-and science, and sometimes it is art. In the creation of any permanent
-work of art the processes of dissipation and consumption are stayed:
-hence the only civilized criterion of a community’s economic life
-is not the amount of things produced, but the durability of things
-created. A community with a low rate of production and a high standard
-of creation will in the long run be physically richer than a modern
-city in which the gains of industry are frittered away in evanescent,
-uncreative expenditures. What matters is the ratio of production to
-creation.
-
-Here lies the justification of the modern architect. Cut off though
-he is from the actual processes of building, he nevertheless remains
-the sole surviving craftsman who maintains the relation towards the
-whole structure that the old handicraft workers used to enjoy in
-connection with their particular job. The architect can still leave
-his imprint, and even in the severely utilitarian factory he can take
-the simple forms of the engineer and turn them into a superb structure
-like Messrs. Helmle and Corbett’s Fletcher Building in New York. To
-the extent that honest engineering is better than fake architecture,
-genuine architecture is better than engineering: for it strikes the
-same esthetic and humane chord that painting and sculpture appeal to
-by themselves. The freedom to depart from arbitrary and mechanical
-precedent, the freedom to project new forms which will more adequately
-meet his problem are essential to the architect. Up to the present he
-has been able, for the most part, to exercise this freedom only on
-traditional buildings, like churches and libraries and auditoriums,
-which are outside the reaches of the present commercial regime and have
-therefore some prospect of durability.
-
-But before the whole mass of contemporary building will be ready to
-receive the imprint of the architect, and before the handicrafts
-re-enter the modern building to give the luster of permanence to its
-decorations and fixtures, there will have to be a pretty thoroughgoing
-reorientation in our economic life. Whilst buildings are erected to
-increase site values, whilst houses are produced in block to be sold
-to the first wretch who must put a roof over his family’s head, it is
-useless to dwell upon the ministrations of art; and, unfortunately, too
-much of our building today rests upon this basis and exhibits all the
-infirmities of our present economic structure.
-
-From the aspect of our well-to-do suburbs and our newly-planned
-industrial towns, from the beginnings of a sound functional
-architecture in some of our schools and factories, it is easy to
-see what the architecture of our various regions might be if it had
-the opportunity to work itself out in a coherent pattern. For the
-present, however, it is impossible to say with any certainty whether
-our architects are doomed to be extruded by mechanism, or whether they
-will have the opportunity to restore to our machine-system some of
-the freedom of an earlier regime; and I have no desire to burden this
-discussion with predictions and exhortations. But if the conclusions we
-have reached are sound, it is only the second possibility that holds
-out any promise to the good life.
-
-
-VI
-
-So far we have considered the regional and industrial bearing of
-architecture: it now remains to examine briefly its relation to the
-community itself.
-
-In the building of our cities and villages the main _mores_ we have
-carried over have been those of the pioneer. We have seen how the
-animus of the pioneer, “mine and move,” is antagonistic to the settled
-life out of which ordered industries and a great architecture grow.
-We have seen also how this animus was deepened in the nineteenth
-century by the extraordinary temptation to profit by the increase in
-land-increments which followed the growth of population, the result
-being, as Mr. Henry George saw when he came back to the cities of
-the East from a part of California that was still in the throes of
-settlement--progress _and_ poverty.
-
-Now, to increase the population of a town and to raise the nominal
-values in ground rents is almost a moral imperative in our American
-communities. That is why our zoning laws, which attempt to regulate the
-use of land and provide against unfair competition in obtaining the
-unearned increment, almost universally leave a loophole through which
-the property owners, by mutual consent, may transform the character of
-the neighborhood for more intensive uses and higher ground rents. All
-our city planning, and more and more our architecture itself, is done
-with reference to prospective changes in the value of real estate. It
-is nothing to the real estate speculator that the growth of a city
-destroys the very purpose for which it may legitimately exist, as the
-growth of Atlantic City into a suburb of Broadway and Chestnut Street
-ruined its charm as a seaside fishing village. Sufficient unto the day
-is the evil he creates.
-
-Most of the important changes that must be effected in relation to
-industry and the land cannot be accomplished without departing from
-these dominant _mores_--from the customs and laws and uneasy standards
-of ethics which we carry over from the days of our continental
-conquest. The pioneer inheritance of the miner, coupled with the
-imperial inheritance of the hunter-warrior, out for loot, lie at the
-bottom of our present-day social structure; and it is useless to expect
-any vital changes in the milieu of architecture until the miner and the
-hunter are subordinated to relatively more civilized types, concerned
-with the culture of life, rather than with its exploitation and
-destruction.
-
-I am aware that the statement of the problem in these elementary terms
-will seem a little crude and unfamiliar in America where, in the midst
-of our buzzing urban environment, we lose sight of the underlying
-primitive reality, or--which is worse--speak vaguely of the “cave-man”
-unleashed in modern civilization. I do not deny that there are other
-elements in our makeup and situation that play an important part; but
-it is enough to bring forward here the notion that our concern with
-physical utilities and with commercial values is something more than
-an abstract defect in our philosophy. On the contrary, it seems to me
-to inhere in the dominant occupations of the country, and it is less
-to be overcome by moralizing and exhortation, than to be grown out of,
-by taking pains to provide for the ascendancy and renewal of the more
-humane occupations.
-
-Our communities have grown blindly, and, escaping the natural
-limitations which curbed even the Roman engineers, have not been
-controlled, on the other hand, by any normative ideal. One step in
-the direction of departing from our pioneer customs and habits would
-be to consider what the nature of a city is, and what functions it
-performs. The dominant, abstract culture of the nineteenth century
-was blithely unconcerned with these questions, but, as I have already
-pointed out, the Puritans not merely recognized their importance, but
-regulated the plan and layout of the city accordingly. The notion that
-there is anything arbitrary in imposing a limitation upon the area and
-population of a city is absurd: the limits have already been laid down
-in the physical conditions of human nature, as Mr. Frederic Harrison
-once wisely observed, in the fact that men do not walk comfortably
-faster than three miles an hour, nor can they spend on the physical
-exertion of locomotion and exercise more than a few hours in every
-twenty-four. With respect to the needs of recreation, home-life, and
-health, the growth of a city to the point where the outlying citizen
-must travel two hours a day in the subway between his office and his
-place of work is unintelligent and arbitrary.
-
-A city, properly speaking, does not exist by the accretion of houses,
-but by the association of human beings. When the accretion of houses
-reaches such a point of congestion or expansion that human association
-becomes difficult, the place ceases to be a city. The institutions
-that make up the city--schools, clubs, libraries, gymnasia, theaters,
-churches, and so forth--can be traced in one form or another back
-to the primitive community: they function on the basis of immediate
-intercourse, and they can serve through their individual units only a
-limited number of people. Should the population of a local community
-be doubled, all its civic equipment must be doubled too; otherwise the
-life that functions through these institutions and opportunities will
-lapse and disappear.
-
-It is not my purpose to discuss in detail the various devices by which
-our practice of endless growth and unlimited increment may be limited.
-Once the necessary conversion in faith and morals has taken place, the
-other things will come easily: for example, the social appropriation of
-unearned land-increments, and the exercise of the town-planner’s art to
-limit the tendency of a community to straggle beyond its boundaries.
-
-While a great many other ideas and measures are of prime importance for
-the good life of the community, that which concerns its architectural
-expression is the notion of the community as limited in numbers, and in
-area; and as formed, not merely by the agglomeration of people, but by
-their relation to definite social and economic institutions. To express
-these relations clearly, to embody them in buildings and roads and
-gardens in which each individual structure will be subordinated to the
-whole--this is the end of community planning.
-
-With the coherence and stability indicated by this method of planning,
-architectural effect would not lie in the virtuosity of the architect
-or in the peculiar ornateness and originality of any particular
-building: it would tend to be diffused, so that the humblest shop would
-share in the triumph with the most conspicuous public building. There
-are examples of this order of comprehensive architectural design in
-hundreds of little villages and towns in pre-industrial Europe--to say
-nothing of a good handful in pre-industrial America--and community
-planning would make it once more our daily practice. That it can be
-done again the examples of Letchworth and Welwyn in England, and
-numerous smaller gardened cities created by municipal authorities
-in England and other parts of Europe, bear evidence; and where the
-precepts of Mr. Ebenezer Howard have been to any degree followed,
-architecture has been quick to benefit.
-
-The difference between community planning and the ordinary method of
-city-extension and suburb-building has been very well put in a recent
-report to the American Institute of Architects, by the Committee on
-Community Planning. “Community planning,” says the report, “does not
-ask by what desperate means a city of 600,000 people can add another
-400,000 during the next generation, nor how a city of seven millions
-may enlarge its effective borders to include 29,000,000. It begins,
-rather, at the other end, and it asks with Mr. Ebenezer Howard how
-big must a city be to perform all of its social, educational, and
-industrial functions. It attempts to establish minima and maxima
-for different kinds of communities, depending upon their character
-and function. If the established practices of industry, commerce,
-and finance tend to produce monstrous agglomerations which do not
-contribute to human welfare or happiness, community planning must
-question these established practices, since the values they create
-have nothing to do with the essential welfare of the community itself,
-and since the condition thus created is inimical to the stable,
-architectural development of the community.”
-
-The normative idea of the garden-city and the garden-village is
-the corrective for the flatulent and inorganic conception of
-city-development that we labor with, and under, today. So far from
-being a strange importation from Europe, the garden-city is nothing
-more or less than a sophisticated recovery of a form that we once
-enjoyed on our Atlantic seaboard, and lost through our sudden and
-almost uncontrollable access of natural resources and people. Here and
-there an enterprising and somewhat benevolent industrial corporation
-has attempted to carry out some of the principles of garden-city
-development; and the United States Housing Corporation and the Shipping
-Board had begun to build many admirable communities, when the war
-brought this vast initiative to an end. These precedents are better
-than nothing, it goes without saying, but there will have to be a
-pretty thorough reorientation in our economic and social life before
-the garden-city will be anything more than a slick phrase, without
-content or power.
-
-Until our communities are ready to undertake the sort of community
-planning that leads to garden-cities, it will be empty eloquence
-to talk about the future of American architecture. Sheltered as an
-enjoyment for the prosperous minority, or used as a skysign for the
-advertisement of business, architecture will still await its full
-opportunity for creative achievement.
-
-The signs of promise are plenty, and if I have dealt with the darker
-side of the picture and have occasionally overemphasized the weaknesses
-and defects of the American tradition, it is only because in our
-present appreciation of what the American architect has already given
-form to, we are likely to forget the small area these achievements
-occupy. So far we have achieved patches of good building; more than
-once we have achieved the _mot juste_, but we have not learnt the
-more difficult art of consecutive discourse. With respect to the
-architecture of the whole community, medieval Boston and medieval
-New Amsterdam had more to boast than their magnificently endowed
-successors. Just as Mr. Babbitt’s great ancestor, Scadder, transformed
-a swamp into a thriving metropolis by the simple method of calling it
-New Eden, so do we tend to lighten our burdens by calling them the
-“blessings of progress”; but it does not avail. Our mechanical and
-metropolitan civilization, with all its genuine advances, has let
-certain essential human elements drop out of its scheme; and until we
-recover these elements our civilization will be at loose ends, and our
-architecture will unerringly express this situation.
-
-Home, meeting-place, and factory; polity, culture, and art have
-still to be united and wrought together, and this task is one of the
-fundamental tasks of our civilization. Once that union is effected, the
-long breach between art and life, which began with the Renaissance,
-will be brought to an end. The magnitude of our task might seem a
-little disheartening, were it not for the fact that, “against or with
-our will,” our civilization is perpetually being modified and altered.
-If in less than a hundred years the feudal civilization of Japan could
-adopt our modern mechanical gear, there is nothing to prevent our own
-civilization from recovering once more its human base--nothing, that
-is, except our own desires, aims, habits, and ends. This is an ironic
-consolation, perhaps, but the remedy it offers is real.
-
-
-
-
-_ENVOI_
-
-
-_The aristocracies of the world have never doubted the supremacy of the
-home and garden and temple over all the baser mechanisms of existence,
-and the folk-civilizations out of which aristocracies have so often
-risen have never strayed far from these realities. In the Norse fables,
-the dwarfs are regarded as queer monsters, because they are always
-“busy people” who have no pride or joy except in the work they perform
-and the mischief they cause._
-
-_The great heresy of the modern world is that it ceased to worship the
-Lords of Life, who made the rivers flow, caused the animals to mate,
-and brought forth the yearly miracle of vegetation: it prostrated
-itself, on the contrary, before the dwarfs, with their mechanical
-ingenuity, and the giants, with their imbecile power. Today our lives
-are perpetually menaced by these “busy people”; we are surrounded
-by their machines, and for worship, we turn their prayer wheels of
-red-tape._
-
-_It will not always be so; that would be monstrous. Sooner or later
-we will learn to pick our way out of the débris that the dwarfs, the
-gnomes, and the giants have created; eventually, to use Henry Adams’
-figure, the sacred mother will supplant the dynamo. The prospects
-for our architecture are bound up with a new orientation towards the
-things that are symbolized in the home, the garden and the temple; for
-architecture sums up the civilization it enshrines, and the mass of our
-buildings can never be better or worse than the institutions that have
-shaped them._
-
-
-
-
-NOTES ON BOOKS
-
-
-I HISTORICAL BACKGROUND
-
-The best introductions to the historic setting of our architecture
-and civilization are the local guide-books and histories. See, for
-example, Stokes’s excellent and exhaustive Iconography of Manhattan,
-and the Memorial History of Boston, edited by Justin Winsor. Both
-are profusely illustrated. In the wave of civic enthusiasm that
-swept over the country in the ’nineties, many local descriptions and
-histories were written. For the most part, they are loose, rambling,
-credulous, and devoid of sociological insight: but occasionally there
-is a nugget in the matrix. Powell’s Historic Towns series covers broad
-ground. As regional histories, Weeden’s Economic and Social History
-of New England, and Mr. Samuel Eliot Morison’s Maritime History of
-Massachusetts, stand in a class by themselves: in them we have the
-beginnings of what W. H. Riehl called a “natural history” of the human
-community.
-
-
-II ARCHITECTURAL HISTORY
-
-Ever since colonial architecture was reappreciated after the Civil
-War, a large amount of material has appeared on the early architecture
-of the colonies. Before 1900 the greater part of this was uncritical.
-Isham and Brown’s work on the early architecture of Connecticut and
-Rhode Island made a new departure, which Messrs. Cousins and Riley’s
-studies of the architecture of Salem and Philadelphia have carried on.
-Mr. Fiske Kimball’s compendious study of the Domestic Architecture of
-the Colonies and the Early Republic brings together a large amount of
-authenticated data. Articles and illustrations dealing with particular
-aspects of our pre-industrial architecture, or with particular
-regions--like the Lebanon Valley in Pennsylvania--are scattered through
-the architectural periodicals. Beyond the early republican period,
-our architectural histories come to an end. Works like John Bullock’s
-The American Cottage Builder, New York: 1854, occur in almost every
-old library and are full of interesting data. To fill the gap in
-later years we must have recourse to a comprehensive German treatise,
-Das Amerikanische Haus, by F. R. Vogel, Berlin: 1910. This may be
-supplemented by Homes in City and Country, by Russell Sturgis, J. W.
-Root and others, New York: 1893.
-
-
-III BIOGRAPHICAL STUDIES
-
-Where formal description leaves off, the biographies of our principal
-architects enter. The following books traverse in order the entire
-period from the Revolution to the present generation.
-
-Samuel McIntire: His Life and Work. F. Cousins and P. M. Riley, Boston:
-1916.
-
-The Life and Letters of Charles Bulfinch. Ellen Susan Bulfinch, New
-York: 1896.
-
-The Journal of Latrobe. Benjamin Henry Latrobe, New York: 1905.
-
-Henry Hobson Richardson. Mrs. Schuyler Van Rensselaer, Boston: 1888.
-
-Charles Follen McKim. A. H. Granger, Boston: 1913.
-
-Daniel H. Burnham. Charles Moore, New York: 1921.
-
-The Autobiography of an Idea. Louis H. Sullivan, New York: 1924.
-
-
-IV CONTEMPORARY WORK
-
-Portfolios of work by contemporary architects are so numerous that
-to single out any would be invidious. The files of the Architectural
-Record, the American Architect, House and Garden, and Arts and
-Decorations--to mention only the more available periodicals--should be
-consulted particularly for illustrations.
-
-
-V ESTHETICS
-
-As an introduction to architecture in general the formal textbooks
-are occasionally useful. Let me commend particularly, however,
-Viollet-le-Duc’s The Habitations of Man in all Ages. The archæology
-and ethnology of this work are, it goes without saying, outmoded:
-but for all that it has a permanent interest, and it is high time
-that someone took up Viollet-le-Duc’s theme and redeveloped it in
-the light of contemporary research. While I am restoring a classic,
-let me add another: Ruskin’s The Seven Lamps of Architecture. Ruskin
-is disregarded nowadays, as he was in his own generation, by people
-who have not yet caught up with him. His insight and unflinching
-intelligence are both needed, however, and it is no longer necessary
-to warn the student against his quirks and solecisms. Ruskin wrote
-the apology for modernism in art when he said: “There would be hope
-if we could change palsy for puerility,” and he anticipated modern
-decoration when he said: “I believe the only manner of rich ornament
-that is open to us is geometrical color mosaic, and that much might
-result from strenuously taking up that mode of design.” For that
-matter, Ruskin even predicted the architectural use of steel frames.
-The Seven Lamps of Architecture closes on a prophetic word which means
-far more to us today than to Ruskin’s contemporaries. “I could smile,”
-he said, “when I hear the hopeful exultation of many, at the new reach
-of worldly science and vigor of worldly effort; as if we were again at
-the beginning of new days. There is thunder on the horizon, as well
-as dawn.” We who have seen the lightning strike may well reread these
-words....
-
-As for modern books on architecture and esthetics, let me recommend
-a handful. Among them note W. R. Lethaby’s Form in Civilization.
-In sharp contrast to Professor Lethaby is Geoffrey Scott’s The
-Architecture of Humanism, Boston: 1914. I do not accept Mr. Scott’s
-main position; but there is something to be said for it, and he says
-it well. Both points of view are embraced in the distinction Mr.
-Claude Bragdon makes between the Organic and the Arranged, in one of
-Six Lectures on Architecture. From a limited field, Rhys Carpenter’s
-Esthetic Basis of Greek Art reaches conclusions which illuminate
-almost every province of esthetics. There is an able exposition of the
-absolutist, mechanical point of view in Vers Une Architecture, by the
-architect whose pen-name is “Le Corbusier-Saugnier.” In Speculations,
-Mr. T. E. Hulme presents an interesting philosophic apology for
-mechanism.
-
-
-VI SOCIOLOGY
-
-For the civic and sociological background of this study, consult
-Professor Patrick Geddes’s Cities in Evolution, London: 1915, likewise
-his Principles of Sociology in Relation to Economics. The latter can
-be obtained through Le Play House, 65 Belgrave Road, London, S. W. 1.
-The chapter on Westminster, by Mr. Victor Branford, in Our Social
-Inheritance, London: 1919, is a unique introduction to the direct study
-of social institutions and their architectural forms. The other volumes
-in The Making of the Future series, edited by Messrs. Geddes and
-Branford, should also have an important place on the student’s shelf.
-
-Light on our more immediate problems will be found in the files of the
-Journal of the American Institute of Architects. Note particularly Mr.
-F. L. Ackermann’s article on Craftsmen--Machines--Speed--Credit, June,
-1923, and Mr. Benton Mackaye’s article on the proposed Appalachian
-Trail. See, also, the Power number of the Survey Graphic. The report
-of the Committee on Community Planning of the American Institute of
-Architects (1924) should be read in connection with the last chapter:
-it treats in detail the difficulties that the architect confronts under
-our present economic and social order. See, likewise, Mr. Ebenezer
-Howard’s classic Garden Cities of Tomorrow.
-
-FINIS
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Punctuation has been made consistent.
-
-Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors have
-been corrected.
-
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Lewis Mumford</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: February 25, 2021 [eBook #64629]</div>
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-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STICKS AND STONES ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover." />
-</div>
-
-<p id="half-title">STICKS AND STONES</p>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/title.jpg" alt="Title page." />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak">STICKS AND STONES</h1>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="center largefont p2">A STUDY OF AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE<br />
-AND CIVILIZATION</p>
-
-<p class="center xlargefont p2 s2">LEWIS MUMFORD</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/logo_t.jpg" alt="Publisher logo." />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p2"><span class="xlargefont" style="word-spacing:0.35em">BONI
-<span class="smcap"><span class="largefont">AND</span></span> LIVERIGHT</span><br />
-<span class="smcap xlargefont">Publishers</span>
-<span class="xlargefont"><span style="padding-left:0.75em; padding-right:0.375em">::</span>
-<span style="padding-left:0.375em; padding-right:0.75em">::</span></span>
-<span class="smcap xlargefont">New York</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center s2">Copyright, 1924, by<br />
-Boni and Liveright, Inc.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
-<img src="images/logo_c.jpg" alt="Publisher logo." />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center p1">PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-</p></div>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="center"><div class="displayinline">
-<p><em>Architecture, properly understood, is
-civilization itself.</em><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&mdash;<span class="smcap">W. R. Lethaby</span></span></p>
-
-<p><em>What is civilization? It is the humanization
-of man in society.</em><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 15em;">&mdash;<span class="smcap">Matthew Arnold.</span></span></p>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table class="toc" border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents">
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"><span class="smallfont">CHAPTER</span></td><td></td><td class="tocpage"><span class="smallfont">PAGE</span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">I.</td><td class="toctitle">THE MEDIEVAL TRADITION</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_ONE">13</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">II.</td><td class="toctitle">THE HERITAGE OF THE RENAISSANCE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_TWO">35</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">III.</td><td class="toctitle">THE CLASSICAL MYTH</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_THREE">53</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">IV.</td><td class="toctitle">THE DIASPORA OF THE PIONEER</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_FOUR">75</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">V.</td><td class="toctitle">THE DEFEAT OF ROMANTICISM</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_FIVE">99</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VI.</td><td class="toctitle">THE IMPERIAL FAÇADE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_SIX">123</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VII.</td><td class="toctitle">THE AGE OF THE MACHINE</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_SEVEN">155</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter">VIII.</td><td class="toctitle">ARCHITECTURE AND CIVILIZATION</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#CHAPTER_EIGHT">193</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"></td><td class="toctitle">ENVOI</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#ENVOI">237</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td class="tocchapter"></td><td class="toctitle">NOTES ON BOOKS</td><td class="tocpage"><a href="#NOTES_ON_BOOKS">241</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">ACKNOWLEDGMENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>This is an attempt to evaluate architecture in America
-in terms of our civilization. I have not sought to criticize
-particular buildings or tendencies: I have tried,
-rather, by approaching our modern problems from their
-historic side, to criticize the forces that from one age to
-another have conditioned our architecture, and altered
-its forms. Lest my purpose be misunderstood, I have
-left out illustrations; for a building is not merely a sight;
-it is an experience: and one who knows architecture
-only by photographs does not know it at all. If the
-omission of pictures lead the reader occasionally to
-break away from the orbit of his daily walks, and examine
-our development in cities and buildings for himself,
-it will be sufficiently justified.</p>
-
-<p>This book would not have been put together but for
-the persistent encouragement and kindly interest of
-Mr. Albert Jay Nock: and it was in The Freeman that
-the first five chapters, in somewhat briefer form, appeared.
-My hearty thanks are likewise due to Mr.
-Charles Harris Whitaker, whose private help and whose
-admirable public work as editor of the Journal of the
-American Institute of Architects have both laid me
-under a heavy obligation. My intellectual debt to
-Messrs. Victor Branford and Patrick Geddes will be
-apparent to those who have followed their work. In the
-concluding chapters I have been stimulated and guided
-in many places by unpublished reports and memoranda
-written by Mr. Clarence Stein, Mr. Benton Mackaye,
-and Mr. Henry Wright. My friendly thanks are also
-due to Mr. James Henderson, Mr. Geroid Tanquary
-Robinson, and Miss Sophia Wittenberg.</p>
-
-<p>Besides the essays in The Freeman, some of the
-material in Sticks and Stones has appeared in the
-Journal of the American Institute of Architects (Chapter
-Six), in The New Republic, and in The American
-Mercury. I thank the editors for their permission to
-draw on these articles.</p>
-
-<p class="ir2 pminus1"><span class="smcap">Lewis Mumford.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[13]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_ONE">CHAPTER ONE<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE MEDIEVAL TRADITION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>For a hundred years or so after its settlement,
-there lived and flourished in America a type of community
-which was rapidly disappearing in Europe.
-This community was embodied in villages and towns
-whose mummified remains even today have a rooted
-dignity that the most gigantic metropolises do not
-often possess. If we would understand the architecture
-of America in a period when good building was
-almost universal, we must understand something of
-the kind of life that this community fostered.</p>
-
-<p>The capital example of the medieval tradition lies
-in the New England village.</p>
-
-<p>There are two or three things that stand in the
-way of our seeing the life of a New England village;
-and one of them is the myth of the pioneer, the conception
-of the first settlers as a free band of
-“Americans” throwing off the bedraggled garments
-of Europe and starting life afresh in the wilderness.
-So far from giving birth to a new life, the settlement<span class="pagenum">[14]</span>
-of the northern American seaboard prolonged for a
-little while the social habits and economic institutions
-which were fast crumbling away in Europe, particularly
-in England. In the villages of the New World
-there flickered up the last dying embers of the medieval
-order.</p>
-
-<p>Whereas in England the common lands were being
-confiscated for the benefit of an aristocracy, and the
-arable turned into sheep-runs for the profit of the
-great proprietors, in New England the common lands
-were re-established with the founding of a new settlement.
-In England the depauperate peasants and
-yeomen were driven into the large towns to become
-the casual workers, menials, and soldiers; in New
-England, on the other hand, it was at first only with
-threats of punishment and conscription that the
-town workers were kept from going out into the countryside
-to seek a more independent living from the
-soil. Just as the archaic speech of the Elizabethans
-has lingered in the Kentucky Mountains, so the
-Middle Ages at their best lingered along the coast
-of Appalachia; and in the organization of our New
-England villages one sees a greater resemblance to
-the medieval Utopia of Sir Thomas More than to
-the classic republic in the style of Montesquieu,<span class="pagenum">[15]</span>
-which was actually founded in the eighteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>The colonists who sought to establish permanent
-communities&mdash;as distinct from those who erected only
-trading posts&mdash;were not a little like those whom
-the cities of Greece used to plant about the Mediterranean
-and the Black Sea littoral. Like the founders
-of the “Ancient City,” the Puritans first concerned
-themselves to erect an altar, or rather, to lay the
-foundations for an edifice which denied the religious
-value of altars. In the crudest of “smoaky wigwams,”
-an early observer notes, the Puritans remember to
-“sing psalms, pray, and praise their God”; and
-although we of today may regard their religion as
-harsh and nay-saying, we cannot forget that it was
-a central point of their existence and not an afterthought
-piled as it were on material prosperity for
-the sake of a good appearance. Material goods
-formed the basis, but not the end, of their life.</p>
-
-<p>The meeting-house determined the character and
-limits of the community. As Weeden says in his
-excellent Economic and Social History of New England,
-the settlers “laid out the village in the best
-order to attain two objects: first, the tillage and
-culture of the soil; second, the maintenance of a<span class="pagenum">[16]</span>
-‘civil and religious society.’” Around the meeting-house
-the rest of the community crystallized in a
-definite pattern, tight and homogeneous.</p>
-
-<p>The early provincial village bears another resemblance
-to the early Greek city: it does not continue
-to grow at such a pace that it either becomes overcrowded
-within or spills beyond its limits into dejected
-suburbs; still less does it seek what we ironically
-call greatness by increasing the number of its
-inhabitants. When the corporation has a sufficient
-number of members, that is to say, when the land is
-fairly occupied, and when the addition of more land
-would unduly increase the hardship of working it
-from the town, or would spread out the farmers, and
-make it difficult for them to attend to their religious
-and civil duties, the original settlement throws out
-a new shoot. So Charlestown threw off Woburn;
-so Dedham colonized Medfield; so Lynn founded
-Nahant.</p>
-
-<p>The Puritans knew and applied a principle that
-Plato had long ago pointed out in The Republic,
-namely, that an intelligent and socialized community
-will continue to grow only as long as it can remain
-a unit and keep up its common institutions. Beyond
-that point growth must cease, or the community will<span class="pagenum">[17]</span>
-disintegrate and cease to be an organic thing.
-Economically, this method of community-development
-kept land values at a properly low level, and
-prevented the engrossing of land for the sake of a
-speculative rise. The advantage of the Puritan
-method of settlement comes out plainly when one
-contrasts it with the trader’s paradise of Manhattan;
-for by the middle of the seventeenth century
-all the land on Manhattan Island was privately
-owned, although only a small part of it was cultivated,
-and so eagerly had the teeth of monopoly
-bitten into this fine morsel that there was already a
-housing-shortage.</p>
-
-<p>One more point of resemblance: all the inhabitants
-of an early New England village were co-partners
-in a corporation; they admitted into the community
-only as many members as they could assimilate.
-This co-partnership was based upon a common
-sense as to the purpose of the community, and upon
-a roughly equal division of the land into individual
-plots taken in freehold, and a share of the common
-fields, of which there might be half a dozen or
-more.</p>
-
-<p>There are various local differences in the apportionment
-of the land. In many cases, the minister<span class="pagenum">[18]</span>
-and deacons have a larger share than the rest of the
-community; but in Charlestown, for example, the
-poorest had six or seven acres of meadow and twenty-five
-or thereabouts of upland; and this would
-hold pretty well throughout the settlements. Not
-merely is membership in the community guarded: the
-right of occupying and transferring the land is also
-restricted, and again and again, in the face of the
-General Assembly, the little villages make provisions
-to keep the land from changing hands without the
-consent of the corporation; “it being our real intent,”
-as the burghers of Watertown put it, to “sitt
-down there close togither.”</p>
-
-<p>These regulations have a positive side as well;
-for in some cases the towns helped the poorer members
-of the corporation to build houses, and as
-a new member was voted into the community, lots
-were assigned immediately, without further ado. A
-friend of mine has called this system “Yankee
-communism,” and I cheerfully bring the institution
-to the attention of those who do not realize upon
-what subversive principles Americanism, historically,
-rests.</p>
-
-<p>What is true of the seventeenth century in New
-England holds good for the eighteenth century in the<span class="pagenum">[19]</span>
-Moravian settlements of Pennsylvania; and it is
-doubtless true for many another obscure colony;
-for the same spirit lingered, with a parallel result in
-architecture and industry, in the utopian communities
-of the nineteenth century. It is pretty plain
-that this type of pioneering, this definite search for
-the good life, was conducted on an altogether different
-level from the ruthless exploitation of the individual
-muckers and scavengers who hit the trail west
-of the Alleghanies. Such renewals of the earlier
-European culture as the Bach Festival at Bethlehem
-give us a notion of the cultural values which the medieval
-community carried over from the Old World
-to the New. There is some of this spirit left even in
-the architecture of the Shaker community at Mount
-Lebanon, New York, which was built as late as the
-nineteenth century.</p>
-
-<p>In contrast to the New England village-community
-was the trading post. Of this nature were the
-little towns in the New Netherlands which were
-planted there by the Dutch West India Company:
-the settlers were for the most part either harassed
-individuals who were lured to the New World by
-the prospects of a good living, or people of established
-rank who were tempted to leave the walks of<span class="pagenum">[20]</span>
-commerce for the dignities and affluences that were
-attached to the feudal tenure of the large estates
-that lined the Hudson.</p>
-
-<p>The germs of town life came over with these
-people, and sheer necessity turned part of their
-energies to agriculture, but they did not develop the
-close village-community we find in New England;
-and though New Amsterdam was a replica of the Old
-World port, with its gabled brick houses, and its well-banked
-canals and fine gardens, it left no decided
-pattern on the American scene. It is only the country
-architecture of the Dutch which survives as
-either a relic or a memory. These trading posts
-like Manhattan and Fort Orange were, as Messrs.
-Petersen and Edwards have shown in their study
-of New York as an Eighteenth Century Municipality,
-medieval in their economy: numerous guild and
-civic regulations which provided for honest weight
-and measure and workmanship continued in force
-within the town. In their external dealings, on the
-other hand, the practice of the traders was sharp,
-and every man was for himself. Beginning its life
-by bargaining in necessities, the trading post ends
-by making a necessity of bargaining; and it was the
-impetus from its original commercial habits which<span class="pagenum">[21]</span>
-determined the characteristics of the abortive city
-plan that was laid down for Manhattan Island in
-1811. Rich as the Dutch precedent is in individual
-farmhouses, it brings us no pattern, such as we
-find in New England, for the community as a
-whole.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Since we are accustomed to look upon the village
-as a quaint primitive relic of a bygone age, we
-do not readily see that its form was dictated by social
-and economic conditions. Where the village had to
-defend itself against Indians, it was necessary to lay
-it out completely, so that it might be surrounded by
-a stockade, and so that the meeting-house might be
-such a rallying center as the bell-tower or the castle
-was in Europe, or as the high temple site was in
-classic times. But in the eighteenth century the
-Indian figured less in the scheme of colonial life,
-and along the seacoast and river&mdash;as at Wells Beach
-in Maine or Litchfield in Connecticut&mdash;the village
-became a long strip upon a highroad, and the
-arable land stretched in narrow plots from the house
-to the water, so that the farmer might better
-protect his crops and his livestock from the fox,<span class="pagenum">[22]</span>
-the wolf, the woodchuck, the hawk, the skunk, and
-the deer.</p>
-
-<p>I emphasize these points of structure because of
-the silly notion superficial observers sometimes carry
-away from the villages of Europe or New England;
-namely, that their irregularity is altogether capricious
-and uneconomical, associated only with the
-vagaries of the straying cow. It would be more
-correct to say that the precise reverse was true.
-The inequality in size and shape of plots shows always
-that attention was paid to the function the
-land was to perform, rather than to the mere possession
-of property. Thus, there was a difference
-in size between home lots, which were always seated
-in the village, and purely agricultural tracts of land,
-which were usually on the outskirts; and in Dedham,
-for example, married men had home lots of twelve
-acres, while bachelors received only eight. Another
-reason for the compactness of the village was a
-decree of the General Court in Massachusetts, in
-1635, that no dwelling should be placed more than
-half a mile from the meeting-house in any new
-plantation. Even irregularities in the layout and
-placement of houses, which cannot be referred to
-such obvious points as these, very often derive<span class="pagenum">[23]</span>
-from an attempt to break the path of the wind, to
-get a good exposure in summer, or to profit by a
-view.</p>
-
-<p>All this was genuine community planning. It did
-not go by this name, perhaps, but it achieved the
-result.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>We have learned in recent years to appreciate the
-felicities of eighteenth-century colonial architecture,
-and even the earlier seventeenth-century style is now
-coming into its own, in the sense that it is being
-imitated by architects who have an eye for picturesque
-effects; but we lose our perspective altogether
-if we think that the charm of an old New England
-house can be recaptured by designing overhanging
-second stories or panelled interiors. The just design,
-the careful execution, the fine style that brings
-all the houses into harmony no matter how diverse
-the purposes they served&mdash;for the farmhouse shares
-its characteristics with the mill, and the mill with
-the meeting-house&mdash;was the outcome of a common
-spirit, nourished by men who had divided the land
-fairly and who shared adversity and good fortune
-together. When the frame of the house is to be<span class="pagenum">[24]</span>
-raised, a man’s neighbors will lend him a hand; if the
-harvest is in danger, every man goes out into the
-fields, even if his own crop is not at stake; if a whale
-founders on the beach, even the smallest boy bears
-a hand, and gets a share of the reward. All these
-practices were not without their subtle effect upon
-craftsmanship.</p>
-
-<p>Schooled in the traditions of his guild, the medieval
-carpenter pours his all into the work. Since sale
-does not enter into the bargain, it is both to his
-patron’s advantage to give him the best materials,
-and to his own advantage to make the most of them.
-If at first, in the haste of settlement, the colonists
-are content with makeshifts, they are nevertheless
-done in the traditional fashion&mdash;not the log cabins
-of later days, but, more probably, wattle and daub
-huts like those of the charcoal burners in the English
-forests. In some points, the prevailing English tradition
-does not fit the raw climate of the north, and
-presently the half-timbered houses of some of the
-earlier settlers would be covered by clapboards for
-greater warmth, as in the eighteenth century their
-interiors were lined with panelled pine or oak, instead
-of the rough plaster. No matter what the
-material or mode, the carpenter works not simply<span class="pagenum">[25]</span>
-for hire, but for dear life’s sake, and as a baker’s
-dozen numbers thirteen, so a piece of handicraft
-contains not merely the workmanship itself, but a
-bit of the worker’s soul, for good measure. The
-new invention of the gambrel roof, which gave additional
-room to the second story without raising
-the roof-tree, is a product of this system; and
-the variation in its length and pitch in New England,
-New Jersey, and New York is a witness to
-the freedom of design that prevailed throughout the
-work.</p>
-
-<p>These seventeenth-century houses, built at first
-with one or two rooms, and then as luxury increased
-and family needs multiplied with as many as four,
-would doubtless seem unspeakably crude and mean
-to the resident of Floral Heights; indeed, if our
-present requirements for housing were so simple it
-would not be quite so difficult to meet our perpetual
-shortage. As a matter of fact, however, these early
-provincial houses were well up to the standards for
-a similar homestead in England; and in some ways
-were a distinct advance. Just as all the separate
-courses on a restaurant menu were a few hundred
-years ago cooked in the same pot, so the different
-subdivisions of the modern house were originally<span class="pagenum">[26]</span>
-combined into a single room, which was not merely
-kitchen, workroom, and living quarters, but which
-also, at least in winter, served as a stable for the
-more delicate members of the barnyard. By the time
-America was settled the division into rooms had
-just commenced among the better sort of farmer:
-the barn had split off from the rest of the house,
-and the bedchamber was becoming a separate apartment.
-As the seventeenth century lengthened, this
-division of functions became more familiar in the
-provincial house.</p>
-
-<p>Let us take a brief look at one of these seventeenth-century
-buildings; let us say, the John Ward house
-in Salem which still survives as a relic. As one approaches
-the village on some November day, when
-the leaves are no longer on the trees to obscure the
-vista, one feels the dynamic quality of medieval
-architecture&mdash;a quality altogether different from
-the prudent regularities of the later Georgian mode.
-It is not merely a matter of painted gables, leaded,
-diamond-paned windows, overhanging second stories,
-much as these would perhaps remind us of a medieval
-European town. What would attract one is the
-feeling, not of formal abstract design, but of growth:
-the house has developed as the family within it has<span class="pagenum">[27]</span>
-prospered, and brought forth children; as sons and
-daughters have married, as children have become
-more numerous, there have been additions: by a
-lean-to at one end the kitchen has achieved a separate
-existence, for instance; and these unpainted, weathered
-oaken masses pile up with a cumulative richness
-of effect.</p>
-
-<p>Every step that brings one nearer to the house
-alters the relation of the planes formed by the gable
-ends; and so one must have got the same effect in
-these old village streets as one gets today when one
-skirts around, let us say, Notre Dame in Paris, now
-overwhelmed by the towers at the front, and now
-seeing them reduced to nothing by the tall spire in
-the rear. So the building seems in motion, as well
-as the spectator; and this quality delights the eye
-quite as much as formal decoration, which the architecture
-of the seventeenth century in America almost
-completely lacked.</p>
-
-<p>The Puritan had his failings; and this lack of
-decoration was perhaps the most important one in
-architecture. In his devotion to books and in his
-love for music, even psalm-music, the Puritan was
-not immune to art; but he was suspicious of the
-image, and one is tempted to read into his idol-breaking<span class="pagenum">[28]</span>
-a positive visual defect, akin to the Daltonism
-or color blindness of the Quakers. Whereas
-medieval architecture had cherished the sculptor
-and the painter, even in the commonest vernacular
-work, the Puritans looked upon every diversion of
-the eye as a diversion from the Lord, and, by forbidding
-a respectable union between the artist and
-the useful arts, they finally turned the artist out on
-the streets, to pander to the first fine gentleman
-who would give him a kind word or a coin. Whereas
-Puritan buildings in the seventeenth century were
-straightforward and honestly bent to fulfill their
-functions, the Puritan did not see that ornament
-itself may be functional, too, when it expresses some
-positive gesture of the spirit. The bareness of the
-seventeenth century paved the way for the finicking
-graces of the eighteenth.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>In essentials, however, both the life and the architecture
-of the first provincial period are sound.
-While agriculture is the mainstay of life, and
-the medieval tradition flourishes, the New England
-village reaches a pretty fair pitch of worldly<span class="pagenum">[29]</span>
-perfection; and beneath all the superficial changes
-that affected it in the next century and a half,
-its sturdy framework held together remarkably
-well.</p>
-
-<p>Consider the village itself. In the center is a
-common, a little to one side will be the meeting-house,
-perhaps a square barnlike structure, with a
-hipped roof and a cupola, like that at Hingham;
-and adjacent or across the way will be the grammar
-school. Along the roads where the houses are set
-at regular intervals is a great columnar arcade of
-elm trees. All these elements are essential to our
-early provincial architecture, and without them it
-would be a little bare and forbidding. The trees,
-above all, are an important part of New England
-architecture: in summer they absorb the moisture
-and cool the air, besides giving shade; in the winter
-their huge boles serve as a partial windbrake; even
-the humus from their leaves keeps the soil of the
-lawns in better order. The apple trees that cling
-to the warmer side of the house are not less essential.
-Would it be an exaggeration to say that there
-has never been a more complete and intelligent partnership
-between the earth and man than existed, for
-a little while, in the old New England village? In<span class="pagenum">[30]</span>
-what other part of the world has such a harmonious
-balance between the natural and the social environment
-been preserved?</p>
-
-<p>Nowadays we have begun to talk about garden
-cities, and we realize that the essential elements in
-a garden-city are the common holding of land by
-the community, and the coöperative ownership and
-direction of the community itself. We refer to all
-these things as if they represented a distinct achievement
-of modern thought; but the fact of the matter
-is that the New England village up to the middle
-of the eighteenth century was a garden-city in every
-sense that we now apply to that term, and happily
-its gardens and its harmonious framework have frequently
-lingered on, even though the economic foundations
-have long been overthrown.</p>
-
-<p>This is a medieval tradition in American architecture
-which should be of some use to our architects
-and city planners; for it is a much more substantial
-matter than the building of perpendicular churches
-or Tudor country-houses in painfully archæological
-adaptations. If we wish to tie up with our colonial
-tradition we must recover more than the architectural
-forms: we must recover the interests, the standards,
-the institutions that gave to the villages and<span class="pagenum">[31]</span>
-buildings of early times their appropriate shapes.
-To do much less than this is merely to bring back
-a fad which might as well be Egyptian as “colonial”
-for all the sincerity that it exhibits.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[35]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_TWO">CHAPTER TWO<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE HERITAGE OF THE RENAISSANCE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The forces that undermined the medieval civilization
-of Europe sapped the vitality from the little
-centers it had deposited in America. What happened
-in the course of three or four centuries in Europe
-took scarcely a hundred years on this side of the
-Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p>Economically and culturally, the village community
-had been pretty well self-contained; it scraped
-along on its immediate resources, and if it could not
-purchase for itself the “best of everything” it at
-least made the most of what it had. In every detail
-of house construction, from the setting of fireplaces
-to the slope of the roof, there were local peculiarities
-which distinguished not merely the Dutch
-settlements from the English, but which even characterized
-several settlements in Rhode Island that were
-scarcely a day’s tramp apart. The limitation of
-materials, and the carpenter’s profound ignorance
-of “style” made for freedom and diversity. It remained<span class="pagenum">[36]</span>
-for the eighteenth century to erect a single
-canon of taste.</p>
-
-<p>With the end of the seventeenth century the economic
-basis of provincial life shifted from the farm
-to the sea. This change had the same effect upon
-New England, where the village-community proper
-alone had flourished, that fur-trading had had upon
-New York: it broke up the internal unity of the
-village by giving separate individuals the opportunity
-by what was literally a “lucky haul,” to
-achieve a position of financial superiority. Fishermen
-are the miners of the water. Instead of the
-long, watchful care that the farmer must exercise
-from planting time to harvest, fishing demands a
-sharp eye and a quick, hard stroke of work; and
-since what the Germans call <i lang="de" xml:lang="de">Sitzfleisch</i> is not one of
-the primary qualities of a free lad, it is no wonder
-that the sea weaned the young folks of New England
-away from the drudgeries of its boulder-strewn
-farms. With fishing, trading, and building wooden
-vessels for sale in foreign ports, riches poured into
-maritime New England; and what followed scarcely
-needs an explanation.</p>
-
-<p>These villages ceased to be communities of farmers,
-working the land and standing squarely on their<span class="pagenum">[37]</span>
-own soil: they became commercial towns which, instead
-of trading for a living, simply lived for trade.
-With this change, castes arose; first, the division
-between the poor and the rich, and then between
-craftsmen and merchants, between the independent
-workers and the menials. The common concerns of
-all the townsfolk took second rank: the privileges
-of the great landlords and merchants warped the
-development of the community. Boston, by the
-middle of the eighteenth century, was rich in public
-buildings, including four schoolhouses, seventeen
-churches, a Town House, a Province House, and
-Faneuil Hall&mdash;a pretty large collection for a town
-whose twenty thousand inhabitants would scarcely
-fill a single block of tenements in the Bronx. But
-by this time a thousand inhabitants were set down
-as poor, and an almshouse and a workhouse had
-been provided for them.</p>
-
-<p>With the rise of the merchant class, the industrial
-guild began to weaken, as it had weakened in
-Europe during the Renaissance. For about a hundred
-years the carpenter-builder continued to remain
-on the scene, and work in his forthright and
-painstaking and honest manner; but in the middle
-of the eighteenth century he was joined, for the<span class="pagenum">[38]</span>
-first time, by the professional architect, the first one
-being probably Peter Harrison, who designed the
-Redwood Library, which still stands in Newport.
-Under competition with architects and amateurs of
-taste, the carpenter-builder lost his position as an
-independent craftsman, building intelligently for his
-equals: he was forced to meet the swift, corrosive
-influences brought in from foreign lands by men
-who had visited the ports of the world; and he must
-set his sails in order to catch the new winds of
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>What were these winds, and what effect did they
-have upon the architecture of the time?</p>
-
-<p>Most of the influences that came by way of trade
-affected only the accent of architecture; the language
-remained a homely vernacular. In the middle
-of the eighteenth century China sent over wallpaper;
-and in the Metropolitan Museum there is an
-American lacquered cabinet dated as early as 1700,
-decorated with obscure little Chinese figures in
-gilded gesso. “China” itself came in to take the
-place of pewter and earthenware in the finer
-houses; while in the gardens of the great manors,
-pavilions and pagodas, done more or less in the
-Chinese manner, were fashionable. Even Thomas<span class="pagenum">[39]</span>
-Jefferson, with his impeccably classical taste, designed
-such a pavilion for Monticello before the
-Revolution.</p>
-
-<p>This specific Chinese influence was part of that
-large, eclectic Oriental influence of the eighteenth
-century. The cultural spirit that produced Montesquieu’s
-Lettres Persanes also led to the translation
-of the Chinese and Persian and Sanskrit classics,
-and by a more direct route brought home Turkish
-dressing-gowns, turbans, and slippers to Boston
-merchants. In Copley’s painting of Nicholas Boylston,
-in 1767, these Turkish ornaments rise comically
-against the suggestion of a Corinthian pillar
-in the background; and this pillar recalls to us the
-principal influence of the time&mdash;that of classic civilization.
-This influence entered America first as a
-motif in decoration, and passed out only after it had
-become a dominating motive in life.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>The Renaissance was an orientation of the European
-mind towards the forms of Roman and Greek
-civilization, and towards the meaning of classical
-culture. On the latter side its impulse was plainly<span class="pagenum">[40]</span>
-a liberating one: it delivered the human soul from
-a cell of torments in which there were no modulating
-interests or activities between the base satisfactions
-of the temporal life and the beatitudes of
-heaven. With the Renaissance the god-beast became,
-once again, a man. Moreover, just when the
-Catholic culture of Christendom was breaking down
-under the influence of heresy and skepticism, the
-classics brought to the educated men of Europe a
-common theme which saved them from complete intellectual
-vagrancy. The effect of classical civilization,
-on the other hand, was not an unmixed good:
-for it served all too quickly to stereotype in old
-forms a spirit which had been freshly reborn, and
-it set up a servile principle in the arts which has
-in part been responsible for the wreck of both taste
-and craftsmanship.</p>
-
-<p>The first builders of the Renaissance, in Italy, were
-not primarily architects; they were rather supreme
-artists in the minor crafts; and their chief failing
-was, perhaps, that they wished to stamp with their
-personal imprint all the thousand details of sculpture,
-painting, and carving which had hitherto been
-left to the humble craftsman. Presently, the technical
-knowledge of the outward treatment of a building<span class="pagenum">[41]</span>
-became a touchstone to success; and a literal
-understanding of the products of antiquity took the
-place in lesser men of personal inspiration. The
-result was that architecture became more and more
-a thing of paper designs and exact archæological
-measurements; the workman was condemned to carry
-out in a faithful, slavish way the details which the
-architect himself had acquired in similar fashion.
-So the architect ceased to be a master-builder working
-among comrades of wide experience and travel:
-he became a Renaissance gentleman who merely gave
-orders to his servants.</p>
-
-<p>Victor Hugo said in Notre Dame that the printing-press
-destroyed architecture, which had hitherto
-been the stone record of mankind. The real misdemeanor
-of the printing-press, however, was not
-that it took literary values away from architecture,
-but that it caused architecture to derive its
-value from literature. With the Renaissance the
-great modern distinction between the literate and
-the illiterate extends even to building; the master
-mason who knew his stone and his workmen and his
-tools and the tradition of his art gave way to the
-architect who knew his Palladio and his Vignola and
-his Vitruvius. Architecture, instead of striving to<span class="pagenum">[42]</span>
-leave the imprint of a happy spirit on the superficies
-of a building, became a mere matter of grammatical
-accuracy and pronunciation; and the seventeenth-century
-architects who revolted from this
-regime and created the baroque were at home only
-in the pleasure gardens and theaters of princes. For
-the common run of architects, particularly in the
-northern countries, the Five Orders became as unchallengeable
-as the eighty-one rules of Latin syntax.
-To build with a pointed arch was barbarous,
-to build with disregard for formal symmetry was
-barbarous, to permit the common workman to carry
-out his individual taste in carving was to risk vulgarity
-and pander to an obsolete sense of democracy.
-The classics had, it is true, united Europe anew in
-a catholic culture; but alas! it was only the leisured
-upper classes who could fully take possession of the
-new kingdom of the mind. The Five Orders remained
-firmly entrenched on one side, the “lower
-orders” on the other.</p>
-
-<p>Hereafter, architecture lives by the book. First
-it is Palladio and Vignola; then it is Burlington and
-Chambers; then, after the middle of the eighteenth
-century, the brothers Adam and Stuart’s Antiquities
-of Athens. Simpler works with detailed prescriptions<span class="pagenum">[43]</span>
-for building in the fashionable mode made
-their way in the late seventeenth century among the
-smaller fry of carpenters and builders; and they
-were widely used in America, as a guide to taste and
-technique, right down to the middle of the nineteenth
-century. It was by means of the book that the
-architecture of the eighteenth century from St.
-Petersburg to Philadelphia seemed cast by a single
-mind. We call the mode Georgian because vast
-quantities of such building was done in England,
-as a result of the general commercial prosperity of
-that country; but it was common wherever European
-civilization had any fresh architectural effort to
-make, and if we call this style “colonial” in America
-it is not to mark any particular lapse or lack of
-distinction.</p>
-
-<p>The Renaissance in architecture had reached
-England at about the time of the Great Fire (1666),
-fully two generations after the Italian influence had
-made its way into English literature; and it came
-to America, as one might guess, about a generation
-later. It was left for Alexander Pope, who himself
-was a dutiful Augustan, to sum up the situation
-with classic precision to Lord Burlington, who had
-published Palladio’s Antiquities of Rome:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[44]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0">“You show us Rome was glorious, not profuse,
-</div><div class="indent0">And pompous buildings once were things of use.
-</div><div class="indent0">Yet shall, my lord, your just and noble rules
-</div><div class="indent0">Fill half the land with imitation fools;
-</div><div class="indent0">Who random drawings from your sheets shall take
-</div><div class="indent0">And of one beauty many blunders make.”
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>These lines were a warning and a prophecy. The
-warning was timely; and the prophecy came true,
-except in those districts in which the carpenter continued
-to ply his craft without the overlordship of
-the architect.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>The first effect of the Renaissance forms in America
-was not to destroy the vernacular but to perfect
-it; for it provided the carpenter-builder, whose distance
-from Europe kept him from profiting by the
-spirited work of his forbears, with a series of ornamental
-motifs. New England, under the influence
-of an idol-breaking Puritanism, had been singularly
-poor in decoration, as I have already observed: its
-modest architectural effects relied solely on mass,
-color, and a nice disposition of parts. In its decorative
-aspects medievalism had left but a trace in<span class="pagenum">[45]</span>
-America: the carved grotesque heads on the face of
-the Van Cortlandt Mansion in New York, and the
-painted decorations in some of the older houses and
-barns among the Pennsylvania Dutch pretty well
-complete the tally.</p>
-
-<p>Classical motifs served to fill the blank in provincial
-architecture. As long as the carpenter worked
-by himself, the classic influence was confined to little
-details like the fanlights, the moldings, the pillars
-of the portico, and so on. In the rural districts of
-New England, from Maine to Connecticut, and in
-certain parts of New York and New Jersey and
-Pennsylvania, the carpenter keeps on building in
-his solid, traditional manner down to the time that
-the jig-saw overwhelms a mechanically hypnotized
-age; and even through the jig-saw period in the
-older regions, the proportions and the plan remained
-close to tradition. The classical did not in fact
-supplant the vernacular until the last vestiges of the
-guild and the village-community had passed away,
-and the economic conditions appropriate to the
-Renaissance culture had made their appearance.</p>
-
-<p>The dwelling house slowly became more habitable
-during this period: the skill in shipbuilding which
-every sheltered inlet gave evidence of was carried<span class="pagenum">[46]</span>
-back into the home, and in the paneling of the walls
-and the general tidiness and compactness of the
-apartments, a shipshape order comes more and more
-to prevail. The plastered ceiling makes its appearance,
-and the papered wall; above all, white paint
-is introduced on the inside and outside of the house.</p>
-
-<p>Besides giving more light, this innovation surely
-indicates that chimney flues had become more satisfactory.
-Paint was no doubt introduced to keep the
-torrid summer sun from charring the exposed clapboards;
-and white paint was used, despite the expense
-of white lead, for the reason that it accorded
-with the chaste effect which was inseparable in the
-eighteenth-century mind from classic precedent.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the whiteness of our colonial architecture
-is an essential characteristic; it dazzled Dickens on
-his first visit to America, and made him think that
-all the houses had been built only yesterday. The
-esthetic reason for delighting in these white colonial
-farmhouses is simple: white and white alone fully
-reflects the surrounding lights; white and white
-alone gives a pure blue or lavender shadow against
-the sunlight. At dawn, a white house is pale pink
-and turquoise; at high noon it is clear yellow and
-lavender-blue; in a ripe sunset it is orange and<span class="pagenum">[47]</span>
-purple; in short, except on a gray day it is anything
-but white. These old white houses, if they seem a
-little sudden and sharp in the landscape, are at least
-part of the sky: one finds them stretched on a slight
-rise above the highroad like a seagull with poised
-wings, or a cloud above the treetops. Were anything
-needed to make visible the deterioration of
-American life which the nineteenth century brought
-with it, the habit of painting both wood and brick
-gray should perhaps be sufficient.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>If the architecture of the early eighteenth century
-in America is a little prim and angular, if it
-never rises far above a sturdy provincialism, it is
-not without its own kind of interest; and Faneuil
-Hall, for example, is not the worst of Boston’s buildings,
-though it is overshadowed by the great utilitarian
-hulks that line the streets about it. By studying
-the classical forms at one remove, the builders
-of the eighteenth century in America had the same
-kind of advantage that Wren had in England.
-Wren’s “Renaissance” churches, with their box-like
-naves and their series of superimposed orders for<span class="pagenum">[48]</span>
-steeples, had no parallel, so far as I am aware,
-in Italy, and certainly had no likeness to anything
-that had been built in classic times: they were the
-products of a playful and original fancy, like the
-mermaid. Mere knowledge, mere imitation, would
-never have achieved Renaissance architecture; it was
-the very imperfection of the knowledge and discipleship
-that made it the appropriate shell of its
-age. Coming to America in handbooks and prints,
-chastely rendered, the models of antiquity were,
-down to the Revolution, followed just so far as they
-conveniently served. Instead of curbing invention,
-they gave it a more definite problem to work upon.</p>
-
-<p>It was a happy accident that made the carpenter-builders
-and cabinet makers of America see their
-China, their Paris, their Rome through a distance,
-dimly. What those who admire the eighteenth century
-style do not, perhaps, see is that an accident
-cannot be recovered. However painstakingly we
-may cut the waistcoat, the stock, the knee-breeches
-of an eighteenth-century costume, it is now only a
-fancy dress: its “moment” in history is over. The
-same principle holds true for Georgian or colonial
-architecture, even more than it does for that of the
-seventeenth century; for one might, indeed, conceive<span class="pagenum">[49]</span>
-of a breakdown in the transportation system
-or the credit system which would force a builder to
-rely for a while upon the products of his own region;
-whereas, while our civilization remains intact there
-are a hundred handbooks, measured drawings, and
-photographs which make a naïve recovery of antiquity
-impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Once we have genuinely appreciated the influence
-that created early colonial architecture, we see that
-it is irrecoverable: what we call a revival is really
-a second burial. All the king’s horses and all the
-king’s men have been hauling and tugging vigorously
-during the last fifty years to bring back the simple
-beauties and graces of the colonial dwelling, and the
-collectors’ hunt for the products of the Salem, Newburyport
-and Philadelphia cabinetmakers is a long
-and merry one; but the only beneficent effect of
-this movement has been the preservation of a handful
-of antiquities, which would otherwise have been
-impiously torn down. What we have built in the
-colonial mode is all very well in its way: unfortunately,
-it bears the same relation to the work of the
-late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries that
-the Woolworth Building bears to the cathedrals of
-the Middle Age, or the patriotism of the National
-Security League to the principles of Franklin and
-Jefferson. Photographic accuracy, neatly touched
-up&mdash;this is its capital virtue, and plainly, it has
-precious little to do with a living architecture. Like
-the ruined chapel in The Pirates of Penzance, our
-modern colonial houses are often attached to ancestral
-estates that were established&mdash;a year ago;
-and if their occupants are “descendants by purchase,”
-what shall we say of their architects?</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[53]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_THREE">CHAPTER THREE<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE CLASSICAL MYTH</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The transformation of European society and its
-material shell that took place during the period we
-call the Renaissance is associated with the break-up
-of the town economy and its replacement by a mercantile
-economy devoted to the advantage of the
-State. Along with this goes the destruction of the
-village community, and the predominance in social
-affairs of a landholding oligarchy who have thrown
-off feudal responsibilities while they have retained
-most of the feudal privileges, and a merchant class,
-buttressed by riches derived from war, piracy, and
-sharp trade.</p>
-
-<p>America reproduced in miniature the changes that
-were taking place in Europe. Because of its isolation
-and the absence of an established social order,
-it showed these changes without the blur and confusion
-that attended them abroad.</p>
-
-<p>It is sometimes a little difficult to tell whether
-the classical modes of building were a result of
-these changes in society or, among other things, an<span class="pagenum">[54]</span>
-incentive to them; whether the classical frame fitted
-the needs of the time, or whether men’s activities
-expanded to occupy the idolum that had seized their
-imagination. At any rate, the notion that the
-classical taste in architecture developed mainly
-through technical interests in design will not hold;
-for the severely classical shell arose only in regions
-where the social conditions had laid a foundation
-for the classical myth.</p>
-
-<p>The first development of the grand style in the
-American renaissance was in the manors of Virginia
-and Maryland. It came originally through an
-imitation of the country houses of England, and
-then, after the Revolutionary War, it led to a direct
-adaptation of the Roman villa and the Greek temple.
-One does not have to go very deep to fetch up the
-obvious parallel between the land-monopoly and
-slavery that prevailed in the American manors and
-the conditions that permitted the Roman villa itself
-to assume its stately proportions; nor need one dwell
-too long upon the natural subordination, in this
-regime, of the carpenter-builder to the gentleman-architect.
-“In the town palaces and churches,” as
-Mr. Fiske Kimball justly says, “there was a strong
-contradiction between modern conditions and ancient<span class="pagenum">[55]</span>
-forms, so that it was only in the country that
-Palladio’s ideas of domestic architecture could come
-to a clear and successful expression. These monuments,
-since so much neglected, served in Palladio’s
-book expressly to represent the ‘Antients’ designs of
-country-houses....’”</p>
-
-<p>At his death, Robert Carter, who had been Rector
-of the College, Speaker of the Burgesses, President
-of the Council, Acting Governor of Virginia, and
-Proprietor of the Northern Neck, was described in
-the Gentleman’s Magazine of 1732 as the possessor
-of an estate of 300,000 acres of land, about 1,000
-slaves, and ten thousand pounds. Pliny the Younger
-might well have been proud of such an estate. On
-a substantial basis like this, a Palladian mansion
-was possible; and up and down the land, wherever
-the means justified the end, Palladian mansions were
-built.</p>
-
-<p>The really striking thing about the architecture of
-Manorial America with its great dignity and its
-sometimes striking beauty of detail or originality of
-design&mdash;as in the staircase at Berry Hill which
-creates a flaring pattern like butterfly’s wings&mdash;the
-striking thing is the fact that the work is not the
-product of a specialized education; it is rather the<span class="pagenum">[56]</span>
-outcome of a warm, loving, and above all intelligent
-commerce with the past, in the days before Horseback
-Hall had become as aimless and empty as
-Heartbreak House. Mr. Arthur T. Bolton, the
-biographer of the brothers Adam, has exhibited
-letters from Robert Adam’s patrons in England
-which mark their avid and precise interest in classical
-forms; and without doubt a little digging would
-uncover similar examples in America.</p>
-
-<p>These educated eighteenth-century gentlemen,
-these contemporaries of “Junius” and Gibbon, who
-had read Horace and Livy and Plutarch, had one
-foot in their own age, and the other in the grave of
-Rome. In America, Thomas Jefferson exemplified
-this whole culture at its best and gave it a definite
-stamp: he combined in almost equal degrees the
-statesman, the student, and the artist. Not merely
-did Jefferson design his own Monticello; he executed
-a number of other houses for the surrounding gentry&mdash;Shadwell,
-Edgehill, Farrington&mdash;to say nothing
-of the Virginia State Capitol and the church and
-university at Charlottesville. It was Jefferson who
-in America first gave a strict interpretation to
-classicism; for he had nothing but contempt for
-the free, Georgian vernacular which was making its<span class="pagenum">[57]</span>
-way among those who regarded the classical past as
-little more than a useful embellishment.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast between the classical and the vernacular,
-between the architecture of the plantation
-and the architecture of the village, between the work
-of the craftsman, and the work of the gentleman
-and the professional architect, became even more
-marked after the Revolutionary War. As a result
-of that re-crystallization of American society, the
-conditions of classical culture and classical civilization
-were for a short time fused in the activities of
-the community, even in the town. One may express
-the transformation in a crude way by saying that
-the carpenter-builder had been content with a classical
-finish; the architects of the early republic worked
-upon a classical foundation. It was the Revolution
-itself, I believe, that turned the classical taste into
-a myth which had the power to move men and
-mold their actions.</p>
-
-<p>The merchant who has spent his hours in the
-counting house and on the quay cannot with the most
-lofty effort convert himself into a classical hero.
-It is different with men who have spent long nights
-and days wrangling in the State House, men who
-have ridden on horseback through a campaign, men<span class="pagenum">[58]</span>
-who have plotted like Catiline and denounced like
-Cicero, men whose daily actions are governed with
-the fine resolution of a Roman general or dictator.
-Unconsciously, such men want a stage to set off
-and magnify their actions. King Alfred can perhaps
-remain a king, though he stays in a cottage
-and minds the cakes on the griddle; but most of us
-need a little scenery and ritual to confirm these high
-convictions. If the tailors had not produced the
-frock-coat, Daniel Webster would have had to invent
-one. The merchant wants his little comforts and
-conveniences; at most, he desires the architect to
-make his gains conspicuous; but the hero who has
-drawn his sword or addressed an assembly wants
-elbow room for gestures. His parlor must be big
-enough for a public meeting, his dining room for a
-banquet. So it follows that whereas under pre-Revolutionary
-conventions even civic buildings like
-Independence Hall in Philadelphia are built on a
-domestic scale, the early republican architecture is
-marked by the practice of building its domestic
-dwellings on a public scale. The fine houses of the
-early republic all have an official appearance; almost
-any house might be the White House.</p>
-
-<p>Even when Dickens made his first visit to America,<span class="pagenum">[59]</span>
-the classical myth and the classical hero had not
-altogether disappeared: one has a painful memory
-of the “mother of the modern Gracchi,” and one
-sees how the republican hero had been vulgarized
-into a Jacksonian caricature like General Cyrus
-Choke. For a whole generation the classical myth
-held men in its thrall; the notion of returning to a
-pagan polity, quaintly modified by deism, was a
-weapon of the radical forces in both America and
-France. Jean Jacques himself preached the virtues
-of Sparta and Rome in Le Contrat Social, as well
-as the state of nature which he praised in Emile;
-and, in general, “radicalism” associated itself with
-the worship of rule and reason, as opposed to the
-caprice, the irrationality, the brute traditionalism
-of what the children of that age then characterized
-as “Gothic superstition.” Almost within his lifetime
-Washington became Divus Cæsar, and if a monument
-was not built to him immediately, a city was
-named after him, as Alexandria had been named
-after Alexander. Did not the very war-veterans become
-the Society of the Cincinnati; did not the first
-pioneers on the westward march sprinkle names like
-Utica and Ithaca and Syracuse over the Mohawk
-trail; and did not a few ex-soldiers go back to their<span class="pagenum">[60]</span>
-Tory neighbor’s plow? As Rome and Greece embodied
-the political interests of the age, so did classical
-architecture provide the appropriate shell.
-Even those who were not vitally touched by the
-dominant interests of the period were not immune
-to the fashion, once it had been set.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>In New England, not unnaturally, the influence of
-the merchant prevailed in architecture for a longer
-time, perhaps, than it did elsewhere. Samuel McIntire,
-a carver of figureheads for ships and moldings
-for cabins, provided an interior setting in the
-fashion of Robert Adam, which enabled the merchant
-of Salem to live like a lord in Berkeley Square;
-and Bulfinch, a merchant’s son, began by repairing
-his father’s house, went on a grand tour of Europe,
-and returned to a lucrative practice which included
-the first monument on Bunker Hill, and the first
-theater opened in Boston. Under McIntire’s assiduous
-and scholarly hands, the low-lying traditional
-farmhouse was converted into the bulky square house
-with its hipped roof, its classical pilasters, its frequently
-ill-proportioned cupola, its “captain’s<span class="pagenum">[61]</span>
-walk,” or “widow’s walk.” The merchant with his
-eye for magnitude lords it over the farmer with his
-homely interest in the wind and the weather; and so
-McIntire, the last great figure in a dying line of
-craftsmen-artists, is compelled to make up by wealth
-of ornament a beauty which the earlier provincial
-houses had achieved by adaptation to the site without,
-and to subtlety of proportion within. The
-standard of conspicuous waste, as Mr. Thorstein
-Veblen would call it, spread from the manor to the
-city mansion.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the rest of the country, the pure
-classical myth created the mold of American architecture,
-and buildings that were not informed by
-this myth attempted some sort of mimicry, like the
-mansion Squire Jones built for Marmaduke Temple
-in Cooper’s The Pioneers. There are churches standing
-in New Jersey and New York, for example, built
-as late as 1850, which at a distance have the outlines
-and proportions of classic buildings, either in
-the earlier style of Wren, or in the more severe and
-stilted Greek manner favored by a later generation.
-It is only on closer inspection that one discovers
-that the ornament has become an illiterate reminiscence;
-that the windows are bare openings; that<span class="pagenum">[62]</span>
-the orders have lost their proportions, and that,
-unlike the wandering mechanic, who “with a
-few soiled plates of English architecture” helped
-Squire Jones, the builder could no longer pretend
-to talk learnedly “of friezes, entablatures, and particularly
-of the composite order.” Alas for a
-bookish architecture when the taste for reading
-disappears!</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>The dominant designs of the early republican
-period proceeded directly or indirectly from such
-books as Stuart’s Antiquities of Athens, and from
-such well-known examples of temple architecture in
-southern Europe as the Maison Carrée at Nîmes.
-In one sense, there was a certain fitness in adapting
-the Greek methods of building to America. Originally,
-the Greek temple had probably been a wooden
-building. Its columns were trees, its cornices exposed
-beams; and the fact that in America one could
-again build mightily in wood may have furnished an
-extra incentive to the erection of these colossal
-buildings. The fact that the Greek mode in America
-was well under way before the first example of it<span class="pagenum">[63]</span>
-had appeared in Edinburgh, London, or Paris, shows
-perhaps that time and place both favored its introduction
-on this side of the Atlantic: for the
-availability of certain materials often, no doubt,
-directs the imagination to certain forms.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, however, the Greek temple precedent
-was a bad one. For one thing, since the Greek <i lang="grc" xml:lang="grc">cella</i>
-had no source of light except the doorway, it was
-necessary to introduce modifications in the elevation,
-and to break up the interior; and it was only in the
-South that the vast shadowed retreats formed by
-porches and second-story balconies proved a happy
-adaptation to the climate. Again: Greek architecture
-was an architecture of exteriors, designed
-for people who spent the greater part of the year
-out of doors. With no temple ritual comparable
-to the services of the church or cathedral, the
-Greeks lavished their attention upon externals, and
-as a great admirer of the Greeks, Sir Reginald Blomfield
-well says, “may have been more successful with
-the outside of their buildings than with the inside.”
-To fail with the interior in a northern climate is to
-fail with the essentials of a habitation; and these
-vast rooms, for all their ornament, too often remained
-bleak.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[64]</span></p>
-
-<p>Even on the esthetic side, the Greek style of building
-was not a full-blown success. With all their
-strict arrangement of the classic orders, with all
-their nice proportions, the muted white exteriors
-resembled a genuine Greek temple in the way that a
-sepia photograph would represent a sunrise&mdash;the
-warm tones, the colors, the dancing procession of
-sculptures were absent; it was a thinned and watered
-Greece that they called to mind. Indeed, the disciples
-of the Age of Reason and white perukes would
-have been horrified, I have no doubt, at the “barbarism”
-of the original Greek temples, as they would
-doubtless also have been at the meanness of the
-dwellings in which Pericles or Thucydides must have
-lived. Once the temple-house ceased to be a stage
-upon which the myth of classicism could be enacted,
-it ceased also to be a home. For who wishes to
-live in a temple? That is a spiritual exercise we
-do not demand even of a priest. Small wonder that
-the temple lingered longest in the South, where,
-down to the Civil War, gangs of slaves supported the
-dignity of the masters and a large household diminished
-the chilly sense of solitude.</p>
-
-<p>It was in public architecture that the early
-republic succeeded best, and it was here that its<span class="pagenum">[65]</span>
-influence lingered longest, for down to 1840 well-designed
-buildings in the classic mode, like the Sub-Treasury
-building in New York, were still put up.
-The work of McComb in New York, Hoadley in Connecticut,
-Latrobe in Pennsylvania and Maryland, to
-mention only a few of the leading architects, represents
-the high-water mark of professional design in
-America; and the fact that in spite of the many hands
-that worked upon it the Capitol at Washington is
-still a fairly coherent structure is a witness to the
-strength of their tradition. For all its minor felicities,
-however, we must not make the mistake of the
-modern revivalists, like Mr. Fiske Kimball, who urge
-the acceptance of the classic tradition in America as
-a foundation for a general modern style. Form and
-function are too far divorced in the classic mode to
-permit the growth of an architecture which will
-proceed on all fours in houses and public buildings,
-and factories and barns; moreover, there are too
-many new structures in the modern world which the
-builders of Rome or the Renaissance have not even
-dimly anticipated. In medieval building the town
-hall is a different sort of building from the cathedral:
-using the same elements, perhaps, it nevertheless
-contrives an altogether different effect. In the<span class="pagenum">[66]</span>
-architecture of the early republic, on the other hand,
-the treasury building might be a church, and the
-church might be a mansion, for any external differentiation
-one can observe&mdash;in fact, the only ecclesiastical
-feeling that goes with the churches of the time
-is a cold deism, or an equally cold Protestant faith
-which has lost entirely the memories and associations
-of the intervening centuries. This sort of
-architecture achieves order and dignity, not by composing
-differences, but by canceling them. Its
-standards do not inhere in the building, but are laid
-on outside of it. When the purpose of the structure
-happens to conform to the style, the result
-may be admirable in every way. When it does not
-happen to conform the result is tedious and
-banal; and, to tell the truth, a great deal of the
-architecture of the early republic is tedious and
-banal.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>One further effect of the classic mode has still
-to be noted: the introduction of formal city design,
-by the French engineer, Major L’Enfant, in the laying
-out of Washington. Stirred by the memory of<span class="pagenum">[67]</span>
-the grand design of Paris under Louis XIV, with
-its radiating avenues that cut through the city in
-the way that riding lanes cut through the hunting
-forest, L’Enfant sought to superimpose a dignified
-pattern upon the rectangular plan provided
-by the commissioners of Washington. By putting
-the major public buildings in key positions, by providing
-for a proper physical relation between the
-various departments of the government, by planning
-spacious avenues of approach, culminating in
-squares, triangles, and round-points, Major L’Enfant
-gave great dignity to the new capital city, and
-even though in the years that followed his plan was
-often ignored and overridden, it still maintained a
-monumental framework for the administrative buildings
-of the American State.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, if Washington has the coherence
-of a formal plan, it also has its abstractness: contrived
-to set off and serve the buildings of the
-government, it exercised no control over domestic
-building, over business, over the manifold economic
-functions of the developing city. The framework was
-excellent, if cities could live by government alone.
-By laying too much stress on formal order, the
-exponents of classic taste paved the way for the all<span class="pagenum">[68]</span>
-too formal order of the gridiron plan, and since the
-gridiron development was suited to hasty commercial
-exploitation, while the mode of Washington
-was not, it was in this mold that the architecture of
-the nineteenth century was cast.</p>
-
-<p>Within a short while after its introduction in New
-York in 1811 the effects of the rectangular streets
-and rectangular lots became evident; whereas the
-prints of New York before 1825 show a constant
-variety in the elevation and layout of houses, those
-after this date resemble more and more standardized
-boxes. Long monotonous streets that terminated
-nowhere, filled by rows of monotonous houses&mdash;this
-was the net contribution of the formal plan. Classical
-taste was not responsible for these enormities&mdash;but
-on the whole it did nothing to check them, and
-since the thrifty merchants of New York could not
-understand L’Enfant’s plan for Washington, they
-seized upon that part of it which was intelligible:
-its regularity, its appearance of order.</p>
-
-<p>With the new forces that were at work on the
-American scene, with the disintegration of classical
-culture under the combined influence of pioneer enterprise,
-mechanical invention, overseas commerce,
-and the almost religious cult of utilitarianism, all<span class="pagenum">[69]</span>
-this was indeed inevitable. What happened to the
-proud, Roman-patterned republic of 1789 is a
-matter of common knowledge. Benjamin Latrobe,
-the British architect who contributed so much to the
-Capitol at Washington&mdash;including a new order of
-corn stalks and tobacco leaves&mdash;was a witness to
-the disintegration of the age and the dissolution
-of its world of ideas; and there is a familiar ring
-to his commentary upon it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“I remember [he says in his autobiography] the
-time when I was over head and ears in love with Man
-in a State of Nature.... Social Compacts were
-my hobbies; the American Revolution&mdash;I ask its pardon,
-for it deserves better company&mdash;was a sort of
-dream of the Golden Age; and the French Revolution
-was the Golden Age itself. I should be ashamed
-to confess all this if I had not a thousand companions
-in my kaleidoscopic amusement, and those generally
-men of ardent, benevolent, and well-informed
-minds and excellent hearts. Alas! experience has
-destroyed the illusion, the kaleidoscope is broken,
-and all the tinsel of scenery that glittered so delightfully
-is translated and turned to raggedness.
-A dozen years’ residence at the Republican court of<span class="pagenum">[70]</span>
-Washington had affected wonderfully the advance
-of riper years.”</p></div>
-
-<p>Major L’Enfant’s plan for Washington was the
-last gasp, it seems to me, of the classical order;
-Jefferson’s University of Virginia was perhaps its
-most perfect consummation, for Jefferson had
-planned for the life of the institution as well as for
-the shell which was to contain it. Before the nineteenth
-century was long under way men’s minds
-ceased to move freely within the classical idolum;
-and by 1860 the mood was obliterated and a large
-part of the work had been submerged or destroyed.
-The final ironic commentary upon the dignity and
-austerity of the earlier temples is illustrated in a
-house in Kennebunkport, Maine; for there the serene,
-pillared façade is broken up in the rear by a
-later, and alas! a necessary addition: a two-story
-bow-window projected far enough beyond the eaves
-to give a little light to the occupants of the rooms!</p>
-
-<p>In sum, there was a pathetic incompatibility in
-this architecture between need and achievement, between
-pretensions and matter-of-fact&mdash;a rigid opposition
-to common sense that a vernacular, however
-playful, would never countenance. These temples<span class="pagenum">[71]</span>
-were built with the marmoreal gesture of eternity;
-they satisfied the desire and fashion of the moment;
-and today their ghosts parade before us, brave but
-incredible.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[75]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_FOUR">CHAPTER FOUR<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE DIASPORA OF THE PIONEER</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>From the standpoint of architecture, the early
-part of the nineteenth century was a period of disintegration.
-The gap between sheer utility and art,
-which the Renaissance had emphasized, was widened
-with the coming of machinery. That part of architecture
-which was touched by industrialism became
-crude beyond belief: the new mills and factories were
-usually packing boxes, lacking in light and ventilation,
-and the homes of the factory workers, when
-they were not the emptied houses of merchants and
-tradesmen, made to serve a dozen families instead of
-the original one, were little more than covered pens,
-as crowded as a cattle market. At the same time that
-the old forms were undermined by the new methods
-of mechanical production, a sentimental longing to
-retain those forms, just because they were old, seized
-men’s minds; and so industrialism and romanticism
-divided the field of architecture between them.</p>
-
-<p>It was no accident that caused romanticism and
-industrialism to appear at the same time. They<span class="pagenum">[76]</span>
-were rather the two faces of the new civilization, one
-looking towards the past, and the other towards the
-future; one glorifying the new, the other clinging to
-the old; industrialism intent on increasing the physical
-means of subsistence, romanticism living in a
-sickly fashion on the hollow glamour of the past.
-The age not merely presented these two aspects; it
-sought to enjoy each of them. Where industrialism
-took root, the traditions of architecture were disregarded;
-where romanticism flourished, on the other
-hand, in the mansions, public buildings, and
-churches, architecture became capricious and absurd,
-and it returned to a past that had never existed.
-Against the gross callousness which a Bounderby
-exhibited toward beauty and amenity, there was only
-the bland piety of a Pecksniff.</p>
-
-<p>The dream that is dying and the dream that is
-coming to birth do not stand in sequence, but mingle
-as do the images in a dissolving view; and during the
-very years that the architecture of the Renaissance,
-both in Europe and America, achieved new heights
-of formal design, the first factories were being
-planted in Staffordshire and Yorkshire, the Duke of
-Bridgewater built his famous canal, and Horace
-Walpole designed his “Gothic” mansion on Strawberry<span class="pagenum">[77]</span>
-Hill. The coincidence of industrialism and
-romanticism is just as emphatic in America as in
-England; and it is not without historic justice that
-the architect who in 1807 designed the chapel of St.
-Mary’s Seminary in Baltimore, after the Gothic
-fashion, successfully introduced a steam pumping
-system in Philadelphia’s waterworks. While the
-industrial buildings of the period represented nothing
-but a lapse from the current vernacular, due to
-haste and insufficient resources, romantic architecture
-was a positive influence; and it will perhaps best
-serve our purpose to examine the romantic heritage
-in its pristine form, rather than in the work of disciples
-like Latrobe, whose American practice is dated
-about two generations later.</p>
-
-<p>The author of The Castle of Otranto had a perverse
-and wayward interest in the past; and the
-spirit he exhibited in both his novel and his country
-home was typical of the romantic attitude everywhere.
-What attracted Walpole to the Gothic style
-was little more than the phosphorescence of decay:
-he summoned up the ghosts of the Middle Ages but
-not the guilds; and instead of admiring the soundness
-of medieval masonry, those who followed directly
-in his path were affected rather by the spectacle of<span class="pagenum">[78]</span>
-its dilapidation, so that the production of authentic
-ruins became one of the chief efforts of the eighteenth-century
-landscape gardener.</p>
-
-<p>It is not a great step from building a ruin to
-building a mansion that is little better than a ruin.
-While Walpole defended Strawberry Hill by saying
-he did not aim to make his house so Gothic as to
-exclude convenience, it happened again and again
-that the picturesque was the enemy of simple honesty
-and necessity; and just as Walpole himself in his
-refectory used wall paper that imitated stucco, so
-did other owners and builders use plaster and hangings
-and wall paper and carpet to cover up defects
-of construction. Towers that no one ever climbed,
-turrets that no one could enter, and battlements
-that no one rose to defend, took the place of the
-classic orders. The drawbridge-and-moat that embellished
-Mr. Wemmick’s villa in Great Expectations
-was not a wild conceit of Dickens but a relic of Walpole
-and his successors.</p>
-
-<p>As a disguise for mean or thoughtless workmanship,
-the application of antique “style” was the
-romantic contribution to architecture; and it served
-very handily during the period of speculative building
-and selling that accompanied the growth of the<span class="pagenum">[79]</span>
-new industrial towns. Even where style did not conceal
-commercial disingenuousness, it covered up a
-poverty of imagination in handling the elements of a
-building. Gothic touches about doors and the exterior
-of windows, and a heap of bric-a-brac and
-curios on the inside, softened the gauntness and
-bareness of this architecture, or rather, distracted
-attention from them. Curiosity was the dominant
-mood of the time, acquisitiveness its principal impulse,
-and comfort its end. Many good things
-doubtless came out of this situation; but architecture
-was not one of them.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Modern industrialism began to take root in America
-after the War of Independence, and its effect
-was twofold: it started up new villages which centered
-about the waterfall or the iron mine and
-had scarcely any other concern than industry; at
-the same time, by cutting canals which tapped the
-interior, it drew life away from the smaller provincial
-ports and concentrated commerce and population
-in great towns like Boston, Philadelphia, and
-New York. In New England, as in the English<span class="pagenum">[80]</span>
-Cotswolds from Whitney to Chalford, the mechanical
-regime was humanized by the presence of an
-older civilization, and the first generation of factory
-hands were farmers’ lads and lasses who neither lost
-nor endangered their independence; but where the
-factory depended upon paupers or immigrants, as
-it did in the big towns and in some of the unsettled
-parts of the country, the community relapsed into
-a barbarism which affected the masters as well as
-the hands. There was more than a difference in
-literary taste between the Corinths and Bethels named
-by an earlier generation and the Mechanicsvilles that
-followed them.</p>
-
-<p>The chief watchwords of the time were progress
-and expansion. The first belonged to the pioneer
-in industry who opened up new areas for mechanical
-invention and applied science; the second, to the land
-pioneer; and between these two resourceful types
-the old ways, were they good or bad, were scrapped,
-and the new ways, were they good or bad, were
-adopted. Both land pioneering and industrial
-pioneering were essentially subdivisions of one occupation,
-mining; and, following the clue opened by
-Messrs. Geddes and Branford, one may say with
-Professor Adshead that the nineteenth century<span class="pagenum">[81]</span>
-witnessed “the great attack of the miner on the
-peasant.”</p>
-
-<p>Mechanical industry owes its great development
-and progress to the work of the woodman and
-the miner: the first type of worker takes the bent
-sapling and develops the lathe or “bodger” which
-is still to be found in the remote parts of the Chiltern
-Hills in England, while from the mine itself
-not merely comes the steam engine, first used for
-pumping out water, but likewise the railway. The
-perpetual débris amid which the miner lives forms
-a capital contrast with the ordered culture, the careful
-weeding and cutting, of field and orchard: almost
-any sort of habitation is an advance upon the
-squalor of the pithead; and it is not a mere chance
-that the era devoted to mining and all its accessory
-manufactures was throughout the western world
-the dingiest and dirtiest that has yet befouled the
-earth. Choked by his own débris, or stirred by the
-exhaustion of minerals, the miner’s community runs
-down&mdash;and he departs.</p>
-
-<p>The name pioneer has a romantic color; but in
-America the land pioneer mined the forests and the
-soil, and the industry pioneer almost as ruthlessly
-mined the human resources, and when the pay-dirt<span class="pagenum">[82]</span>
-got sallow and thin, they both moved on. Longfellow’s
-allusion to the “bivouac of life” unconsciously
-points to the prevailing temper; for even
-those who remained in the older American centers
-were affected by the pioneer’s malaise and unsettlement;
-and they behaved as if at any moment they
-might be called to the colors and sent westward.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the vivid promises of Mechanical Progress
-and Manifest Destiny the realities of an ordered
-society thinned into a pale vapor. In many little
-communities Mechanical Societies were formed for
-the propagation of the utilitarian faith: industrialism
-with its ascetic ritual of unsparing work, its
-practice of thrift, its renunciation of the arts,
-gathered to itself the religious zeal of Protestantism.
-The erection of factories, the digging of canals, the
-location of furnaces, the building of roads, the devising
-of inventions, not merely exhausted a great part
-of the available capital; even more, it occupied the
-energy and imagination of the more vigorous spirits.
-Two generations before, Thomas Jefferson could
-lay out and develop the estate of Monticello; now,
-with many of Jefferson’s capacities, Poe could only
-dream about the fantastic Domain of Arnheim.
-The society around Poe had no more use for an<span class="pagenum">[83]</span>
-architectural imagination than the Puritans had for
-decorative images; the smoke of the factory-chimney
-was incense, the scars on the landscape were as the
-lacerations of a saint, and the mere multiplication of
-gaunt sheds and barracks was a sign of progress,
-and therefore an earnest of perfection.</p>
-
-<p>Did ever so many elements of disintegration come
-together at one time and place before? The absence
-of tradition and example raised enough difficulties
-in Birmingham and Manchester and Lyons
-and Essen; but in America it was accentuated by
-the restless march of those pioneers who, in the
-words of a contemporary economist, “leave laws,
-education and the arts, all the essential elements of
-civilization, behind them.” What place could architecture
-fill in these squatter communities? It could
-diminish the hardships of living; it could grease the
-channels of gain; and it could demolish or “improve”
-so much of the old as it could not understand, as
-Bulfinch’s Court House in Newburyport was improved,
-and as many a fine city residence was swept
-away under the tide of traffic.</p>
-
-<p>These were the days when the log cabin flourished;
-but it did not remain long enough in place to become
-the well-wrought and decorative piece of rustic<span class="pagenum">[84]</span>
-architecture that the better sort of peasant hut, done
-with the same materials, became in Russia. A
-genuine architectural development might have led
-from a crude log cabin to a finished one, from a bare
-cabin to an enriched and garnished one, and so,
-perhaps, in the course of a century or so, to a
-fine country architecture and a great native art
-of wood carving comparable to that of the Russian
-sculptors today. In America, however, the pioneer
-jumped baldly from log cabin to White House, or
-its genteel and scroll-sawed equivalent; and the
-arts inherent in good building never had a chance to
-develop. With the animus of the miner in back of
-everything the pioneer attempted, the pioneer’s
-architecture was all false-work and scantling.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>The first contribution to the pioneer’s comfort
-was Franklin’s ingenious stove (1745). After that
-came a number of material appliances. Central
-heating gave the American house a Roman standard
-of comfort, the astral-oil lamp captivated Edgar
-Poe; and cooking stoves, gas-lighting, permanent
-bathtubs, and water-closets made their way into the<span class="pagenum">[85]</span>
-better sort of house in the Eastern cities before the
-middle of the nineteenth century. In the development
-of the city itself, the gridiron plan was added
-to the list of labor-saving devices. Although the
-gridiron plan had the same relation to natural conditions
-and fundamental social needs as a paper
-constitution has to the living customs of a people,
-the simplicity of the gridiron plan won the heart of
-the pioneer. Its rectangular blocks formed parcels
-of land which he could sell by the front foot and
-gamble with as easily as if he were playing cards,
-and deeds of transfer could be drawn up hastily
-with the same formula for each plot; moreover, the
-least competent surveyor, without thought or knowledge,
-could project the growth of New Eden’s streets
-and avenues into an interminable future. In nineteenth-century
-city planning the engineer was the
-willing servant of the land monopolist; and he provided
-a frame for the architect&mdash;a frame in which
-we still struggle today&mdash;where site-value counted for
-everything, and sight-value was not even an afterthought.</p>
-
-<p>In street layout and land subdivision no attention
-was paid to the final use to which the land would be
-put; but the most meticulous efforts were made to<span class="pagenum">[86]</span>
-safeguard its immediate use, namely, land-speculation.
-In order to further this use hills were graded,
-swamps and ponds filled, and streets laid out before
-these expenditures could be borne by the people
-who, in the end, were to profit by or suffer from
-them. It was no wonder that the newer towns like
-Cincinnati, St. Louis, and Chicago by the middle
-of the century had forfeited to the gambler in real
-estate, to pay the cost of street improvements, generous
-tracts of land which the original planners had
-set aside as civic centers. Planned by men who still
-retained some of the civic vision of the early republic,
-the commercial city speedily drifted into the
-hands of people who had no more civic scruples than
-the keeper of a lottery.</p>
-
-<p>The gridiron plan had one other defect which
-was accounted a virtue by the pioneer, and still is
-shared by those who have not profited by the intervening
-century’s experience. With its avenues that
-encompassed swamps and wildernesses, with its
-future growth forecast for at least a hundred years,
-the complete city plan captivated the imagination.
-Scarcely any American town was so mean that it
-did not attempt to grow faster than its neighbor,
-faster perhaps than New York. Only by the accumulation<span class="pagenum">[87]</span>
-of more and more people could its colossal
-city plan and its inflated land values be realized. If
-the older cities of the seaboard were limited in their
-attempts to become metropolises by the fact that
-their downtown sections were originally laid out for
-villages, the villages of the middle west labored under
-just the opposite handicap; they had frequently acquired
-the framework of a metropolis before they
-had passed out of the physical state of a village.
-The gridiron plan was a sort of hand-me-down which
-the juvenile city was supposed to grow into and fill.
-That a city had any other purpose than to attract
-trade, to increase land values, and to grow is something
-that, if it uneasily entered the mind of an
-occasional Whitman, never exercised any hold upon
-the minds of the majority of our countrymen. For
-them, the place where the great city stands <em>is</em> the
-place of stretched wharves, and markets, and ships
-bringing goods from the ends of the earth; that,
-and nothing else.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>With business booming and vanishing, with people
-coming and going, with land continually changing<span class="pagenum">[88]</span>
-hands, what encouragement was there for the stable
-achievements of architecture? In vain does the
-architect antic and grimace to conceal his despair;
-his business is to put on a front. If he is not a
-Pecksniff at heart, he will at any rate have to serve
-Mr. Veneering. A guide book of 1826 refers to a
-Masonic Hall “somewhat in the Gothic style”; and
-we can characterize all the buildings of the period
-by saying that they were “somewhat” like architecture&mdash;a
-little more than scenery, a little less than
-solids.</p>
-
-<p>For a while it seemed as if the Gothic revival
-might give the prevailing cast to nineteenth-century
-building; for if this mode was adopted at first
-because it was picturesque and historic it was later
-reënforced by the conviction that it was a natural
-and scientific mode of construction, that it stood
-for growth and function, as against the arbitrary
-character of the classic work. The symbols of the
-organic world were rife in the thought of this period,
-for in the sphere of thought biology was supplanting
-physics, and Gothic architecture was supposed peculiarly
-to be in the line of growth, while that of the
-Renaissance cut across and, heretically, denied the
-principle of organic development. Unfortunately<span class="pagenum">[89]</span>
-the process of disintegration had gone so far that no
-one current of thought had the power to dominate;
-and the Gothic style proved to be only the first of a
-number of discordant influences, derived from industry,
-from history, from archæology.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the chief sign that bears witness to the
-disintegration of architecture during the formative
-days of the pioneer is eclecticism; but there is still
-another&mdash;the attempt to justify the industrial
-process by using solely the materials it had created
-in abundance. In discussing the plans for the
-Smithsonian Institution, Robert Dale Owen observed
-that “of late years a rival material, from
-the mine, seems encroaching on these [stone, clay,
-wood] and the next generation may see, arising on
-our continent, villages, or it may be cities, of
-iron.”</p>
-
-<p>What Owen’s generation actually did see, apart
-from sheet-iron façades and zinc cornices, was the
-Crystal Palace, which was built in New York in
-1853 in imitation of London’s exhibition hall of
-1850. Ruskin described the original Crystal Palace,
-with sardonic justice, as a magnified conservatory;
-and that is about all that can be said for either
-building. As exercises in technique they doubtless<span class="pagenum">[90]</span>
-taught many lessons to the iron masters and engineers;
-but they had scarcely anything to contribute
-to architecture. A later generation built
-the train sheds for their smoky railways on this pattern;
-but the precedent lingers today chiefly in
-subway kiosks and window-fronts, and even here it
-has created no fresh forms for itself&mdash;unless the
-blank expanse of a plate-glass window framed in
-metallic grilles can be called a fresh form.</p>
-
-<p>The growth of eclecticism, on the other hand, had
-by the middle of the century given the American city
-the aspect of a museum and the American countryside
-a touch of the picture-book. Washington
-Irving’s Sunnyside and the first Smithsonian building
-were in the predominant Gothic mode; but Poe
-described the mansion of a not altogether imaginary
-Arnheim as semi-Gothic, semi-Saracenic; and the old
-Tombs prison in New York got its name from the
-Egyptian character of its façade. Who can doubt
-that the design for a <em>Byzantine</em> cottage, shown in
-The American Cottage Builder (1854), was somewhere
-carried out?</p>
-
-<p>Nettled by the criticism that America was not
-Europe, the pioneer determined to bring Europe
-to his doors. Relatively few American architects<span class="pagenum">[91]</span>
-during the period, however, had been abroad, and
-still fewer had been there to any purpose; even men
-of culture and imagination like Hawthorne and Emerson
-were not at home in the physical environment of
-Europe, however intimate they were with its mind.
-The buildings that were erected under the inspiration
-of European tours only accentuated the barbarism
-of the American scene and the poverty of the architect’s
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>A good part of our architecture today still exhibits
-the parvenu’s uneasiness, and is by turns
-French, Italian, or more or less obsolete English;
-but we do not, perhaps, realize with what a difference;
-for photography and archæological research
-now make it possible to produce buildings which have
-all the virtues of the original except originality,
-whereas the earlier, illiterate development of foreign
-examples, rehearsed in memory, resulted in a conglomerate
-form which resembled nothing so much,
-perhaps, as P. T. Barnum’s mermaid.</p>
-
-<p>If the Crystal Palace represents the extreme of industrial
-art, Colonel Colt’s Armsmear represents the
-opposite&mdash;untutored romanticism. Armsmear was
-built near Hartford, between 1855 and 1862. A
-writer in the Art Journal for 1876 calls this mansion<span class="pagenum">[92]</span>
-a “characteristic type of the unique.” It was a
-“long, grand, impressive, contradictory, beautiful,
-strange thing.... An Italian villa in stone, massive,
-noble, refined, yet not carrying out any decided principles
-of architecture, it is like the mind of its originator,
-bold and unusual in its combinations....
-There is no doubt it is a little Turkish among other
-things, on one side it has domes, pinnacles, and light,
-lavish ornamentation, such as Oriental taste delights
-in.... Yet, although the villa is Italian and cosmopolitan,
-the feeling is English. It is an English
-home in its substantiality, its home-like and comfortable
-aspects.”</p>
-
-<p>It is, alas! impossible to illustrate in these pages
-this remarkable specimen of American architecture;
-but in a lecture on the Present and Future Prospects
-of Chicago (1846), I have discovered its exact
-literary equivalent, and it will sum up the crudity
-and cultural wistfulness of the period perhaps better
-than any overt description:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>“I thank you [apologizes the lecturer] for the
-patience you have manifested on this occasion, and
-promise never more to offend in like manner, so long.
-I have now, as Cowper observes&mdash;<span class="pagenum">[93]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘Roved for fruit,
-</div><div class="indent0">Roved far, and gathered much....’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“And can, I think with Scott, surely say that&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘To his promise just
-</div><div class="indent0">Vich-Alpine has discharged his trust.’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“I propose now, gentlemen, to leave you at Carlangtoghford,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘And thou must keep thee with thy sword.’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“Let me say to you on this occasion, as Campbell
-does on another:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘Wave, Munich! all your banners wave!
-</div><div class="indent0">And charge with all your chivalry.’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“And should you in the contest fall, remember with
-old Homer&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘Such honours Ilion to her hero paid,
-</div><div class="indent0">And peaceful slept the mighty Hector’s shade.’
-</div></div></div></div>
-
-<p>“Allow me now to close in one of Scott’s beautiful
-strains:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container1">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="indentquote0a">‘Charge, Chester, charge! On, Stanley, on!
-</div><div class="indent0">Were the last words of Marmion.’”
-</div></div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><em>That</em> was American architecture between 1820
-and the Civil War&mdash;a collection of tags, thrown at
-random against a building. Architectural forms
-were brought together by a mere juxtaposition of<span class="pagenum">[94]</span>
-materials, held in place by neither imagination nor
-logic. There are a number of honorable exceptions
-to this rule, for architects like Renwick, who designed
-St. Patrick’s Cathedral, and Upjohn, who built Trinity
-Church, had a more sincere understanding of the
-conventional task; and by any standard of esthetic
-decency the old Gothic building of New York University,
-on Washington Square, was a far finer
-structure than the bulky office building that has
-taken its place. Nevertheless, this saving remnant
-does not alter the character of the great mass of
-work, any more than the occasionally excellent cast-iron
-balconies, brought over from the London of the
-Regency, alter the depressing character of the great
-mass of domestic building. In elevation and interior
-treatment, these ante-bellum buildings were
-all what-nots. Souvenirs of architecture, their
-forms dimly recall the monuments of the past without
-in any sense taking their place.</p>
-
-<p>To tell the truth, a pall had fallen over the industrial
-city: contemporary writers in the ’forties
-and ’fifties speak of the filth and smoke, and without
-doubt the chocolate brownstone front was introduced
-as a measure of protective coloration. In
-this dingy environment, men turned to nature as a<span class="pagenum">[95]</span>
-refuge against the soiled and bedraggled works of
-man’s creation; and as the creeping factory and
-railroad train removed Nature farther from their
-doors, the park was introduced as a more convenient
-means of escape. The congested capitals of Europe
-had already learnt this lesson; traveled Americans,
-like William Cullen Bryant, brought it home; and
-Central Park, planned in 1853, was the first of the
-great landscape parks to serve as a people’s pleasance.
-Conceived in contrast to the deflowered landscape
-and the muddled city, the park alone re-created
-the traditions of civilization&mdash;of man naturalized,
-and therefore at home, of nature humanized, and
-therefore enriched. And even today our parks are
-what our cities should be, and are not.</p>
-
-<p>By 1860 the halcyon day of American civilization
-was over; the spirit had lingered in letters and
-scholarship, in the work of Parkman and Motley
-and Emerson and Melville and Thoreau, but the sun
-had already sunk below the horizon, and what seemed
-a promise was in reality an afterglow. By the time
-the Civil War came, architecture had recorded faithfully
-the social transformation; it was sullen, grim,
-gauche, unstable. While in almost every age architecture
-has an independent value to the spirit, so<span class="pagenum">[96]</span>
-that we can rejoice in Chartres or Winchester even
-though we have abandoned the Roman faith, in the
-early industrial period architecture is reduced to
-a symptom. Romanticism had not restored the past,
-nor had industrialism made the future more welcome.
-Architecture wandered between two worlds, “one
-dead, the other powerless to be born.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[99]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_FIVE">CHAPTER FIVE<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE DEFEAT OF ROMANTICISM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>Between 1860 and 1890, some of the forces that
-were latent in industrialism were realized in American
-architecture. Where the first pioneers had fared
-timidly, hampered by insufficient resources, the
-generation that had been stimulated by war industries
-and profiteering, by the discovery of petroleum
-and natural gas, by the spanning of the American
-continent and by cable communication with Europe,
-rioted over its new-found wealth.</p>
-
-<p>“The Song of the Broad-Ax” still faintly lingered
-on the Pacific slopes; but the land pioneer was
-rapidly giving way to the pioneer in industry; and
-for perhaps the first time during the century, the
-surplus of capital outran the immediate demand for
-new plant and equipment. The Iron Age reached its
-peak of achievement in a series of great bridges, beginning
-with the Eads Bridge at St. Louis; and
-romanticism made a last stand. It will pay us, perhaps,
-to take one last look at the romantic effort,<span class="pagenum">[100]</span>
-in order to see how impossible and hopeless was the
-task it set out to perform.</p>
-
-<p>In England, the romantic movement in architecture
-had made the return to the Middle Ages a
-definite symbol of social reform: in Ruskin’s mind
-it was associated with the restoration of a medieval
-type of polity, something like a reformed manor,
-while with Morris it meant cutting loose from the
-machine and returning to the meticulous handicraft
-of the town-guilds. In America, the romantic movement
-lacked these social and economic implications;
-and while it is not unfair to say that the literary
-expression of English romanticism was on the whole
-much better than the architecture, in the proportion
-that The Stones of Venice was better than the
-Ashmolean Museum or the Albert Memorial, the
-reverse is true on this side of the Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p>Inarticulate as H. H. Richardson, the chief exponent
-of American romanticism, was, it seemed for
-a while as if he might breast the tide of mechanical
-industry and create for a good part of the scene a
-sense of stability and harmony which it had all too
-plainly lacked. In relation to his age, however,
-Richardson was in the biological sense a “sport”;
-surrounded by jerry-builders, who had degraded the<span class="pagenum">[101]</span>
-craft of building, and engineers who ignored it, he
-was perhaps the last of the great medieval line of
-master-masons.</p>
-
-<p>Richardson began his career in America directly
-after the Civil War. Almost the first of the new
-generation of Americans to be trained by the Ecole
-des Beaux Arts, he brought back to America none
-of those atrocious adaptations of the French
-Renaissance like the New York, Philadelphia, and
-Boston Post Offices. On the contrary, he had come
-under the influence of Viollet-le-Duc; and for about
-ten years he struggled with incongruous forms and
-materials in the anomalous manner known as Free
-Gothic. The end of this period of experiment came
-in 1872, when he received the commission for Trinity
-Church in Boston; and although it was not until
-ten years later that he saw any Romanesque buildings
-other than in photographs&mdash;for he had not
-traveled during his student-years in Paris&mdash;it was
-in this sturdy mode that he cast his best work.
-Richardson was not a decorator, but a builder: in
-going back to Romanesque precedent, with its round
-arches and massive stone members, he was following
-out a dictum of Viollet-le-Duc’s: “only primitive
-sources supply the energy for a long career.” Turning<span class="pagenum">[102]</span>
-away from “applied Gothic,” Richardson started
-to build from the bottom up. So far had the art of
-masonry disappeared that in Trinity Church Richardson
-sometimes introduced struts and girders without
-any attempt to assimilate them in the composition;
-but as far as any single man could absorb and
-live with a vanished tradition, Richardson did.</p>
-
-<p>The proof of Richardson’s genius as a builder lies
-in the difference between the accepted drawings for
-Trinity Church and the finished building. His ideas
-altered with the progress of the work, and in almost
-every case the building itself is a vast improvement
-over the paper design. Moreover, in his capacity as
-master-mason, Richardson trained an able corps of
-craftsmen; and so pervasive was his influence that
-one still finds on houses Richardson never saw, the
-touches of delicate, leafy stone-carving he had introduced.
-With carving and sculpture, the other arts
-entered, and by his fine designs and exacting standards
-of work, Richardson elevated the position of
-the minor crafts, at the same time that he turned
-over unreservedly to men like John La Farge and
-Augustus St. Gaudens the major elements of decoration.</p>
-
-<p>Probably most people who know Richardson’s<span class="pagenum">[103]</span>
-name vaguely associate him with ecclesiastical work;
-but Richardson’s brand of romanticism was a genuine
-attempt to embrace the age, and in his long
-list of public works there are but five churches. If
-the Pittsburgh Court House and Trinity Church
-stand out as the hugest of his architectural conceptions,
-it is the smaller buildings that test the skill
-and imagination of the master, and the public
-libraries at North Easton, Malden, and Quincy,
-Mass., and some of the little railway stations in
-Massachusetts stand on an equally high level. Richardson
-pitted his own single powers against the
-barbarism of the Gilded Age; but, unlike his contemporaries
-in England, he did not turn his back
-upon the excellences of industrialism. “The things
-I want most to design,” he said to his biographer,
-“are a grain-elevator and the interior of a great
-river-steamboat.”</p>
-
-<p>In short, Richardson sought to dominate his age.
-So nearly did he succeed that in a symposium on
-the ten finest buildings in America, conducted by an
-architectural journal in the ’eighties, Richardson
-was given five. This was no easy victory, and, to
-tell the truth, it was only a partial one. The case
-of the State Capitol at Albany, which Richardson<span class="pagenum">[104]</span>
-and Eidlitz took in hand in 1878, after five million
-dollars had been squandered on it in the course of
-ten years’ misconstruction, scarcely caricatures the
-conditions under which the arts struggled to exist.
-Begun in the style of the Roman Renaissance, the
-building under Richardson’s impetuous touch began
-to take on Romanesque proportions, only to be legislated
-back into Renaissance by the offended lawgivers!</p>
-
-<p>William Morris Hunt, then at the height of
-his powers, was commissioned to paint two large
-mural compositions for the assembly chamber of
-this blessed building. So much time had been spent
-in mismanaging the structure that Hunt was given
-only two months to transfer his cartouche to the
-panels; but he worked heroically, and, as one of his
-biographers says, the work was a great triumph.
-Great, perhaps&mdash;but temporary! “The building
-had fallen into the hands of a political ring, and
-the poor construction was revealed in the leaking
-of the massive roof and the settling of the whole
-structure. Before ten years had passed, great portions
-of Hunt’s paintings flaked off, and what remained
-was walled up behind the rebuilding necessary
-to avert utter ruin.” In a period like this,<span class="pagenum">[105]</span>
-Richardson’s comparative success takes on heroic
-proportions.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>With the little eddies of eclecticism, with the rage
-for the Mansard roof, or the introduction of German
-Gothic, and, a little later, the taste for Queen Anne
-domesticity, there is scarcely any need to deal; they
-represented only the dispersion of taste and the collapse
-of judgment which marked the Gilded Age.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the time of the Chicago World’s Fair,
-Richardson had imitators, and they were not always
-mean ones. L. H. Buffington, in Minneapolis, had to
-his credit a number of buildings which would not,
-perhaps, have dishonored the master himself; but,
-as so often happens, the tags in Richardson’s work
-were easier to imitate than his spirit and inventiveness;
-and the chief marks of the style he created are
-the all-too-solid courses of rough stone, the round
-arch, the squat columns, and the contrasts in color
-between the light granite and the dark sandstone or
-serpentine. Mr. Montgomery Schuyler, an excellent
-architectural critic, once said, not without reason,
-that Richardson’s houses were not defensible except
-in a military sense; but one is tempted to read<span class="pagenum">[106]</span>
-into these ponderous forms partly the architect’s
-unconscious desire to combat the infirmity and jerry-building
-of his lower contemporaries, and partly his
-patron’s anxiety to have a seat of refuge against the
-uneasy proletariat. A new feudalism was entrenching
-itself behind the stockades of Homestead and
-the other steel-towns of the Pittsburgh district.
-Here was a mode of building, solid, formidable, at
-times almost brutal, that served the esthetic needs
-of the barons of coal and steel almost as well as
-the classic met those heroes who had survived the
-War of Independence.</p>
-
-<p>I have emphasized what was strong and fine in
-Richardson’s work in order to show how free it was
-from the minor faults of romanticism; and yet it
-reckoned without its host, and Richardson, alas!
-left scarcely a trace upon the period that followed.
-Romanticism was welcomed when it built churches;
-tolerated when it built libraries; petted when it built
-fine houses; but it could not go much farther.
-Richardson was a mason, and masonry was being
-driven out by steel; he was an original artist, and
-original art was being thrust into the background by
-connoisseurship and collection; he was a builder, and
-architecture was committing itself more and more<span class="pagenum">[107]</span>
-to the paper plan; he insisted upon building foursquare,
-and building was doomed more and more to
-<em>façaderie</em>. The very strength of Richardson’s buildings
-was a fatal weakness in the growing centers of
-commerce and industry. It takes more than a little
-audacity to tear down one of Richardson’s monuments,
-and so, rather ironically, they have held their
-own against the insurrections of traffic and realty
-speculation; but the difficulty of getting rid of these
-Romanesque structures only increased the demand
-for a more frail and facile method of construction.</p>
-
-<p>Romanticism met its great defeat in the office-building.
-By the use of the passenger elevator, first
-designed for an exhibition-tower adjacent to the
-Crystal Palace in 1853, it had become possible to
-raise the height of buildings to seven stories: the
-desire for ground-rents presently increased the
-height to ten. Beyond this, mere masonry could
-not go without thickening the supporting piers to
-such an extent that on a twenty-foot lot more than
-a quarter of the width would be lost on the lower
-floors. Richardson’s Marshall Field Building in
-Chicago was seven stories high; and that was about
-as far as solid stone or brick could climb without<span class="pagenum">[108]</span>
-becoming undignified and futile by its bulk. The
-possibilities of masonry and the possibilities of commercial
-gain through ground-rents were at loggerheads,
-and by 1888 masonry was defeated.</p>
-
-<p>Richardson, fortunately, did not live to see the
-undermining of the tradition he had founded and
-almost established. Within a decade of his death,
-however, only the empty forms of architecture remained,
-for the steel-cage of the engineer had become
-the new structural reality. By 1890 the
-ground-landlord had discovered, in the language of
-the pioneer’s favorite game, that “the roof’s the
-limit.” If that was so, why limit the roof? With
-this canny perception the skyscraper sprang into
-being.</p>
-
-<p>During this Gilded Age the standard of the best
-building had risen almost as high as it had been in
-America in any earlier period; but the mass of good
-building had relatively decreased; and the domestic
-dwellings in both city and country lost those final
-touches of craftsmanship that had lingered, here
-and there, up to the Civil War. In the awkward
-country villas that began to fill the still-remote
-suburbs of the larger cities, all sense of style and
-proportion were lost: the plan was marked by meaningless<span class="pagenum">[109]</span>
-irregularities; a dingy, muddy color spread
-over the wooden façades. There exists a huge and
-beautifully printed volume, of which, I believe, there
-are not more than a hundred copies, on the villas
-of Newport in 1876: the compiler thereof sought
-to satisfy the vanity of the original owners and
-the curiosity of a later generation; yet mid all these
-examples of the “novel” and the “unique,” there is
-not a single mansion that would satisfy any conceivable
-line of descendants.</p>
-
-<p>If the level of architecture was low in the country,
-it touched the bottom of the abyss in the city.
-As early as 1835 the multiple-family tenement had
-been introduced in New York as a means of producing
-congestion, raising the ground-rents, and
-satisfying in the worst possible way the need of the
-new immigrants for housing. The conditions of life
-in these tenements were infinitely lower than they
-had been in the most primitive farmhouse of the
-colonial period; their lack of light, lack of water,
-lack of sanitary facilities, and lack of privacy,
-created an admirable milieu for the propagation
-of vice and disease, and their existence in a period
-which was boasting loudly of the advance of science
-and industrialism shows, to say the least, how the<span class="pagenum">[110]</span>
-myths which inspired the age stood between the eye
-and reality, and obscured the actual state of the
-modern industrial community.</p>
-
-<p>To the disgrace of the architectural profession
-in America, the worst features of tenement-house
-construction were standardized in the so-called
-dumb-bell tenement which won the first prize in the
-model tenement-house competition of 1879; and the
-tenements which were designed after this pattern
-in the succeeding years combined a maximum lack
-of privacy with a minimum of light and air. The
-gridiron street-design, the narrow frontage, the deep
-lot, all conspired to make good housing difficult in
-the larger cities: within this framework good house-design,
-indeed, still is difficult. The dumb-bell tenement
-of the Gilded Age, however, raised bad housing
-into an art; and the acquisition of this art
-in its later developments is now one of the stigmata
-of “progress” in a modern American city. I
-say this without irony; the matter is too grave for
-jest.</p>
-
-<p>During these same ’seventies, the benefits of poor
-housing were extended in New York to those with
-money enough to afford something better: the Paris
-flat was introduced. The legitimate excuse for the<span class="pagenum">[111]</span>
-small apartment was the difficulty of obtaining
-household service, and the futility of keeping up
-large houses for small families: this, however, had
-nothing to do with the actual form that the apartment
-took, for, apart from the desire for congestion-rents,
-it is as easy to build apartments for two
-families as for twenty. The flat is a genuine convenience
-for the well-to-do visitor to a city; it gives
-him the atmosphere of a home without many of its
-major complications, and those who got the taste for
-this life in Paris were not altogether absurd in desiring
-to enjoy the same benefits in New York. Unfortunately,
-what suits a visitor does not necessarily
-meet the demands of a permanent resident: one may
-tolerate a blank wall for a week or a month without
-being depressed, particularly since a good part of
-a visitor’s time is spent outside his home; but to live
-year after year facing a blank wall or an equally-frowning
-façade opposite is to be condemned to the
-environment of a penitentiary.</p>
-
-<p>The result of building apartments in New York
-and elsewhere was not cheaper rents for smaller
-quarters: it was smaller quarters without the cheap
-rents. Those who wanted sunlight and a pleasant
-view paid a premium for it; those who did not get<span class="pagenum">[112]</span>
-either paid more than enough for what they got.
-The result of building apartments which would
-satisfy only a visitor was to make every family
-visitors: before the acute housing shortage, yearly
-removals to new premises were the only palliative
-that made their occupancy tolerable. The amount
-of wear and tear and waste, the loss of energy and
-money and good spirits, produced by the inability
-of the architect to design adequately under the
-pecuniary standards of the Gilded Age was colossal.
-The urban nomad in his own way was as great a
-spendthrift as the pioneer of the prairie. Both of
-them had been unable to create a permanent civilization;
-and both of them paid the price for it.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>During the first period of pioneering, mechanical
-improvements had affected the milieu of architecture,
-but not architecture itself, if one overlooks such ingenuities
-as the circular and octagon houses of the
-eighteen-thirties. Slowly, the actual methods of
-construction changed: the carpenter-builder, who had
-once performed every operation, gave way to the
-joiner, whose work profited by putty and paint,<span class="pagenum">[113]</span>
-curtains and carpets&mdash;to the plasterer, who covered
-up the raw imperfect frame&mdash;and to the plumber.
-Weird ornamental forms for doors and window-architraves,
-for moldings and pendants, were supplied
-to the builder by the catalogs of the planing
-and scroll-saw mills. Invention produced novelties
-of contortion in wood, unique in ugliness and imbecile
-in design. Like the zinc and iron statues that
-graced the buildings of the Centennial Exposition,
-these devices record the absorption of art in a vain
-technology.</p>
-
-<p>One need not dwell upon the results of all these
-miserable efforts, conceived in haste and aborted for
-profit: the phenomenon was common to industrial
-civilization at this period, and can be observed in
-Battersea and Manchester as well as in New York and
-Pittsburgh. Mr. Thomas Hardy, who was trained
-as an architect, wrote the esthetic apology for industrialism;
-and in proclaiming the rightness of our
-architectural deserts, one cannot help thinking that
-he transferred to the Wessex countryside a little of
-the horrible depression he must have acquired in
-London.</p>
-
-<p>“Gay prospects,” exclaimed Mr. Hardy, “wed
-happily with gay times; but, alas! if the times be<span class="pagenum">[114]</span>
-not gay! Men have more often suffered from the
-mockery of a place too smiling than from the oppression
-of surroundings oversadly tinged....
-Indeed, it is a question if the exclusive reign of orthodox
-beauty is not approaching its last quarter. The
-new vale in Tempe may be a gaunt waste in Thule:
-human souls may find themselves in closer harmony
-with external things wearing a somberness distasteful
-to our race when it was young. Shall we say
-that man has grown so accustomed to his spiritual
-Bastille that he no longer looks forward to, and
-even shrinks from, a casual emergence into unusual
-brightness?”</p>
-
-<p>Even the best work of the period is blighted with
-this sombreness: the fact that so many of Richardson’s
-buildings have the heavy air of a prison shows
-us that the Gilded Age was not, indeed, gay, and
-that a spiritual Black Friday perpetually threatened
-the calendar of its days.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>If the romantic movement in America proved that
-the architect could capture only a small part of the
-field, and go no further than the interests of privilege<span class="pagenum">[115]</span>
-allowed, the building of the Brooklyn Bridge
-showed how well industrialism could handle its problems
-when its purposes were not limited by the necessity
-for sloppy workmanship and quick turnover.
-The story of its building is a tribute to both science
-and humanity. When John Roebling, the designer
-of the bridge, died in the midst of his job, the business
-of construction was taken up by his son, and
-by his devotion to his task in season and out of
-season, Washington Roebling became an invalid.
-Confined to his house on Columbia Heights, for ten
-years the younger Roebling watched the work
-through a telescope, and directed it as a general
-would direct a battle. So goes the legend: it runs
-rather higher than the tales of mean prudence or
-mechanical skill which glorified Mr. Samuel Smiles’
-heroes.</p>
-
-<p>The bridge itself was a testimony to the swift
-progress of physical science. The strong lines of
-the bridge, and the beautiful curve described by its
-suspended cables, were derived from an elegant formula
-in mathematical physics&mdash;the elastic curve.
-If the architectural elements of the massive piers
-have perhaps too much the bare quality of engineering,
-if the pointed arches meet esthetic betrayal in<span class="pagenum">[116]</span>
-the flat solidity of the cornices, if, in short, the
-masonry does not sing as Richardson alone perhaps
-could have made it sing, the steel work itself makes
-up for this, by the architectural beauty of its pattern;
-so that beyond any other aspect of New York,
-I think, the Brooklyn Bridge has been a source of
-joy and inspiration to the artist. In the later
-bridges the spanning members are sturdier and the
-supporting piers and cables are lighter and less
-essential; and they suffer esthetically by the very
-ease of their triumph over the difficulties of engineering.</p>
-
-<p>All that the age had just cause for pride in&mdash;its
-advances in science, its skill in handling iron, its
-personal heroism in the face of dangerous industrial
-processes, its willingness to attempt the untried and
-the impossible&mdash;came to a head in the Brooklyn
-Bridge. What was grotesque and barbarous in industrialism
-was sloughed off in the great bridges.
-These avenues of communication are, paradoxically,
-the only enduring monuments that witness a period
-of uneasy industrial transition; and to this day they
-communicate a feeling of dignity, stability, and
-unwavering poise.</p>
-
-<p>The Brooklyn Bridge was opened in 1884; Richardson<span class="pagenum">[117]</span>
-died, after finishing the Pittsburgh Court
-House, in 1886. There was a short period during
-which the echoes of Richardson’s style resounded in
-the work of the Western architects; and then in
-New York two of Richardson’s own pupils, Messrs.
-McKim and White, who had caught the spirit of the
-period that was to follow the passing of the frontier,
-prepared an appropriate mold for its activities. By
-far the finest things in the late ’eighties are the
-shingled houses which Richardson and Stanford
-White and a few others developed for seaboard estates:
-they recovered the spirit of the early vernacular
-work, and continued the colonial tradition without
-even faintly recalling colonial forms. This
-new note, however, was scarcely sounded before it
-died out; and in the twenty years that followed the
-conflict between industrialism and romanticism was
-swallowed up and finally forgotten in the rise of a
-new mode. Richardson had not died too soon. The
-quality of mind and culture which shines through his
-work was opposed to nearly every manifestation of
-the period that succeeded him.</p>
-
-<p>From this time on, romanticism retained a place
-for itself only by forfeiting its claims to occupy the
-whole province of architecture. In churches and<span class="pagenum">[118]</span>
-college halls where the traditional tie with the Middle
-Ages had never perhaps been completely broken, its
-triumphs have been genuine; but although Mr. J. G.
-Rogers’ Harkness Memorial at Yale, or Messrs.
-Goodhue and Cram’s St. Thomas’ Church, for example,
-leave little to be desired in themselves, they
-have established no precedent for the hundred other
-kinds of building which the modern community requires;
-and it is not without significance that in his
-most recent efforts Mr. Goodhue, for one, had abandoned
-the molds of romanticism. Unlike Richardson,
-the surviving romanticists now demand a certain
-insulation from the modern world; the more intelligent
-exponents of the movement believe with Dr.
-Ralph Adams Cram that there is no hope for its
-achievement throughout the community without a
-return to “Walled Towns.”</p>
-
-<p>Such a retreat is the equivalent of surrender. To
-hold to Gothic precedent in the hope of re-creating
-the medieval community is to hope that an ancient
-bottle will turn potassium permanganate into claret.
-The romanticists have never fully faced the social
-and economic problems that attend their architectural
-solutions: the result is that they have been
-dependent upon assistance from the very forces and<span class="pagenum">[119]</span>
-institutions which, fundamentally, they aim to combat.
-Isolated on little islands, secure for the moment,
-romanticism must view the work on the mainland
-with a gesture of irate despair; and the only future
-it dares to face lies behind it!</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[123]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_SIX">CHAPTER SIX<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE IMPERIAL FAÇADE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>The decade between 1890 and 1900 saw the rise
-of a new period in American architecture. This
-period had, it is true, been dimly foreshadowed by
-the grandiose L’Enfant, but if the superficial forms
-resembled those of the early republic, and if the
-precedents of classic architecture again became a
-guide, the dawning age was neither a revival nor a
-continuation.</p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, fresh influences had entered.
-The generation of students who had studied in
-the Ecole des Beaux Arts after the Civil War was
-ready, at last, to follow the lone trail which Richard
-H. Hunt had blazed. Richardson’s most intimate
-disciples reacted against the stamp of his personality
-and sought a more neutral mode of expression,
-consecrated by established canons of good taste. On
-top of this, the introduction of steel-cage construction
-removed the necessity for solid masonry, and
-placed a premium upon the mask. The stage was
-set for a new act of the drama.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[124]</span></p>
-
-<p>All these influences shaped the style of our architecture
-when it arose; but the condition that gave
-it a substantial base was the rise of a new order in
-America’s economic life. Up to this time, the chief
-industrial problem had been to improve the processes
-of mechanical production and to stake out new areas
-for exploitation. One may compare these economic
-advances to the separate sorties of an army operating
-on a wide front: any lone adventurer might take
-his courage in his hands and exploit an invention, or
-sink an oil well, if he could find it. By 1890 the
-frontier had closed; the major resources of the
-country were under the control of the monopolist; it
-became more important to consolidate gains than
-freshly to achieve them. Separate lines of railroads
-were welded into systems; separate steel plants
-and oil plants were wrought into trusts; and where
-monopoly did not rest upon a foundation of natural
-advantage, the “gentleman’s agreement” began its
-service as a useful substitute. The popular movements
-which sought to challenge the forces of this
-new regime&mdash;the labor movement, socialism, populism&mdash;had
-neither analyzed the situation with sufficient
-care nor attracted the adherence of the majority.
-The defeat of Henry George as a local<span class="pagenum">[125]</span>
-political candidate was symbolic: by 1888 a humane
-thinker like Edward Bellamy had already accepted
-the defeat, had embraced the idea of the trust, and
-had conceived a comprehensive utopia on the basis of
-letting the process of monopoly go the limit, so that
-finally, by a mere yank of the levers, the vast economic
-organizations of the country would become
-the “property” of the people.</p>
-
-<p>The drift to the open lands came to a full pause.
-The land-empire had been conquered, and its overlords
-were waxing in power and riches: the name
-“millionaire” became the patent of America’s new
-nobility. With the shift from industry to finance
-went a shift from the producing towns to the spending
-towns: architecture came to dwell in the stock
-exchanges, the banks, the shops, and the clubs of the
-metropolis; if it sought the countryside at all, it
-established itself in the villas that were newly laid
-out on hill and shore in the neighborhood of the
-great cities. The keys to this period are opulence
-and magnitude: “money to burn.”</p>
-
-<p>These years witnessed what the Roman historian,
-Ferrero, has called a “<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">véritable recommencement
-d’histoire</i>.” In the new centers of privilege there
-arose a scale of living and a mode of architecture<span class="pagenum">[126]</span>
-which, with all its attendant miseries, depletions, and
-exploitations, recalled the Rome of the first and
-second centuries after Christ. It is needless to say
-that vast acres of buildings, factories, shops, homes,
-were erected which had no relation at all to the imperial
-regime; for not everyone participated in
-either the benefits or the depressions that attended
-the growth of monopoly; but the accent of this
-period, the dominant note, was an imperial one.
-While the commonplace building of the time cannot
-be ignored, it remains, so to say, out of the picture.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Hardly had the process of concentration and consolidation
-begun before the proper form manifested
-itself. The occasion for its appearance was the
-World’s Columbian Exposition, opened in 1893. In
-creating this fair, the enterprise and capacity for
-organization which the architects of Chicago had
-applied to the construction of the skyscraper transformed
-the unkempt wilderness of Jackson Park into
-the Great White City in the space of two short years.
-Here the architects of the country, particularly of
-New York and Chicago, appeared for the first time<span class="pagenum">[127]</span>
-as a united profession, or, to speak more accurately,
-as a college. Led by the New Yorkers, who had
-come more decisively under European influence, they
-brought to this exposition the combination of skill
-and taste in all the departments of the work that
-had, two centuries earlier, created the magnificent
-formalities of Versailles. There was unity of plan
-in the grouping of the main buildings about the
-lagoon; there was unity of tone and color in the
-gleaming white façades; there was unity of effect
-in the use of classic orders and classic forms of
-decoration. Lacking any genuine unity of ideas
-and purposes&mdash;for Root had initially conceived of
-a variegated oriental setting&mdash;the architects of the
-exposition had achieved the effects of unity by
-subordinating their work to an established precedent.
-They chanted a Roman litany above the
-Babel of individual styles. It was a capital triumph
-of the academic imagination. If these main buildings
-were architecture, America had never seen so
-much of it at one time before. Even that belated
-Greco-Puritan, Mr. Charles Eliot Norton, was warm
-in praise.</p>
-
-<p>It would be foolish to quarrel with the style that
-was chosen for these exposition buildings, or to<span class="pagenum">[128]</span>
-deny its propriety. Messrs. McKim, White, Hunt,
-and Burnham divined that they were fated to serve
-Renaissance despots and emperors with more than
-Roman power, and unerringly they chose the proper
-form for their activities. Whereas Rome had cast
-its spell over the architects of the early Renaissance
-because they wished once more to enter into its life,
-the life of its sages and poets and artists, it attracted
-the architects of the White City because of
-its external features&mdash;because of its stereotyped
-canons and rules&mdash;because of the relatively small
-number of choices it offered for a lapse in taste&mdash;because
-of its skill in conspicuous waste, and because
-of that very noncommittal quality in its
-massive forms which permitted the basilica to become
-a church, or the temple to become a modern
-bank.</p>
-
-<p>Of all the Renaissance architects, their impulses
-and interests were nearest, perhaps, to Robert Adam,
-whose church at West Wycombe could be turned into
-a ballroom by the simple act of removing the pews,
-and permitting the gay walls and decorations to
-speak for themselves. Behind the white staff façade
-of the World’s Fair buildings was the steel and glass
-structure of the engineer: the building spoke one<span class="pagenum">[129]</span>
-language and the “architecture” another. If the
-coming of the skyscraper had turned masonry into
-veneer, here was a mode of architecture which was
-little but veneer.</p>
-
-<p>In their place, at the Fair, these classic buildings
-were all that could be demanded: Mr. Geoffrey
-Scott’s defense of the Baroque, in The Architecture
-of Humanism, applies particularly to its essential
-manifestations in the Garden and the Theater&mdash;and
-why not in the Fair? Form and function, ornament
-and design, have no inherent relation, one with the
-other, when the mood of the architect is merely
-playful: there is no use in discussing the anatomy of
-architecture when its only aim is fancy dress. As a
-mask, as a caprice, the classic orders are as justifiable
-as the icing on a birthday cake: they divert
-the eye without damaging the structure that they
-conceal. Unfortunately, the architecture of the
-Renaissance has a tendency to imitate the haughty
-queen who advised the commons to eat cake. Logically,
-it demands that a Wall Street clerk shall live
-like a Lombardy prince, that a factory should be
-subordinated to esthetic contemplation; and since
-these things are impossible, it permits “mere building”
-to become illiterate and vulgar below the standards<span class="pagenum">[130]</span>
-of the most debased vernacular. Correct in
-proportion, elegant in detail, courteous in relation
-to each other, the buildings of the World’s Fair were,
-nevertheless, only the simulacra of a living architecture:
-they were the concentrated expression of an
-age which sought to produce “values” rather than
-goods. In comparison with this new style, the romanticism
-of the Victorian Age, with its avid respect for
-the medieval building traditions, was honesty and
-dignity itself.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman precedent, modified by the work of
-Louis XIV and Napoleon III, by Le Nôtre and
-Haussmann, formed the basis not merely for the
-World’s Fair, but for the host of city plans that
-were produced in the two decades that followed. It
-seemed for a while as if the architect might take the
-place of the engineer as city planner, and that the
-mangled regularity of the engineer’s gridiron plan,
-laid down without respect to topographic advantage
-or to use, might be definitely supplanted in the remodeled
-central districts and in the new extensions
-and suburbs of the American city. The evil of the
-World’s Fair triumph was that it suggested to the
-civic enthusiast that every city might become a fair:
-it introduced the notion of the City Beautiful as a<span class="pagenum">[131]</span>
-sort of municipal cosmetic, and reduced the work
-of the architect to that of putting a pleasing front
-upon the scrappy building, upon the monotonous
-streets and the mean houses, that characterized vast
-areas in the newer and larger cities.</p>
-
-<p>If the engineer who had devoted himself to sewers
-and street-plans alone had been superficial, the architectural
-city planner who centered attention upon
-parkways alone, grand avenues alone, and squares
-like the Place de l’Etoile alone, was equally superficial.
-The civic center and the parkway represented
-the better and more constructive side of this effort:
-in Cleveland, in Pittsburgh, in Springfield, Mass.,
-harmonious groups of white buildings raised their
-heads above the tangle of commercial traffic, and in
-the restoration of L’Enfant’s plan for Washington,
-the realities of the imperial regime at length caught
-up with the dreamer born out of his due time. A
-good many of these plans, however, were pathetically
-immature. One of the reports for Manhattan,
-for example, devoted pages and pages to
-showing the improvement that would follow the
-demolition of the wall around Central Park&mdash;and
-the importance of clipped trees in the design of
-grand avenues!</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[132]</span></p>
-
-<p>Plainly, the architect did not face with sufficient
-realism the colossal task with which he was confronted
-in the renovation of the city. He accepted
-his improvements too much at the value placed
-upon them by the leaders of Big Business&mdash;as a creator
-of land-values, as an element in increasing the
-commercial attractiveness of the city. Did not Mr.
-Daniel Burnham himself point to the improvements
-in Periclean Athens, not as the embodiment of
-Athenian citizenship and religion at its highest
-point, but as a measure for increasing the attractiveness
-of the city to visitors from abroad? Cut
-off from his true function to serve and beautify the
-community, made an accessory of business itself, like
-the merest salesman or advertising agent, it is no
-wonder that the architect speedily lost his leadership;
-and that the initiative went once again into
-the hands of the engineer.</p>
-
-<p>The main merit of all these efforts to perpetuate
-the World’s Fair is that they sought to achieve
-some of the dignity and decisiveness of the formal
-plan. Their weakness was that they neglected new
-elements, like the billboard, the skysign, the subway,
-the tall building, which undermined the effects of
-the plan even when it was achieved. In their efforts<span class="pagenum">[133]</span>
-to escape from the welter of misguided commercial
-enterprise, the advocates of the city beautiful placed
-too great reliance upon spots of outward order and
-decency; they took refuge in the paper symmetry of
-axial avenues and round-points, as one finds them
-in Haussmann’s Paris, and neglected the deeper
-and more genuine beauties of, let us say, the
-High Street in Oxford or Chipping Camden, or
-of many another European town that had achieved
-completion in its essentials before the nineteenth
-century.</p>
-
-<p>In short, the advocates of the city beautiful
-sought a remedy on paper which could be purchased
-only by a thorough reorganization of the community’s
-life. If all this applies to the better side of the
-World’s Fair, it touches even more emphatically
-the worse.</p>
-
-<p>The twenty years between 1890 and 1910 saw the
-complete rehabilitation of the Roman mode, as the
-very cloak and costume of imperial enterprise. The
-main effort of architecture was to give an effect of
-dignity and permanence to the façades of the principal
-thoroughfares: the public buildings must dominate
-the compositions, numerous boulevards and
-avenues must concentrate the traffic at certain points<span class="pagenum">[134]</span>
-and guide the stranger to the markets and amusements:
-where possible, as in the Chicago plan,
-by Messrs. Burnham and Bennett, avenues must
-be cut through the gridiron pattern of blocks in
-order to achieve these effects. If this imperial
-street system is somewhat arbitrary, and if the necessary
-work of grading, filling, demolishing, and
-purchasing existing property rights is extremely
-costly, the end, nevertheless, justifies the means&mdash;the
-architecture impresses and awes a populace
-that shares vicariously in it glories. Should the
-effect prove a little too austere and formidable, the
-monuments will be offset with circuses and hippodromes.</p>
-
-<p>In all this, the World’s Fair was a precise and
-classic example, for it reproduced in miniature the
-imperial order. When the panic of 1893 kept people
-away from the exhibitions of art, industry, and culture,
-sideshows were promptly introduced by the
-astute organizers. Beyond the serene classic façades,
-which recalled the elevation of a Marcus Aurelius,
-sprawled the barkers, the freaks, and the tricksters,
-whose gaudy booths might have reminded the spectator
-of the other side of the imperial shield&mdash;the
-gaminism of Petronius Arbiter. The transformation<span class="pagenum">[135]</span>
-of these white façades into the Gay White Ways
-came during the next decade; whilst the sideshows
-achieved a separate existence as “Coney Island.” On
-top of this came the development of the mildly gladiatorial
-spectacles of football and baseball: at first
-invented for playful exercise, they became a standard
-means of exhibition by more or less professional performers.
-The erection of numerous amphitheaters
-and arenas, such as the Yale Bowl, the Harvard
-Stadium, the Lewisohn Stadium, and their counterparts
-in the West, rounded out the imperial spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>By a happy congruence of forces, the large-scale
-manufacture of Portland cement, and the reintroduction
-of the Roman method of concrete construction,
-came during the same period. Can anyone
-contemplate this scene and still fancy that imperialism
-was nothing more than a move for foreign
-markets and territories of exploitation? On the
-contrary, it was a tendency that expressed itself in
-every department of Western civilization, and if it
-appears most naked, perhaps, in America, that is
-only because, as in the earlier periods, there was so
-little here to stand in its way. Mr. Louis Sullivan
-might well complain, in The Autobiography of an<span class="pagenum">[136]</span>
-Idea, that imperialism stifled the more creative modes
-of architecture which might have derived from our
-fine achievements in science, from our tentative experiments
-in democracy. It seems inevitable, however,
-that the dominant fact in our civilization should
-stamp the most important monuments and buildings
-with its image. In justice to the great professors
-of the classic style, Messrs. McKim and
-Burnham and Carrere and Hastings, one must admit
-that the age shaped them and chose them and used
-them for its ends. Their mode of building was
-almost unescapably determined by the milieu in
-which they worked.</p>
-
-<p>The change in the social scene which favored an
-imperial setting was not without its effects upon
-the industries that supplied the materials for architecture,
-and upon the processes of building itself.
-Financial concentration in the stone quarries, for
-example, was abetted by the creation of a national
-system of rail transportation, and partly, perhaps,
-by the elaboration of the mechanical equipment for
-cutting and trimming stone beyond a point where a
-small plant could work economically. The result was
-that during this period numerous small local quarries,
-which had been called into existence by Richardson’s<span class="pagenum">[137]</span>
-fine eye for color contrasts, were allowed to
-lapse. Vermont marble and Indiana limestone served
-better the traditions that had been created in the
-White City.</p>
-
-<p>The carrying of coals to Newcastle is always a
-pathetic practice; it remained for the imperial age
-to make it a subject for boasting. Just as many
-Connecticut towns whose nearby fields are full of
-excellent granite boulders, boast a bank or a library
-of remote marble, so New York City, which has a
-solid foundation of schist, gneiss, and limestone,
-can point to only a handful of buildings, notably
-the College of the City of New York and Mr. Goodhue’s
-Church of the Intercession, in which these excellent
-local materials were used. The curious result
-of being able by means of railway transportation to
-draw upon the ends of the earth for materials has
-been, not variety, but monotony. Under the imperial
-order the architect was forced to design
-structures that were identical in style, treatment,
-and material, though they were placed thousands of
-miles apart and differed in every important function.
-This ignorance of regional resources is not
-incompatible with grand effects, or even on occasion
-with decently good architecture. But it does not<span class="pagenum">[138]</span>
-profit by that fine adaptation to site, that justness
-of proportion in the size of window and slope
-of roof, which is an earnest of the architect’s mastery
-of the local situation. Substitute Manila for the
-military colony of Timgad, or Los Angeles for
-Alexandria, and it is plain that we have here another
-aspect of Ferrero’s generalization. Even architects
-whose place of work was nearer to the site of their
-buildings were, nevertheless, compelled to copy the
-style of the more successful practitioners in New
-York and Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>In government, in industry, in architecture, the imperial
-age was one. The underlying policy of imperialism
-is to exploit the life and resources of
-separate regions for the benefit of the holders of
-privilege in the capital city. Under this rule, all
-roads lead literally to Rome. While, as the German
-historian, W. H. Riehl, points out, the provincial
-highroads served to bring the city out into the
-countryside, the railroads served to bring the major
-cities together and to drain the products of rural
-regions into the metropolis. It was no accident that
-the great triumphs of American architecture during
-the imperial period were the railroad stations; particularly
-the Pennsylvania and the Grand Central<span class="pagenum">[139]</span>
-in New York, and the Union Station in Washington.
-Nor is it by mere chance that the Washington and
-the Pennsylvania stations are the monuments to
-two architects, McKim and Burnham, who worshiped
-most whole-heartedly at the imperial shrine.
-With capital insight, these men established the
-American Academy at Rome: they recognized their
-home.</p>
-
-<p>Esthetically considered, it is true, perhaps, that
-the finest element in the Pennsylvania station is the
-train hall, where the architect has dealt sincerely
-with his steel elements and has not permitted himself
-to cast a fond, retrospective eye upon the Roman
-baths. When all allowances are made, however, there
-remains less for criticism in the railway stations and
-the stadiums&mdash;those genuinely Roman bequests&mdash;than
-in any of the other imperial monuments. Indeed,
-so well does Roman architecture lend itself to
-the railroad station that one of the prime virtues of
-such a building, namely ease of circulation, was even
-communicated to the New York Public Library,
-where it is nothing but a nuisance, since it both increases
-the amount of noise and diminishes the
-amount of space for reading rooms that are already
-overcrowded.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[140]</span></p>
-
-<p>Here, indeed, is the capital defect of an established
-and formalized mode: it tends to make the
-architect think of a new problem in terms of an old
-solution for a different problem. Mr. Charles
-McKim, for example, indignantly withdrew from the
-competition over the New York Public Library because
-the demands of the librarian for a convenient
-and expeditious administration of his business interfered
-with the full-blown conception which Mr. McKim
-had in mind. All this happened after years of demonstration
-in the Boston Library of Messrs. McKim
-and White’s failure to meet that problem squarely;
-and it apparently was not affected by Mr. McKim’s
-experience with the great Columbia Library, which
-has ample space for everything except books. In
-short, the classic style served well enough only when
-the building to be erected had some direct relation
-to the needs and interests of the Roman world&mdash;the
-concourse of idlers in the baths or the tiers of
-spectators in the circuses and hippodromes. When
-it came face to face with our own day, it had but
-little to say, and it said that badly, as anyone who
-will patiently examine the superimposed orders on
-the American Telegraph Building in New York will
-discover for himself.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[141]</span></p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>With the transition from republican to imperial
-Rome, numerous monuments were erected to the
-Divine Cæsar. Within a much shorter time than
-marked the growth of the imperial tradition in
-America, a similar edification of patriotic memories
-took place.</p>
-
-<p>In the restoration of the original plan of Washington,
-which began in 1901, the axis of the plan
-was so altered as to make it pass through the Washington
-Monument; and at the same time the place
-of the Lincoln Memorial, designed by the late Mr.
-Henry Bacon, a pupil of Mr. McKim’s, was assigned.
-This was the first of a whole series of temples devoted
-to the national deities. In the Lincoln Memorial,
-in the McKinley Memorial at Niles, Ohio, in
-the Hall of Fame at New York University, and in
-their prototype, Grant’s Tomb, one feels not the living
-beauty of our American past, but the mortuary
-air of archæology. The America that Lincoln was
-bred in, the homespun and humane and humorous
-America that he wished to preserve, has nothing in
-common with the sedulously classic monument that
-was erected to his memory. Who lives in that shrine,<span class="pagenum">[142]</span>
-I wonder&mdash;Lincoln, or the men who conceived it: the
-leader who beheld the mournful victory of the Civil
-War, or the generation that took pleasure in the
-mean triumph of the Spanish-American exploit, and
-placed the imperial standard in the Philippines and
-the Caribbean?</p>
-
-<p>On the plane of private citizenship, a similar movement
-took place: while before 1890 one can count
-the tombs in our cemeteries that boast loudly of the
-owner’s earthly possessions and power, from that
-time onward the miniature temple-mausoleum becomes
-more and more frequent. In fact, an entire history
-of architecture could be deduced from our cemeteries;
-all that has so far been described could be marked
-in the progress from the simple slab, carved in
-almost Attic purity with a weeping willow or a
-cubistic cherub, that characterized the eighteenth
-century, to the bad lettering and the more awkward
-headstones of the early nineteenth century; and from
-this to the introduction of polished granite and iron
-ornament in the post-Civil War cemetery, down to
-the mechanically perfect mausoleum, where the
-corpses are packed like the occupants of a subway
-train, that some of our more effusively progressive
-communities boast of today. As we live, so we die:<span class="pagenum">[143]</span>
-no wonder Shelley described Hell as a place much
-like London.</p>
-
-<p>The Roman development of New York, Chicago,
-Washington, and the lesser metropolises, had an important
-effect upon the homes of the people. Historically,
-the imperial monument and the slum-tenement
-go hand in hand. The same process that
-creates an unearned increment for the landlords
-who possess favored sites, contributes a generous
-quota&mdash;which might be called the unearned excrement&mdash;of
-depression, overcrowding, and bad living,
-in the dormitory districts of the city. This had
-happened in imperial Rome; it had happened again
-in Paris under Napoleon III, where Haussmann’s
-sweeping reconstructions created new slums in the
-districts behind the grand avenues, quite as bad,
-if far less obvious, as those that had been cleared
-away; and it happened once again in our American
-cities. Whereas in Rome a certain limit, however,
-was placed upon the expansion of the city because of
-the low development of vehicular traffic, the rise of
-mechanical transportation placed no bounds at all
-on the American city. If Rome was forced to create
-huge engineering projects like aqueducts and sewers
-in order to cleanse the inhabitants and remove the<span class="pagenum">[144]</span>
-offal of its congested districts, the American city
-followed the example of the modern Romes like London
-and Paris by devising man-sewers, in which the
-mass of plebeians could be daily drained back and
-forth between their dormitories and their factories.</p>
-
-<p>So far from relieving congestion, these colossal
-pieces of engineering only made more of it possible:
-by pouring more feeder lines into the central district
-of New York, Boston, Chicago, or where you will,
-rapid transit increased the housing congestion at
-one end and the business-congestion at the other. As
-for the primary sewer system devised for the imperial
-metropolis, it could scarcely even claim, with rapid
-transit, that it was a valuable commercial investment.
-The water outlets of New York are so thoroughly
-polluted that not merely have the shad and the
-oyster beds vanished from the Hudson River, where
-both once flourished, but it is a serious question
-whether the tides can continue to transport their
-vast load of sewage without a preliminary reduction
-of its content. Like the extension of the water conduits
-into the Adirondacks, all these necessary little
-improvements add to the per capita cost of living in
-an imperial metropolis, without providing a single<span class="pagenum">[145]</span>
-benefit that a smaller city with no need for such
-improvements does not enjoy. In the matter of public
-parks, for example, the Committee on Congestion
-in New York, in 1911, calculated that the park
-space needed for the East Side alone, on the scale
-provided by the city of Hartford, would be greater
-than the entire area of Manhattan Island. In short,
-even for its bare utilitarian requirements, the mass-city,
-as the Germans call it, costs more and gives
-less than communities which have not had imperial
-greatness inflicted upon them.</p>
-
-<p>As to the more positive improvements under the
-imperial regime, history leaves no doubt as to their
-dubious character, and current observation only reinforces
-history’s lesson. In discussing the growth
-of the tenement in Rome after the Great Fire, Friedlander
-says:</p>
-
-<p>“The motives for piling up storeys were as strong
-as ever: the site for Cæsar’s Forum had cost over
-£875,000 compensation to tenants and ground landlords.
-Rome had loftier houses than modern capital.
-A disproportionately large part of the area
-available for building was monopolized by the few,
-in consequence of the waste of space in the plethoric
-architecture of the day, and a very considerable<span class="pagenum">[146]</span>
-portion was swallowed up by the public places, such
-as the imperial forums, which took up six hectares,
-as well as by the traffic regulations and extensions
-of the streets. The transformation and decoration
-of Rome by the Cæsars enhanced the scarcity of
-housing, as did Napoleon III’s improvements in
-Paris. A further adjutory cause of the increase
-in the price of dwellings was the habit of speculation
-in house property (which Crassus had practiced in
-great style) and the monopoly of the proprietors,
-in consequence of which houses were let and sublet.”</p>
-
-<p>It would be tedious to draw out the parallel: given
-similar social conditions in America we have not been
-able to escape the same social results, even down
-to the fact that the palliatives of private philanthropy
-flourish here again as they had not flourished
-anywhere on the same scale since the Roman Empire.
-So much for imperial greatness. When an
-architect like Mr. Edward Bennett can say, as he
-did in The Significance of the Fine Arts: “House the
-people densely, if necessary, but conserve great areas
-for recreation,” we need not be in doubt as to who
-will profit by the density and who will profit, at the
-other end, by the recreation. It is not merely that<span class="pagenum">[147]</span>
-the park must be produced to remedy the congestion:
-it is even more that the congestion must be produced
-in order to provide for the park. To profit by both
-the disease and the remedy is one of the master-strokes
-of imperialist enterprise. Mr. Daniel Burnham
-said of the World’s Fair, according to Mr.
-Bennett and Mr. Charles Moore, “that it is what the
-Romans would have wished to create in permanent
-form.” One may say of our imperial cities that
-they are what the Romans did create&mdash;but whether
-the form will be permanent or not is a matter
-we may leave to the sardonic attentions of history.</p>
-
-<p>For my own part, I think we have at last acquired
-a criterion which will enable us to sum up the architecture
-of the imperial age, and deal justly with
-these railroad stations and stadiums, these sewers
-and circuses, these aqueducts and parkways and
-grand avenues. Our imperial architecture is an
-architecture of compensation: it provides grandiloquent
-stones for people who have been deprived of
-bread and sunlight and all that keeps man from
-becoming vile. Behind the monumental façades of
-our metropolises trudges a landless proletariat,
-doomed to the servile routine of the factory system;<span class="pagenum">[148]</span>
-and beyond the great cities lies a countryside whose
-goods are drained away, whose children are uprooted
-from the soil on the prospect of easy gain and endless
-amusements, and whose remaining cultivators
-are steadily drifting into the ranks of an abject
-tenantry. This is not a casual observation: it is
-the translation of the last three census reports into
-plain English. Can one take the pretensions of this
-architecture seriously; can one worry about its
-esthetics or take full delight in such finer forms
-as Mr. Pope’s Temple of the Scottish Rite in
-Washington, or Mr. Bacon’s Lincoln Memorial?
-Yes, perhaps&mdash;if one refuses to look beyond the
-mask.</p>
-
-<p>Even in some of its proudest buildings, the imperial
-show wears thin; and one need not peer into
-the slums beyond in order to realize its defects. The
-rear of the Metropolitan Museum or the Brooklyn
-Museum, for example, might be the rear of a row
-of Bronx tenements or Long Island City factories, so
-gaunt and barren and hideous is their aspect. If
-the imperial age was foreshadowed in the World’s
-Fair, it has received its apotheosis in the museum.
-In contrast to the local museums one still finds occasionally
-in Europe, which are little more than extensions<span class="pagenum">[149]</span>
-of the local curio cabinet, the imperial museum
-is essentially a loot-heap, a comprehensive
-repository for plunder. The sage Viollet-le-Duc once
-patly said that he preferred to see his apples hanging
-on a tree, rather than arranged in rows in the
-fruit shop: but the animus of the museum is to value
-the plucked fruit more than the tree that bore
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Into the museum come the disjecta membra of other
-lands, other cultures, other civilizations. All that
-had once been a living faith and practice is here reduced
-to a separate specimen, pattern, or form. For
-the museum, the world of art has already been created:
-the future is restricted to a duplication of the
-perfected past. This animus is identic with that
-which made the Romans so skillful in copying Greek
-statues and so dull in carving their own; a desirable
-habit of humility were it not for the fact that the
-works of art in the past could not have been created
-had our ancestors been so punctual in respect to
-finished designs. The one thing the museum cannot
-attempt to do is to supply a soil for living art: all
-that it can present is a pattern for reproduction.
-To the extent that an insincere or imitative art is
-better than no art at all, the Imperial Age marked<span class="pagenum">[150]</span>
-an advance: to the extent, however, that a living
-art is a fresh gesture of the spirit, the museum confessed
-all too plainly that the age had no fresh
-gestures to make; on that score, it was a failure,
-and the copying of period furniture and the design
-of period architecture were the livid proofs of that
-failure.</p>
-
-<p>The museum is a manifestation of our curiosity,
-our acquisitiveness, our essentially predatory culture;
-and these qualities were copiously exhibited in
-the architecture of imperialism. It would be foolish
-to reproach the great run of architects for exploiting
-the characteristics of their age; for even those
-who in belief and design have remained outside the
-age&mdash;such resolute advocates of a medieval polity as
-Dr. Ralph Adams Cram&mdash;have not been able to divert
-its currents. In so far as we have learned to care
-more for empire than for a community of freemen,
-living the good life, more for dominion over palm
-and pine than for the humane discipline of ourselves,
-the architect has but enshrined our desires. The
-opulence, the waste of resources and energies, the
-perversion of human effort represented in this architecture
-are but the outcome of our general scheme
-of working and living. Architecture, like government,<span class="pagenum">[151]</span>
-is about as good as a community deserves.
-The shell that we create for ourselves marks our
-spiritual development as plainly as that of a snail
-denotes its species. If sometimes architecture becomes
-frozen music, we have ourselves to thank when
-it is a pompous blare of meaningless sounds.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[155]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_SEVEN">CHAPTER SEVEN<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">THE AGE OF THE MACHINE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>Since 1910 the momentum of the Imperial Age
-seems to have slackened a little: at any rate, in architecture
-it has lost much of the original energy which
-had been given to it by the success of the Chicago
-Exposition. It may be, as Henry Adams hinted,
-that the rate of change in the modern world has
-altered, so that processes which required centuries
-for their consummation before the coming of the
-dynamo have been accelerated into decades.</p>
-
-<p>With events and buildings so close to us, it is
-almost impossible to rate their relative importance;
-all that I can do in the present chapter is to single
-out one or two of the more important threads which,
-it seems to me, are bound to give the predominant
-color to the fabric of our architecture. It is fairly
-easy to see, however, why the imperial order has
-not stamped every aspect of our building: for one
-thing, eclecticism has not merely persisted, but the
-new familiarity that the American architect has
-gained with authentic European and Asiatic work<span class="pagenum">[156]</span>
-outside the province of the classic has increased the
-range of eclecticism. So the baroque architecture of
-Spain, which flourished so well in Mexico, and the
-ecclesiastical architecture of Byzantium and Syria,
-have added a new charm to our motlied wardrobe:
-from the first came new lessons in ornament and
-color, applied with great success by Mr. Bertram
-Goodhue in the Panama-Pacific Exposition, and now
-budding lustily in southern villas and gardens; and
-from the second the architect is learning the importance
-of mass and outline&mdash;the essentials in
-monolithic construction.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from this, however, the imperial regime has
-been stalled by its own weight. The cost of cutting
-through new streets, widening grand avenues, and
-in general putting on a monumental front has put
-the pure architect at a disadvantage: there is the
-same disparity between his plans and the actual
-aims of the commercial community as there is, quite
-often, between the prospectus and the actual organization
-of an industry. Within the precincts of
-the modern city, the engineer, whose utilitarian eye
-has never blinked at the necessity for profitable
-enterprise, and whose interest in human beings as
-loads, weights, stresses, or units pays no attention<span class="pagenum">[157]</span>
-to their qualitative demands as human beings&mdash;within
-these precincts, I say, the engineer has recovered his
-supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>Here, in fact, is the paradox of American architecture.
-In our suburban houses we have frequently
-achieved the excellence of Forest Hills and Bronxville;
-in our public buildings we tend more easily to
-approach the strength and originality of Mr. Goodhue’s
-State Capitol for Nebraska; in fact, never before
-have the individual achievements of American
-architects been so rich, so varied, and so promising.
-In that part of architecture which lies outside the
-purlieus of our commercial system&mdash;I mean the
-prosperous country homes and college buildings and
-churches and municipal institutions&mdash;a tradition of
-good building and tactful design has been established.
-At this point, unfortunately, the scope of the architect
-has become narrowed: the forces that create the
-great majority of our buildings lie quite outside the
-cultivated field in which he works. Through the
-mechanical reorganization of the entire milieu, the
-place of architecture has become restricted; and
-even when architecture takes root in some unnoticed
-crevice, it blooms only to be cut down at the first
-“business opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[158]</span></p>
-
-<p>The processes which are inimical to architecture
-are, perhaps, seen at their worst in the business district
-of the metropolis; but more and more they
-tend to spread throughout the rest of the community.
-Mr. Charles McKim, for example, was enthusiastic
-over Mr. Burnham’s design for the Illinois Trust and
-Savings Bank in Chicago, and predicted that it
-would long be a monument to his genius. “But unfortunately,”
-as Mr. Burnham’s biographer says,
-“unfortunately for Mr. McKim’s reputation as a
-prophet, he was unappreciative of the rapid growth
-of Chicago, the consequent appreciation in the value
-of real estate in the Loop district, and the expansive
-force of a great bank. This beautiful building is
-doomed to be replaced by one which will tower into
-the air to the permissible height of structures in the
-business section of Chicago.” The alternative to
-this destruction is an even more ignominious state
-of preservation; such a state as the Knickerbocker
-Trust Company building achieved in New York,
-or the old Customs House in Boston, both of which
-have been smothered under irrelevant skyscrapers.
-Even where economic necessity plays no distinct part,
-the forms of business take precedence over the forms
-of humanism&mdash;as in the Shipping Board’s York Village,<span class="pagenum">[159]</span>
-where as soon as the direction of the community
-planner was removed a hideous and illiterate
-row of shop-fronts was erected, instead of that provided
-by the architect, in spite of the fact that the
-difference in cost was negligible.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately for architecture, every district of
-the modern city tends to become a business district,
-in the sense that its development takes place less in
-response to direct human needs than to the chances
-and exigencies of sale. It is not merely business
-buildings that are affected by the inherent instability
-of enterprises to which profit and rent have become
-Ideal Ends: the same thing is happening to the great
-mass of houses and apartments which are designed
-for sale. Scarcely any element in our architecture
-and city planning is free from the encroachment,
-direct or indirect, of business enterprise. The old
-Boulevard in New York, for example, which was
-laid out by the Tweed ring long before the land on
-either side was used for anything but squatters’
-farms, was almost totally disrupted by the building
-of the first subways, and it has taken twenty years to
-effect even a partial recovery. The widening of
-part of Park Avenue by slicing off its central grass
-plot has just been accomplished, in order to relieve<span class="pagenum">[160]</span>
-traffic congestion; and it needs only a little time before
-underground and overground traffic will cause
-the gradual reduction of our other parkways&mdash;even
-those which now seem secure.</p>
-
-<p>The task of noting the manifold ways in which
-our economic system has affected architecture would
-require an essay by itself: it will be more pertinent
-here, perhaps, to pay attention to the processes
-through which our economic system has worked; and
-in particular to gauge the results of introducing
-mechanical methods of production, and mechanical
-forms into provinces which were once wholly occupied
-by handicraft. The chief influence in eliminating
-the architect from the great bulk of our building
-is the machine itself: in blotting out the elements of
-personality and individual choice it has blotted out
-the architect, who inherited these qualities from the
-carpenter-builder. Mr. H. G. Wells, in The New
-Macchiavelli, described Altiora and Oscar Bailey
-as having the temperament that would cut down
-trees and put sanitary glass lamp-shades in their
-stead; and this animus has gone pretty far in both
-building and city planning, for the reason that lamp-shades
-may be manufactured quickly for sale, and
-trees cannot. It is time, perhaps, that we isolated<span class="pagenum">[161]</span>
-the machine and examined its workings. What is the
-basis of our machine-ritual, and what place has it
-in relation to the good life?</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>Before we discuss the influence of machinery upon
-building, let us consider the building itself as an
-architectural whole.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the nineteenth century, a house might be
-a shelter and a work of art. Once it was erected, it
-had few internal functions to perform: its physiological
-system, if we may use a crude and inaccurate
-metaphor, was of the lowest order. An open fire
-with a chimney, windows that opened and closed&mdash;these
-were its most lively pretensions. Palladio, in
-his little book on the Five Orders, actually has suggestions
-for cooling the hot Italian villa by a system
-of flues conducted into an underground chamber
-from which cold air would circulate; but this ingenious
-scheme was on the plane of Leonardo’s flying
-machine&mdash;an imaginative anticipation, I suppose,
-rather than a project.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of Wren’s suggestions for
-ventilating the Houses of Parliament, and Sir<span class="pagenum">[162]</span>
-Humphrey Davy’s actual installation of apparatus
-for this purpose, it was not until the last quarter
-of the nineteenth century that engineers turned their
-minds to this problem, in America. Yankee ingenuity
-had devised central heating before the Civil War, and
-one of the first numbers of Harper’s Weekly contained
-an article deploring the excessive warmth of
-American interiors; and at one time or another during
-the century, universal running water, open
-plumbing, gas, electric lighting, drinking fountains,
-and high speed electric elevators made their way
-into the design of modern buildings. In Europe
-these changes came reluctantly, because of the existence
-of vast numbers of houses that had been
-built without a mechanical equipment; so that many
-a student at the Beaux Arts returned from an attic
-in the Latin quarter where water was carried in
-pails up to the seventh story, to design houses in
-which the labor-saving devices became an essential
-element in the plan. It is only now, however, during
-the last two decades, that the full effect of these
-innovations has been felt.</p>
-
-<p>The economic outcome of all these changes can
-be expressed mathematically; and it is significant.
-According to an estimate by Mr. Henry Wright in<span class="pagenum">[163]</span>
-the Journal of the American Institute of Architects,
-the structure of the dwelling house represented over
-ninety per cent of the cost in 1800. Throughout
-the century there was a slow, steady increase in the
-amount necessary for site, fixtures, and appliances,
-until, in 1900, the curve takes a sharp upward rise;
-with the result that in 1920 the cost of site and
-mechanical equipment has risen to almost one-half
-the total cost of the house. If these estimates apply
-to the simple dwelling house, they apply, perhaps,
-with even greater force to the tenement, the office
-building, the factory, and the loft: here the cost of
-ventilation, of fireproof construction, of fire-prevention
-and fire-escaping devices, makes the engineering
-equipment bulk even more heavily.</p>
-
-<p>Whereas in the first stages of industrial development
-the factory affected the environment of architecture,
-in its latest state the factory has become the
-environment. A modern building is an establishment
-devoted to the manufacture of light, the circulation
-of air, the maintenance of a uniform temperature,
-and the vertical transportation of its occupants.
-Judged by the standards of the laboratory, the
-modern building is, alas! an imperfect machine: the
-engineers of a certain public service corporation, for<span class="pagenum">[164]</span>
-example, have discovered that the habit of punching
-windows in the walls of the building-machine is responsible
-for great leakages which make difficult the
-heating and cooling of the plant; and they hold that
-the maximum efficiency demands the elimination of
-windows, the provision of “treated” air, and the
-lighting of the building throughout the day by
-electricity.</p>
-
-<p>All this would perhaps seem a little fantastic, were
-it not for the fact that we have step by step approached
-the reality. Except for our old-fashioned
-prejudice in favor of windows, which holds over from
-a time when one could see a green field or a passing
-neighbor by sitting at one, the transformation favored
-by the engineers has already been accomplished.
-Just because of the ease in installing fans, lights,
-and radiators in a modern building, a good part of
-the interiors of our skyscrapers are fed day and
-night with artificial light and ventilation. The margin
-of misuse under this method of construction is
-necessarily great; the province of design, limited.
-Instead of the architect’s paying attention to exposure,
-natural circulation, and direct daylight, and
-making a layout which will achieve these necessary
-ends, he is forced to center his efforts on the maximum<span class="pagenum">[165]</span>
-exploitation of land. Where the natural factors
-are flouted or neglected, the engineer is always
-ready to provide a mechanical substitute&mdash;“just as
-good as the original” and much more expensive.</p>
-
-<p>By systematically neglecting the simplest elements
-of city planning, we have provided a large and
-profitable field for all the palliative devices of engineering:
-where we eliminate sunlight we introduce
-electric light; where we congest business, we build skyscrapers;
-where we overcrowd the thoroughfares with
-traffic we burrow subways; where we permit the city
-to become congested with a population whose density
-would not be tolerated in a well-designed community,
-we conduct water hundreds of miles by aqueducts
-to bathe them and slake their thirst; where we rob
-them of the faintest trace of vegetation or fresh air,
-we build metalled roads which will take a small portion
-of them, once a week, out into the countryside.
-It is all a very profitable business for the companies
-that supply light and rapid transit and motor cars,
-and the rest of it; but the underlying population
-pays for its improvements both ways&mdash;that is, it
-stands the gratuitous loss, and it pays “through the
-nose” for the remedy.</p>
-
-<p>These mechanical improvements, these labyrinths<span class="pagenum">[166]</span>
-of subways, these audacious towers, these endless
-miles of asphalted streets, do not represent a triumph
-of human effort: they stand for its comprehensive
-misapplication. Where an inventive age follows
-methods which have no relation to an intelligent
-and humane existence, an imaginative one would not
-be caught by the necessity. By turning our environment
-over to the machine we have robbed the machine
-of the one promise it held out&mdash;that of enabling
-us to humanize more thoroughly the details of
-our existence.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>To return to architecture. A further effect of the
-machine process on the internal economy of the modern
-building is that it lends itself to rapid production
-and quick turnover. This has been very well
-put by Mr. Bassett Jones, in an article in The American
-Architect, which is either a hymn of praise to
-the machine, or a cool parade of its defects, according
-to the position one may take.</p>
-
-<p>“As the building more and more takes on the character
-of the machine,” says Mr. Jones, “so does its
-design, construction, and operation become subject
-to the same rules that govern ... a locomotive.<span class="pagenum">[167]</span>
-Our grandfathers built for succeeding generations.
-The rate of development was slow, and a building
-which would satisfy the demands made upon it for
-a century would necessarily be of a substantial nature.
-But with us in a single generation even the
-best we can do with all the data and facilities at
-our command is out of date almost before it shows
-signs of appreciable wear. So a building erected
-today is outclassed tomorrow. The writer well remembers
-the late Douglas Robinson, when outlining
-the location and property to be improved by the
-construction of a building some twenty years ago,
-ending his directions with the proviso that it must be
-‘the cheapest thing that will hold together for fifteen
-years’! When the amortization charges must be
-based on so short a period as this, and with land
-taxes constantly increasing, it becomes obvious that
-construction must be based upon a cubic foot valuation
-that prohibits the use of any but the cheapest
-materials and methods.... Even the cost of carrying
-the required capital inactive during the period
-of production has its effect in speeding up production
-to the point where every part of the building
-that, by any ingenuity of man, can be machine-made
-must be so made.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[168]</span></p>
-
-<p>Since the features that govern the construction
-of modern buildings are conditioned by external
-canons of mechanism, purpose and adaptation to
-need play a small part in the design, and the esthetic
-element itself enters largely by accident. The plan
-of the modern building is not fundamental to its
-treatment; it derives automatically from the methods
-and materials employed. The skyscraper is inevitably
-a honeycomb of cubes, draped with a fireproof
-material: as mechanically conceived, it is
-readily convertible: the floors are of uniform height
-and the windows of uniform spacing, and with no
-great difficulty the hotel becomes an office building,
-the office building a loft; and I confidently look forward
-to seeing the tower floors become apartments&mdash;indeed
-this conversion has already taken place on
-a small scale. Where the need of spanning a great
-space without using pillars exists, as in a theater
-or an auditorium, structural steel has given the
-architect great freedom; and in these departments
-he has learned to use his material well; for here
-steel can do economically and esthetically what
-masonry can do only at an unseemly cost, or not at
-all.</p>
-
-<p>What is weak in some of our buildings, however, is<span class="pagenum">[169]</span>
-not the employment of certain materials, but the
-application of a single formula to every problem.
-In the bare mechanical shell of the modern skyscraper
-there is precious little place for architectural modulation
-and detail; the development of the skyscraper
-has been towards the pure mechanical form. Our first
-tall buildings were designed for the most part by
-men who thought in terms of established architectural
-forms: Burnham and Root’s Monadnock Building,
-in Chicago, which has exerted such a powerful
-influence over the new school of German architects,
-was an almost isolated exception; and, significantly
-enough, it did not employ the steel skeleton! The
-academic architects compared the skyscraper to a
-column, with a base, a shaft, and a capital; and
-they sought to relieve its empty face with an elaborate
-modeling of surface, like that of the old Flatiron
-Building. Then the skyscraper was treated as
-a tower, and its vertical lines were accented by piers
-which simulated the acrobatic leap of stone construction:
-the Woolworth Tower and the Bush Tower
-were both designed in this fashion, and, in spite of
-numerous defects in detail, they remain with the new
-Shelton Hotel in New York among the most satisfactory
-examples of the skyscraper.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[170]</span></p>
-
-<p>Neither column nor buttress has anything to do
-with the internal construction of the skyscraper;
-both forms are “false” or “applied.” Under the
-veracious lead of the late Mr. Louis Sullivan, the
-buildings of the machine period have accepted the
-logic of the draped cube, and the only gestures of
-traditional architecture that remain are the ornaments
-that cling to the very highest and the very
-lowest stories. Those buildings which do not follow
-this logic for the most part accentuate the clumsy
-unimaginativeness of the designer: the new Standard
-Oil building in New York, with its vestigial orders,
-shows an interesting profile across the harbor almost
-in spite of itself, but at a closer range will not bear
-criticism.</p>
-
-<p>An ornamentalist, like Mr. Louis Sullivan, is perhaps
-at his best against the simple planes of the
-modern building: but a different order of imagination,
-an imagination like that of the Norman builders,
-is powerless in the face of this problem&mdash;or it
-becomes brutal. If modern building has become engineering,
-modern architecture retains a precarious
-foothold as ornament, or to put it more frankly, as
-scene painting. Indeed, what is the bare interior of
-a modern office or apartment house but a stage, waiting<span class="pagenum">[171]</span>
-for the scenery to be shifted, and a new play to
-be put on. It is due to this similarity, I believe, that
-modern interior decoration has so boldly accepted
-the standards and effects of stage-design. A newspaper
-critic referred to Mr. Norman-Bel Geddes as
-having lined the interior of the Century Theater
-with a cathedral: well, in the same way, the interior
-of a modern skyscraper is lined with a factory, an
-office, or a home.</p>
-
-<p>It is not for nothing that almost every detail of
-the mechanized building follows a standard pattern
-and preserves a studious anonymity. Except for
-the short run of the entrance, the original architect
-has no part in its interior development. If the architect
-himself is largely paralyzed by his problem,
-what shall we say of the artisans, and of the surviving
-handicraft workers who still contribute their
-quota of effort to the laying of bricks and stones,
-to the joining of pipes, to the plastering of ceilings?
-Gone are most of their opportunities for the exercise
-of skilled intelligence, to say nothing of art:
-they might as well make paper-boxes or pans for all
-the personal stamp they can give to their work.
-Bound to follow the architect’s design, as the printer
-is supposed to follow the author’s words, it is no<span class="pagenum">[172]</span>
-wonder that they behave like the poor drudge in
-the Chicago Exposition who left bare or half-ornamented
-the columns which the architect had not
-bothered to duplicate in full in the haste of finishing
-his drawing. Is it any wonder, too, that the last
-vestige of guild standards is gone: that the politics
-of industry, the bargaining for better wages and
-fewer hours, concerns them more than their control
-over their job and the honor and veracity of their
-workmanship? What kind of work can a man put
-into “the cheapest building that will last fifteen
-years”?</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>The chief justification for our achievements in mechanical
-architecture has been brought forth by
-those who believe it has provided the basis for a
-new style. Unfortunately, the enthusiasts who
-have put the esthetic achievements of mechanical
-architecture in a niche by themselves, and who
-have serenely disregarded all its lapses and failures
-and inefficiencies, have centered their attention
-mainly upon its weakest feature&mdash;the skyscraper.
-I cannot help thinking that they have looked in
-the wrong place. The economic and social reasons<span class="pagenum">[173]</span>
-for regarding the skyscraper as undesirable have
-been briefly alluded to; if they needed any further
-confirmation, a week’s experience of the miseries
-of rapid transit would perhaps be sufficient. It
-remains to point out that the esthetic reasons are
-just as sound.</p>
-
-<p>All the current praise of the skyscraper boils
-down to the fact that the more recent buildings have
-ceased to be as bad as their prototypes. Granted.
-The uneasy hemming and hawing of ornament, which
-once agitated the whole façade, has now been reduced
-to a concentrated gesture; and the zoning
-ordinances that have been established in many large
-American cities have transformed the older, top-heavy
-building into a tower or a pyramid. That
-this is something of an advance is beyond dispute; in
-New York one need only compare the Fisk Tire
-Building with the United States Tire Building, representing
-respectively the later and the earlier work
-of the same architects, to see what a virtue can be
-made of legal necessity. A great architecture, however,
-is something to be seen and felt and lived in.
-By this criterion most of our pretentious buildings
-are rather pathetic.</p>
-
-<p>When one approaches Manhattan Island, for instance,<span class="pagenum">[174]</span>
-from the Staten Island Ferry or the Brooklyn
-Bridge, the great towers on the tip of the island
-sometimes look like the fairy stalagmites of an
-opened grotto; and from an occasional vantage
-point on the twentieth floor of an office building one
-may now and again recapture this impression. But
-need I point out that one can count on one’s fingers
-the number of buildings in New York or Chicago
-that one can approach from the street in similar
-fashion? For the millions who fill the pavements
-and shuttle back and forth in tubes, the skyscraper
-as a tall, cloudward building does not exist. Its
-esthetic features are the entrance, the elevator, and
-the window-pocked wall; and if there has been any
-unique efflorescence of a fresh style at these points,
-I have been unable to discover it.</p>
-
-<p>What our critics have learned to admire in our
-great buildings is their photographs&mdash;and that is
-another story. In an article chiefly devoted to
-praise of the skyscraper, in a number of The Arts,
-the majority of the illustrations were taken from a
-point that the man in the street never reaches. In
-short, it is an architecture, not for men, but for
-angels and aviators!</p>
-
-<p>If buildings are to be experienced directly, and<span class="pagenum">[175]</span>
-not through the vicarious agency of the photograph,
-the skyscraper defeats its own ends; for a city built
-so that tall buildings could be approached and appreciated
-would have avenues ten times the width of
-the present ones; and a city so generously planned
-would have no need for the sort of building whose sole
-economic purpose is to make the most of monopoly
-and congestion. In order to accommodate the
-office-dwellers in the Chicago Loop, for example, if
-a minimum of twenty stories were the restriction,
-the streets would have to be 241 feet wide,
-according to a calculation of Mr. Raymond Unwin,
-in the Journal of the American Institute of Architects.</p>
-
-<p>One need not dwell upon the way in which these
-obdurate, overwhelming masses take away from the
-little people who walk in their shadows any semblance
-of dignity as human beings; it is perhaps
-inevitable that one of the greatest mechanical
-achievements in a thoroughly dehumanized civilization
-should, no doubt unconsciously, achieve this
-wry purpose. It is enough to point out that the
-virtues of the skyscraper are mainly exercises in
-technique. They have precious little to do with the
-human arts of seeing, feeling, and living, or with the<span class="pagenum">[176]</span>
-noble architectural end of making buildings which
-stimulate and enhance these arts.</p>
-
-<p>A building that one cannot readily see, a building
-that reduces the passerby to a mere mote, whirled
-and buffeted by the winds of traffic, a building that
-has no accommodating grace or perfection in its
-interior furnishing, beyond its excellent lavatories&mdash;in
-what sense is such a building a great work of
-architecture, or how can the mere manner of its
-construction create a great style? One might as
-well say, with Robert Dale Owen, that the brummagem
-gothic of the Smithsonian Institution was a
-return to organic architecture. Consider what painful
-efforts of interior decoration are necessary before
-the skyscraper-apartment can recapture the
-faded perfume of the home. Indeed, it takes no
-very discerning eye to see that in a short time we
-shall be back again in interiors belonging to the period
-of the ottoman and the whatnot, in order to
-restore a homely sense of comfort and esthetic ease
-to the eviscerated structure of the modern fireproof
-apartment. What chiefly distinguishes our modern
-American work in this department from that of the
-disreputable ’eighties is that the earlier architects
-were conscious of their emptiness, and attempted<span class="pagenum">[177]</span>
-feverishly to hide it: whereas our moderns do not
-regard emptiness as a serious lapse, and are inclined
-to boast about it.</p>
-
-<p>There is a sense, of course, in which these modern
-colossi express our civilization. It is a romantic
-notion, however, to believe that this is an important
-or beautiful fact. Our slums express our civilization,
-too, and our rubbish heaps tell sermons that
-our stones conceal. The only expression that really
-matters in architecture is that which contributes
-in a direct and positive way to the good life: that is
-why there is so much beauty to the square foot in
-an old New England village, and so little, beyond
-mere picturesqueness, in the modern metropolis. A
-building stands or falls, even as a pure work of art,
-by its just relation to the city around it. Without
-a sense of scale&mdash;and the skyscraper has destroyed
-our sense of scale&mdash;the effect of any single building
-is nullified.</p>
-
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>The provinces in which mechanical architecture
-has been genuinely successful are those in which
-there have been no conventional precedents, and in
-which the structure has achieved a sense of absolute<span class="pagenum">[178]</span>
-form by following sympathetically the limitations
-of material and function. Just as the bridge summed
-up what was best in early industrialism, so the modern
-subway station, the modern lunch room, the
-modern factory, and its educational counterpart,
-the modern school, have often been cast in molds
-which would make them conspicuous esthetic achievements.
-In the Aristotelian sense, every purpose contains
-an inherent form; and it is only natural that
-a factory or lunchroom or grain elevator, intelligently
-conceived, should become a structure quite
-different in every aspect from the precedents that
-are upheld in the schools.</p>
-
-<p>It would be a piece of brash esthetic bigotry to
-deny the esthetic values that derive from machinery:
-the clean surfaces, the hard lines, the calibrated perfection
-that the machine has made possible carry
-with them a beauty quite different from that of
-handicraft&mdash;but often it is a beauty. Our new
-sensitiveness to the forms of useful objects and
-purely utilitarian structures is an excellent sign;
-and it is not surprising that this sensitiveness has
-arisen first among artists. Many of our power-plants
-are majestic; many of our modern factories
-are clean and lithe and smart, designed with unerring<span class="pagenum">[179]</span>
-logic and skill. Put alongside buildings in which
-the architect has glorified his own idiosyncrasy or
-pandered to the ritual of conspicuous waste, our
-industrial plants at least have honesty and sincerity
-and an inner harmony of form and function. There
-is nothing peculiar to machine-technology in these
-virtues, however, for the modern factory shares them
-with the old New England mill, the modern grain
-elevator with the Pennsylvania barn, the steamship
-with the clipper, and the airplane hangar with the
-castle.</p>
-
-<p>The error with regard to these new forms of
-building is the attempt to universalize the mere
-process or form, instead of attempting to universalize
-the scientific spirit in which they have been
-conceived. The design for a dwelling-house which
-ignores everything but the physical necessities of
-the occupants is the product of a limited conception
-of science which stops short at physics and mechanics,
-and neglects biology, psychology, and sociology. If
-it was bad esthetics to design steel frames decorated
-with iron cornucopias and flowers, it is equally bad
-esthetics to design homes as if babies were hatched
-from incubators, and as if wheels, rather than love
-and hunger, made the world go round. During the<span class="pagenum">[180]</span>
-first movement of industrialism it was the pathetic
-fallacy that crippled and warped the new achievements
-of technology; today we are beset by the
-plutonic fallacy, which turns all living things it
-touches into metal.</p>
-
-<p>In strict justice to our better sort of mechanical
-architecture, I must point out that the error of the
-mechanolators is precisely the opposite error to
-that of the academies. The weakness of conventional
-architecture in the schools of the nineteenth
-century was the fact that it applied only to a limited
-province: we knew what an orthodox palace or post
-office would be like, and we had even seen their guilty
-simulacra in tenement-houses and shopfronts; but
-no one had ever dared to imagine what a Beaux Arts
-factory would be like; and such approaches to it
-as the pottery works in Lambeth only made the possibility
-more dubious. The weakness of our conventional
-styles of architecture was that they
-stopped short at a province called building&mdash;which
-meant the province where the ordinary rules of esthetic
-decency and politeness were completely abandoned,
-for lack of a precedent.</p>
-
-<p>The modernist is correct in saying that the mass
-of building ought to speak the same language; it is<span class="pagenum">[181]</span>
-well for him to attempt to follow Mr. Louis Sullivan,
-in his search for a “rule so broad as to admit of no
-exceptions.” Where the modernist becomes confused,
-however, is in regarding the <em>dictionary</em> of
-modern forms, whose crude elements are exhibited
-in our factories and skyscrapers and grain elevators,
-as in any sense equivalent for their creative
-expression. So far our mechanical architecture is
-a sort of structural Esperanto: it has a vocabulary
-without a literature, and when it steps beyond the
-elements of its grammar it can only translate badly
-into its own tongue the noble poems and epics that
-the Romans and Greeks and medieval builders left
-behind them.</p>
-
-<p>The leaders of modernism do not, indeed, make
-the mistake that some of their admirers have made:
-Mr. Frank Lloyd Wright’s pleasure pavilions and
-hotels do not resemble either factories or garages or
-grain elevators: they represent the same tendencies,
-perhaps, but they do so with respect to an entirely
-different set of human purposes. In one important
-characteristic, Mr. Wright’s style has turned its
-back upon the whole world of engineering: whereas
-the steel cage lends itself to the vertical skyscraper,
-Mr. Wright’s designs are the very products of the<span class="pagenum">[182]</span>
-prairie, in their low-lying, horizontal lines, in their
-flat roofs, while at the same time they defy the neutral
-gray or black or red of the engineering structure
-by their colors and ornament.</p>
-
-<p>In sum, the best modern work does not merely
-respect the machine: it respects the people who use
-it. It is the lesser artists and architects who, unable
-to control and mold the products of the machine,
-have glorified it in its nakedness, much as the
-producer of musical comedies, in a similar mood of
-helpless adulation, has “glorified” the American girl&mdash;as
-if either the machine or the girl needed it.</p>
-
-<p>It has been a genuine misfortune in America that,
-as Mr. Sullivan bitterly pointed out in The Autobiography
-of an Idea, the growth of imperialism
-burked the development of a consonant modern
-style. In Europe, particularly in Finland, Germany,
-and the Netherlands, the best American work
-has been appreciated and followed up, and as so
-often happens, exaggerated; so that the esthetic
-appreciation of the machine has been carried across
-the Atlantic and back again, very much in the way
-that Emerson’s individualism was transformed by
-Nietzsche and became the mystic doctrine of the
-Superman. Some of the results of this movement<span class="pagenum">[183]</span>
-are interesting and valid: the work of the Dutch
-architects, for example, in the garden suburbs around
-Amsterdam: but what pleases one in these new compositions
-is not the mechanical rigor of form but
-the playfulness of spirit&mdash;they are good architecture
-precisely because they are something more than mere
-engineering. Except for a handful of good precedents,
-our mechanical work in America does not
-express this vitality. The machine has stamped us;
-and we have not reacted.</p>
-
-<p>Moreover, in the building of separate houses in
-the city and its suburbs, where the demands of mechanical
-efficiency are not so drastic as they are in
-the office building, the effect of the machine process
-has been to narrow the scope of individual taste and
-personality. The designer, whether he is the architect,
-the owner, or the working contractor, works
-within a tradition whose bearing lies beyond him.
-Outside this mechanical tradition we have had many
-examples of good individual work, like the stone
-houses that have been erected around Philadelphia,
-and the more or less native cement and adobe houses
-in New Mexico and California: but the great mass
-of modern houses are no longer framed for some
-definite site and some definite occupants: they are<span class="pagenum">[184]</span>
-manufactured for a blind market. The boards are
-cut to length in the sawmill, the roofing is fabricated
-in a roofing plant, the window frames are cut in
-standard sizes and put together in the framing factory,
-the balustrade is done in a turning mill, the
-very internal fittings like china closets and chests
-are made in a distant plant, after one of a dozen
-patterns fixed and exemplified in the catalog. The
-business of the building worker is reduced to a mere
-assemblage of parts; and except for the more expensive
-grades of work, the architect is all but
-eliminated. The charming designs that the European
-modernists make testify to the strength of
-their long architectural tradition even in the face
-of machinery; the truth is that they fit our modern
-methods of house-production scarcely much better
-than the thatched cottage of clay and wattle. The
-nemesis of mechanism is that it inexorably eliminates
-the architect&mdash;even the architect who worships its
-achievements!</p>
-
-<p>So much of the detail of a building is established
-by factory standards and patterns that even the
-patron himself has precious little scope for giving
-vent to his impulses in the design or execution of
-the work; for every divergence from a standardized<span class="pagenum">[185]</span>
-design represents an additional expense. In fact,
-the only opportunity for expressing his taste and
-personality is in choosing the mode in which the
-house is to be built: he must find his requirements
-in Italy, Colonial America, France, Tudor England,
-or Spain&mdash;woe to him if he wants to find them in
-twentieth-century America! Thus the machine process
-has created a standardized conception of style:
-of itself it can no more invent a new style than a
-mummy can beget children. If one wishes a house
-of red brick it will be Georgian or Colonial; that is
-to say, the trimming will be white, the woodwork
-will have classic moldings, and the electric-light fixtures
-will be pseudo-candlesticks in silvered metal.
-If one builds a stucco house, one is doomed by similar
-mechanical canons to rather heavy furniture in
-the early Renaissance forms, properly duplicated by
-the furniture makers of Grand Rapids&mdash;and so on.
-The notion of an American stucco house is so foreign
-to the conception of the machine mode that only
-the very poor, and the very rich, can afford it. Need
-I add that Colonial or Italian, when it falls from the
-mouth of the “realtor” has nothing to do with
-authentic Colonial or Italian work?</p>
-
-<p>Commercial concentration and the national market<span class="pagenum">[186]</span>
-waste resources by neglect, as in the case of the
-Appalachian forests they squandered them by pillage.
-Standardized materials and patterns and
-plans and elevations&mdash;here are the ingredients of
-the architecture of the machine age: by escaping it
-we get our superficially vivacious suburbs; by accepting
-it, those vast acres of nondescript monotony
-that, call them West Philadelphia or Long Island
-City or what you will, are but the anonymous districts
-of Coketown. The chief thing needful for
-the full enjoyment of this architecture is a standardized
-people. Here our various educational institutions,
-from the advertising columns of the five-cent
-magazine to the higher centers of learning,
-from the movie to the radio, have not perhaps altogether
-failed the architect.</p>
-
-<p>The manufactured house is set in the midst of a
-manufactured environment. The quality of this
-environment calls for satire rather than description;
-and yet a mere catalog of its details, such as
-Mr. Sinclair Lewis gave in Babbitt, is almost
-satire in itself. In this environment the home tends
-more and more to take last place: Mr. Henry
-Wright has in fact humorously suggested that at
-the present increasing ratio of site-costs&mdash;roads,<span class="pagenum">[187]</span>
-sewers, and so forth&mdash;to house-costs, the house itself
-will disappear in favor of the first item by
-1970. The prophetic symbol of this event is the
-tendency of the motor-car and the temple-garage
-to take precedence over the house. Already these
-incubi have begun to occupy the last remaining
-patch of space about the suburban house, where up
-to a generation ago there was a bit of garden, a
-swing for the children, a sandpile, and perhaps a
-few fruit trees.</p>
-
-<p>The end of a civilization that considers buildings
-as mere machines is that it considers human beings
-as mere machine-tenders: it therefore frustrates or
-diverts the more vital impulses which would lead to
-the culture of the earth or the intelligent care of
-the young. Blindly rebellious, men take revenge
-upon themselves for their own mistakes: hence the
-modern mechanized house, with its luminous bathroom,
-its elegant furnace, its dainty garbage-disposal
-system, has become more and more a thing to
-get away from. The real excuse for the omnipresent
-garage is that in a mechanized environment of
-subways and house-machines some avenue of escape
-and compensation must be left open. Distressing as
-a Sunday automobile ride may be on the crowded<span class="pagenum">[188]</span>
-highways that lead out of the great city, it is one
-degree better than remaining in a neighborhood
-unsuited to permanent human habitation. So intense
-is the demand for some saving grace, among all these
-frigid commercial perfections, that handicraft is
-being patronized once more, in a manner that would
-have astonished Ruskin, and the more audacious sort
-of interior decorator is fast restoring the sentimentalities
-in glass and wax flowers that marked the
-Victorian Age. This is a pretty comment upon the
-grand achievements of modern industry and science;
-but it is better, perhaps, that men should be foolish
-than that they should be completely dehumanized.</p>
-
-<p>The architecture of other civilizations has sometimes
-been the brutal emblem of the warrior, like
-that of the Assyrians: it has remained for the architecture
-of our own day in America to be fixed
-and stereotyped and blank, like the mind of a Robot.
-The age of the machine has produced an architecture
-fit only for lathes and dynamos to dwell in:
-incomplete and partial in our applications of
-science, we have forgotten that there is a science of
-humanity, as well as a science of material things.
-Buildings which do not answer to this general description
-are either aristocratic relics of the age<span class="pagenum">[189]</span>
-of handicraft, enjoyed only by the rich, or they are
-fugitive attempts to imitate cheaply the ways and
-gestures of handicraft.</p>
-
-<p>We have attempted to live off machinery, and the
-host has devoured us. It is time that we ceased to
-play the parasite: time that we looked about us, to
-see what means we have for once more becoming men.
-The prospects of architecture are not divorced
-from the prospects of the community. If man is
-created, as the legends say, in the image of the gods,
-his buildings are done in the image of his own mind
-and institutions.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[193]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_EIGHT">CHAPTER EIGHT<br />
-<span class="cheaderfont">ARCHITECTURE AND CIVILIZATION</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I</h3>
-
-<p>In the course of this survey we have seen how
-architecture and civilization develop hand in hand:
-the characteristic buildings of each period are the
-memorials to their dearest institutions. The essential
-structure of the community&mdash;the home, meeting-place,
-the work-place&mdash;remains; but the covering
-changes and passes, like the civilization itself, when
-new materials, new methods of work, new ideas and
-habits and ways of feeling, come into their own.</p>
-
-<p>If this interpretation of the rôle of architecture
-is just, there is little use in discussing the needs and
-promises of architecture without relating the shell
-itself to the informing changes that may or may not
-take place in the life of the community itself. To
-fancy that any widespread improvement of architecture
-lies principally with the architects is an
-esthetic delusion: in a barren soil the most fertile
-geniuses are cut off from their full growth. We have
-not lacked architects of boldness and originality,
-from Latrobe to Louis H. Sullivan: nor have we
-lacked men of great ability, from Thomas Jefferson<span class="pagenum">[194]</span>
-to Bertram Goodhue; nor yet have we lacked men
-who stood outside the currents of their time and
-kept their own position, from Richardson to Dr.
-Cram. With all these capacities at our disposal,
-our finest efforts in building remain chaotic and
-undisciplined and dispersed&mdash;the reflection of our
-accumulated civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Our architectural development is bound up with
-the course of our civilization: this is a truism. To
-the extent that we permit our institutions and organizations
-to function blindly, as our bed is made,
-so must we lie on it; and while we may nevertheless
-produce isolated buildings of great esthetic interest,
-like Messrs. Cram and Goodhue’s additions to
-West Point, like The Shelton, like a hundred country
-estates, the matrix of our physical community
-will not be affected by the existence of separate jewels;
-and most of our buildings will not merely be outside
-the province of the architectural profession&mdash;they
-will be the product of minds untouched, for the
-most part, by humane standards. Occasionally the
-accidental result will be good, as has happened
-sometimes in our skyscrapers and factories and
-grain elevators; but an architecture that must depend
-upon accidental results is not exactly a triumph<span class="pagenum">[195]</span>
-of the imagination, still less is it a triumph
-of exact technology.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back upon the finished drama, it is convenient
-to regard our community and our builders
-as creatures of their environment: once their choices
-are made, they seem inevitable. On this account
-even the pomp of the imperial architects can be
-justified, as the very voice and gesture of the period
-they consummated. Looking forward, however, this
-convenient fiction of inevitability is no longer serviceable:
-we are in the realm of contingency and
-choice; and at any moment a new factor may be
-introduced which will alter profoundly the economic
-and social life of the community. The Great War in
-Europe, the revolution in Russia, the spread of
-motor transportation in America, the idea of non-coöperation
-in India&mdash;I select these at random as
-matters which during the last generation have altered
-profoundly the unceasing “drift of things.”</p>
-
-<p>The future of our civilization depends upon our
-ability to select and control our heritage from the
-past, to alter our present attitudes and habits, and
-to project fresh forms into which our energies may
-be freely poured. On our ability to re-introduce
-old elements, as the humanists of the late Middle<span class="pagenum">[196]</span>
-Ages brought back the classic literature and uncovered
-the Roman monuments, or to introduce new
-elements, as the inventors and engineers of the last
-century brought in physical science and the machine-tool
-technology, our position as creators depends.
-During the last century our situation has
-changed from that of the creators of machinery to
-that of creatures of the machine system; and it is
-perhaps time that we contrived new elements which
-will alter once more the profounder contours of our
-civilization.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately for our comfort and peace of mind,
-any real change in our civilization depends upon
-much more complicated, and much more drastic
-measures than the old-fashioned reformer, who
-sought to work a change of heart or to alter the
-distribution of income, ever recognized; and it will
-do little good to talk about a “coming renaissance”
-unless we have a dim idea of the sort of creature that
-is to be born again. Our difficulty, it seems to me,
-is due to the fact that the human sciences have
-lagged behind the physical ones; and up to the
-present time our good intentions have been frustrated
-for the lack of the necessary instruments of
-analysis. It may be helpful and amusing, however,<span class="pagenum">[197]</span>
-to see what we can do in this department with the
-instruments that are already at hand.</p>
-
-<p>In every community, as Frédéric Le Play first
-pointed out, there are three elements: the place, the
-work, and the people; the sociologist’s equivalent
-of environment, function, and organism. Out of
-the interaction of the folk and their place, through
-the work, the simple life of the community develops.
-At the same time, each of these elements carries with
-it its specific spiritual heritage. The people have
-their customs and manners and morals and laws;
-or as we might say more briefly, their institutions;
-the work has its technology, its craft-experience,
-from the simple lore of peasant and breeder to the
-complicated formulæ of the modern chemists and
-metallurgists; while the deeper perception of the
-“place,” through the analysis of the falling stone,
-the rising sun, the running water, the decomposing
-vegetation, and the living animal gives rise to the
-tradition of “learning” and science.</p>
-
-<p>With this simple outline in mind, the process that
-created our present mechanical civilization becomes
-a little more plain; and we can appreciate, perhaps,
-the difficulties that stand in the way of any swift and
-easy transformation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>Thus our present order was due to a mingled
-change in every aspect of the community: morally,
-it was protestantism; legally, the rise of representative
-government; socially, the introduction of
-“democracy”; in custom, the general breakdown of
-the family unit; industrially, it meant the collapse
-of the guilds and the growth of the factory-system;
-scientifically, the spread of physical science, and the
-increased knowledge of the terrestrial globe&mdash;and so
-on.</p>
-
-<p>Each of these facets of the community’s life was
-the object of separate attention and effort: but it
-was their totality which produced the modern order.
-Where&mdash;among other reasons&mdash;the moral
-preparation for mechanical civilization was incomplete,
-as in the Catholic countries, the industrial
-revolution was also late and incomplete; where the
-craft-tradition remained strong, as in the beech forests
-of the Chilterns, the industrial change made
-fewer inroads into the habits of the community, than,
-let us say, in Lancashire, where modern industry
-was untempered and unchallenged.</p>
-
-<p>If the circumstances which hedge in our architecture
-are to be transformed, it is not sufficient,
-with Mr. Louis Sullivan, to say that we must accept<span class="pagenum">[199]</span>
-and enthrone the virtues of democracy; still
-less is there any meaning in the attempt of the Educational
-Committee of the American Institute of
-Architects to educate public taste in the arts. Nor
-is there any genuine esthetic salvation in the demand
-of the modernists that we embrace in more whole-hearted
-fashion the machine. Our architecture has
-been full of false starts and unfulfilled promises,
-precisely because the ground has not been worked
-enough beforehand to receive the new seeds.</p>
-
-<p>If we are to have a fine architecture, we must begin
-at the other end from that where our sumptuously
-illustrated magazines on home-building and
-architecture begin&mdash;not with the building itself, but
-with the whole complex out of which architect,
-builder, and patron spring, and into which the
-finished building, whether it be a cottage or a
-skyscraper, is set. Once the conditions are ripe
-for a good architecture, the plant will flower by
-itself: it did so in the Middle Ages, as a hundred
-little towns and villages between Budapest and
-Glastonbury still testify; it did so again within a
-limited area among the swells of the Renaissance;
-and it is springing forth lustily today in the garden
-cities of England, the Netherlands, and the Baltic<span class="pagenum">[200]</span>
-countries. The notion that our architecture will be
-improved by courses of appreciation in our museums
-and colleges is, to put it quite mildly, one of the
-decadent deceits of snobbery. It is only paper
-flowers that grow in this fashion.</p>
-
-
-<h3>II</h3>
-
-<p>In order to get our bearings, we shall pull apart,
-one by one, the principal elements in our heritage
-of civilization in the United States, and examine
-them separately. This is a dangerous convenience,
-however, and I must emphasize that these strands
-are tightly intertwined and bound up. It is only in
-thought that one can take them apart. No one has
-ever encountered man, save on the earth; no one has
-ever seen the earth, save through the eyes of a man.
-There is no logical priority in place, work, and
-people. In discussing the community one either
-deals with it as a whole, or one’s discussion is incomplete
-and faulty.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III</h3>
-
-<p>The capital sign of the early settlements beyond
-the seashore was the clearing; and since the great<span class="pagenum">[201]</span>
-majority of newcomers lived by agriculture, the
-forest itself appeared merely as an obstacle to be
-removed. The untouched woods of America were all
-too lush and generous, and if an occasional Leatherstocking
-loved them, the new settler saw only land
-to clear and wood to burn. In the New England
-village, the tradition of culture was perhaps applied
-to the land itself, and elsewhere there are
-occasional elements of good practice, in the ordered
-neatness of boulder-fences. For the most part,
-however, the deliberate obliteration of the natural
-landscape became a great national sport, comparable
-to the extermination of bison which the
-casual western traveler devoted himself to at a later
-date.</p>
-
-<p>The stripping of the Appalachian forest was the
-first step in our campaign against nature. By 1860
-the effect was already grave enough to warn an
-acute observer, like George Perkins Marsh, of the
-danger to our civilization, and to prompt him in
-Earth and Man, to remind his countrymen that
-other civilizations about the Mediterranean and the
-Adriatic had lost their top-soil and ruined their
-agriculture through the wanton destruction of their
-forests.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[202]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the meanwhile, a new factor had entered. If
-before the nineteenth century we cleared the forest
-to make way for the farm, with the entrance of the
-industrial pioneer we began to clear the farm to
-parcel out the city. We have called this process the
-settlement of America, but the name is anomalous,
-for we formed the habit of using the land, not as a
-home, a permanent seat of culture, but as a means
-to something else&mdash;principally as a means to the
-temporary advantages of profitable speculation and
-exploitation.</p>
-
-<p>James Mackay, a charitable Scotch observer in
-the middle of the nineteenth century, explained our
-negligence of the earth by the fact that we pinned
-our affections to institutions rather than places, and
-cared not how the landscape was massacred as long
-as we lived under the same flag and enjoyed the
-same forms of government. There is no doubt a
-little truth in this observation; but it was not merely
-our attachment to republican government that
-caused this behavior: it was even more, perhaps, our
-disattachment from the affiliations of a settled life.
-The pioneer, to put it vulgarly, was on the make and
-on the move; it did not matter to him how he treated
-the land, since by the time he could realize its deficiencies<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
-he had already escaped to a new virgin
-area. “What had posterity done for him?”</p>
-
-<p>The pioneers who turned their backs on a civilized
-way of life in order to extend the boundaries of
-civilization, left us with a heavy burden&mdash;not merely
-blasted and disorderly landscapes, but the habit of
-tolerating and producing blasted and disorderly
-landscapes. As Cobbett pointed out in his attempt
-to account for the unkempt condition of the American
-farm, the farmer in this country lacked the example
-of the great landed estates, where the woods
-had become cultivated parks, and the meadowland
-had become lawns. Without this cultivated example
-in the country, it is no wonder that our cities have
-been littered, frayed at the edges, ugly; no wonder
-that our pavements so quickly obliterate trees and
-grass; no wonder that so many towns are little more
-than gashes of metal and stone.</p>
-
-<p>Those who had been bred on the land brought into
-the city none of that disciplined care which might
-have preserved some of its amenities. They left the
-smoke of the clearings, which was a sign of rural
-“progress”; they welcomed the smoke of the towns,
-and all that accompanied it.</p>
-
-<p>It is scarcely a paradox to say that the improvement<span class="pagenum">[204]</span>
-of our cities must proceed inwards from the
-countryside; for it is largely a matter of reversing
-the process which converts the farm into incipient
-blocks of real estate. Once we assimilate the
-notion that soil and site have uses quite apart from
-sale, we shall not continue to barbarize and waste
-them. Consider how the water’s edge of lower Manhattan
-was developed without the slightest regard
-for its potential facilities for recreation; how the
-Acropolis of Pittsburgh, the Hump, was permitted
-to turn into a noisome slum; how the unique beauty
-of Casco Bay has been partly secured only by Portland’s
-inferiority as a shipping center. Indeed, all
-up and down the country one can pick up a thousand
-examples of towns misplaced, of recreation
-areas becoming factory sites, of industries located
-without intelligent reference to raw materials or
-power or markets or the human beings who serve
-them, of agricultural land being turned prematurely
-into suburban lots, and of small rural communities
-which need the injection of new industries and enterprises,
-languishing away whilst a metropolis not
-fifty miles away continues to absorb more people,
-who daily pay a heavy premium for their congestion.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[205]</span></p>
-
-<p>I have already drawn attention to the waste of
-local materials in connection with our manufacture
-of buildings, our concentration of markets, and our
-standardization of styles. It is plain that our
-architects would not have to worry so painfully
-about the latest fashion-page of architectural tricks,
-if they had the opportunity to work more consistently
-with the materials at hand, using brick where
-clay was plentiful, stone where that was of good quality,
-and cement where concrete adapted itself to
-local needs&mdash;as it does so well near the seashore,
-and, for a different reason, in the south. Wood,
-one of our most important materials for both exterior
-and interior, has suffered by just the opposite
-of neglect: so completely have our Appalachian
-forests been mined, and so expensive are the freight
-charges for the long haul from the Pacific coast,
-that good housing in the east depends to no little
-extent upon our ability to recover continuous local
-supplies of timber throughout the Appalachian region.</p>
-
-<p>(It is characteristic of our mechanical and metropolitan
-civilization that one of the great sources
-of timber waste is the metropolitan newspaper: and
-one of the remoter blessings of a sounder regional<span class="pagenum">[206]</span>
-development is that it would, perhaps, remove the
-hourly itch for the advertising sheet, and by the
-same token would provide large quantities of wood
-for housing, without calling for the destruction of
-ten acres of spruce for the Sunday edition alone!
-I give the reader the privilege of tracing the pleasant
-ramifications of this notion.)</p>
-
-<p>To see the interdependence of city and country, to
-realize that the growth and concentration of one
-is associated with the depletion and impoverishment
-of the other, to appreciate that there is a just and
-harmonious balance between the two&mdash;this capacity
-we have lacked. Before we can build well on any
-scale we shall, it seems to me, have to develop an
-art of regional planning, an art which will relate
-city and countryside in a new pattern from that
-which was the blind creation of the industrial and
-the territorial pioneer. Instead of regarding the
-countryside as so much grist doomed to go eventually
-into the metropolitan mill, we must plan to
-preserve and develop all our natural resources to the
-limit.</p>
-
-<p>It goes without saying that any genuine attempt
-to provide for the social and economic renewal of a
-region cannot be constrained to preserve vested<span class="pagenum">[207]</span>
-land-values and property rights and privileges; indeed,
-if the land is to be fully loved and cared for
-again we must recover it in something more than
-name only. The main objection to keeping our
-natural resources in the hands of the community,
-namely, that private capital is more zealous at exploitation,
-is precisely the reason for urging the
-first course. Our land has suffered from zeal in
-exploitation; and it would be much better, for example,
-that our water power resources should remain
-temporarily undeveloped, than that they should
-be incontinently used by private corporations to
-concentrate population in the centers where a high
-tariff can be charged. The number of things that
-are waiting to be done&mdash;the planting of town forests,
-the communal restoration of river banks and beaches,
-the transformation of bare roads into parkways&mdash;will
-of course differ in each region and locality;
-and my aim here is only to point to a general
-objective.</p>
-
-<p>The beginnings of genuine regional planning have
-already been made in Ontario, Canada, where the
-social utilization of water-power has directly benefited
-the rural communities, and given them an independent
-lease on life. In the United States, Mr.<span class="pagenum">[208]</span>
-Benton Mackaye has sketched out a bold and fundamental
-plan for associating the development of a
-spinal recreational trail with an electric power development
-for the whole Appalachian region, along
-the ridgeway; both trail and power being used as
-a basis for the re-afforestation and the re-peopling
-of the whole upland area, with a corresponding
-decentralization and depopulation of the overcrowded,
-spotty coastal region. Such a scheme
-would call for a pretty thorough dislocation of
-metropolitan values; and if it is slow in making
-headway, that is only because its gradual institution
-would mean that a new epoch had begun in
-American civilization. At the present time it is hard
-to discover how tangible these new hopes and projects
-may be: it is significant, however, that the
-Housing and Regional Planning Commission of the
-State of New York was called into existence by the
-necessity for finding a way out of our metropolitan
-tangle; and it is possible that a new orientation in
-power and culture is at hand.</p>
-
-<p>In a loose, inconsecutive way, the objectives of
-regional planning have been dealt with by the conservation
-movement during the last century; and if
-the art itself has neither a corpus of experience nor<span class="pagenum">[209]</span>
-an established body of practitioners, this is only to
-say that it has, as it were, broken through the surface
-in a number of places and that it remains to be gathered
-up and intelligently used. When regional planning
-starts its active career, it will concern itself
-to provide a new framework for our communities
-which will redistribute population and industry, and
-recultivate the environment&mdash;substituting forestry
-for timber-mining, stable agriculture for soil-mining,
-and in general the habit of dressing and keeping the
-earth for our traditional American practice of
-stripping and deflowering it. Architecture begins
-historically when the “Bauer” who plants becomes
-the “Bauer” who builds; and if our architecture is
-to have a substantial foundation, it is in a refreshened
-countryside that we will perhaps find it.</p>
-
-
-<h3>IV</h3>
-
-<p>Let us now turn to industry. The medieval order
-was disrupted in America before it could fully take
-root. As a result we have no craft-tradition that
-is properly native, with the exception of the shipbuilders
-and furniture-makers of New England,
-whose art has been on the wane since the second<span class="pagenum">[210]</span>
-quarter of the nineteenth century. We have covered
-up this deficiency by importing from generation to
-generation foreign workmen, principally Germans
-and Italians, in whose birthplaces the art of using
-wood and stone has not been entirely lost; but we
-are still far from having created an independent
-craft-tradition of our own. If art is the fine efflorescence
-of a settled life, invention is the necessity of
-the roving pioneer who every day faces new difficulties
-and new hazards; and accordingly we have devoted
-our energies to the machine, and to the products
-of the machine. All that we cannot do in
-this medium we regard as “mere” art, and put it
-apart from the direct aims and practices of everyday
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Our skill in working according to exact formulæ
-with machines and instruments of precision is not
-to be belittled: socially directed it would put an end
-to a hundred vapid drudgeries, and it would perhaps
-give the pervasive finish of a style to structures
-whose parts are now oddly at sixes and sevens.
-Unfortunately for us and for the world in general
-the machine did not come simply as a technological
-contribution: it appeared when the guild had broken
-down and when the joint stock company had gotten<span class="pagenum">[211]</span>
-its piratical start as a Company of Gentleman-Adventurers.
-As a result, our mechanical age was given
-an unsocial twist; and inventions which should have
-worked for the welfare of the community were used
-for the financial aggrandizement of investors and
-monopolizers. In architecture, all the skill of the
-technologist and all the taste of the artist have become
-subservient to the desire of the financier for a
-quick turnover of capital, and the ground landlord
-for the maximum exploitation of the land. The sole
-chances for good workmanship occur when, by a
-happy accident of personality or situation, the patron
-asks of the architect and engineer only the best
-that they can give.</p>
-
-<p>It is this side of exaggeration to say that today
-a building is one kind of manufactured product on
-a counter of manufactured products; but with a difference;
-for the internal processes of construction
-are still, in spite of all our advances, handicrafts.
-An interesting result, as Mr. F. L. Ackermann has
-pointed out, follows from this fact: namely, that the
-pace of building tends to lag behind the pace at
-which other goods are produced under the machine-system;
-and if this is the case, the quantitative production
-of buildings is bound to be too low, while<span class="pagenum">[212]</span>
-their cost is bound, by the same process, to be disproportionately
-high.</p>
-
-<p>The remedy seized by the engineer, as I have
-pointed out, is to introduce the process of standardization
-and mechanization wherever possible.
-This heightens the pace of building, and by and large
-it quickens the rate of deterioration in the thing
-built: both processes increase the turnover of buildings,
-and so tend to make the art of building approach
-the rhythm established by our price-system
-for the other mechanical arts; since, under the price-system,
-the manufacturer must create a continued
-demand for his products or risk flooding the market.
-The two ways of creating a demand are to widen the
-area of sale or to increase the rate of consumption.
-Shoddy materials and shoddy workmanship are the
-most obvious means of accomplishing the second end;
-but fashion plays a serious part, and maladaptation
-to use, though less frequently noted, cannot be
-ignored.</p>
-
-<p>All these little anomalies and inconveniences have
-come with machinery, not of course because the machine
-is inherently wasteful and fraudulent, but because
-our social order has not been adapted to its
-use. Our gains have been canceled, for the reason<span class="pagenum">[213]</span>
-that the vast expansion of our productive powers
-has necessitated an equally vast expansion in our
-consumptive processes. Hence in many departments
-of building, the advantage of machinery has been
-almost nullified; and if handicraft has been driven
-out, it is less because it is inefficient than because
-the pace of production and consumption under
-handicraft is so much retarded.</p>
-
-<p>When Ruskin began to agitate for the revival of
-handicraft it looked as if our industrial system were
-bound to triumph everywhere, and as if Ruskin’s
-protest were the last weak chirp of romanticism. At
-the present time, however, the issue is not so simple
-as it seemed to the builders of the Crystal Palace;
-nor are the choices so narrow. What seemed a fugitive
-philosophy when applied to the machine by itself
-has turned out to be a rigorous and intelligent criticism,
-when applied to the machine-system. The use
-of the machine in provinces where it has no essential
-concern, the network of relationships that have
-followed the financial exploitation of machinery&mdash;these
-things have led to a revolt, in which the engineers
-themselves have participated. It is not machinery
-alone that causes standardization, we begin
-to see, but the national market; it is not the machine<span class="pagenum">[214]</span>
-that makes our cheaper houses blank and anonymous,
-but the absence of any mediating relation between
-the user and the designer&mdash;except through the personality
-of the builder, who builds for sale.</p>
-
-<p>Apart from this, in certain industries like wood-turning
-and furniture-making the introduction of
-the gasoline engine and the electric motor has restored
-the center of gravity to the small factory,
-set in the countryside, and to the individual craftsman
-or group, working in the small shop. Professor
-Patrick Geddes has characterized the transition
-from steam to electricity as one from the
-paleotechnic to the neotechnic order; and intuitive
-technological geniuses, like Mr. Henry Ford, have
-been quick to see the possibilities of little factories set
-in the midst of the countryside. Mechanically speaking,
-the electric motor has in certain industries and
-operations placed the individual worker on a par
-with the multiple-machine factory, even as motor
-transportation is reducing the advantages of the
-big city over the small town or village. It is therefore
-not unreasonable to look forward to a continuation
-of this development, which will enable groups
-of building workers to serve their immediate region
-quite as economically as would a multitude of national<span class="pagenum">[215]</span>
-factories, producing goods blindly for a blind
-national market. With direct sale and service, from
-local sawmills and local furniture-making shops, the
-older handicrafts themselves might reënter once
-more through the back door&mdash;as indeed they have
-already begun to do in response to the demands of
-the wealthy.</p>
-
-<p>I am not suggesting here that handicraft is likely
-to replace machinery: what I am suggesting is the
-immediate and tangible possibility that machinery
-itself may lend itself in its modern forms to a more
-purposive system of production, like that fostered by
-handicraft; and under this condition the antagonism
-and disparity between the two forms of production
-need not be so great as they are at present. In a
-little valley I happen to be acquainted with, there is
-enough running water to supply five families with
-electric light from a single power plant; unfortunately,
-five families cannot combine for such a
-purpose in the state I am speaking of without a
-power-franchise; and so the only source of electric
-light is a distant commercial power plant using coal.
-Here is an obvious case where commercial monopoly
-runs contrary to economy and where the benefits of
-modern technology are forfeited in the working of<span class="pagenum">[216]</span>
-our financial system. Once we understand that
-modern industry does not necessarily bring with it
-financial and physical concentration, the growth of
-smaller centers and a more widespread distribution
-of the genuine benefits of technology will, I think,
-take place.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that the movement of the last hundred
-years has been away from handicraft; but a hundred
-years is a relatively short time, and at least a
-part of the triumph of machinery has been due to
-our naïve enjoyment of it as a plaything. There is
-a wide difference between doing away with hand-labor,
-as in sawing wood or hoisting a weight, and
-eliminating handicraft by using machine tools for
-operations which can be subtly performed only by
-hand. The first practice is all to the good: the
-second essentially misunderstands the significance
-of handicraft and machinery, and I must dwell on
-this point for a moment, since it is responsible for
-a good deal of shoddy thinking on the future of art
-and architecture.</p>
-
-
-<h3>V</h3>
-
-<p>On the human side, the prime distinction overlooked
-by the mechanists is that machine work is<span class="pagenum">[217]</span>
-principally toil: handicraft, on the other hand, is a
-form of living. The operations of the mechanical
-arts are inherently servile, because the worker is
-forced to keep the pace set by the machine and to
-follow the pattern set by the designer, someone other
-than himself; whereas the handicrafts are relatively
-free, in that they allow a certain leeway to different
-types of work and different ways of tackling a job.
-These distinctions are bound up with a difference in
-the forms that are used; and it is through these
-esthetic differences that we may, perhaps, best see
-how the personal and mechanical may be apportioned
-in the architecture of the future.</p>
-
-<p>The key to handicraft esthetics, it seems to me, is
-a sort of vital superfluity. The carpenter is not
-content with his planed surface; nor is the mason
-satisfied with the smooth stone; nor does the painter
-impartially cover the bare wall: no, each worker
-must elaborate the bare utilitarian object until the
-capital becomes a writhing mass of foliage, until the
-domed ceiling becomes the gate of heaven, until each
-object gets the imprint of the fantasies that have
-ripened in the worker’s head. The craftsman literally
-possesses his work, in the sense that the Bible
-says a body is possessed by a familiar spirit.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[218]</span></p>
-
-<p>Occasionally, this elaboration passes the point at
-which it would give the highest esthetic delight to
-the beholder; nevertheless, the craftsman keeps pouring
-himself into his job: he must fill up every blank
-space, and will not be denied, for carving wood or
-hacking stone, when it is done with a free spirit, is
-a dignified and enjoyable way of living. Those of
-us who have become acclimated to industrialism
-sometimes find the effulgence and profusion of
-craftsmanship a little bewildering: but if our enjoyment
-of the portals of a medieval cathedral or
-the façade of an East Indian house is dulled by the
-myopic intricacy of the pattern, our appreciation of
-the craftsman’s fun and interest should be heightened.
-Granting that art is an end in itself, is it not an
-end to the worker as well as the spectator? A great
-part of craftsmanship needs no other justification
-than that it bears the mark of a joyous spirit.</p>
-
-<p>When we compare an ideal product of handicraft,
-like a Florentine table of the sixteenth century, with
-an ideal product of mechanical art&mdash;say a modern
-bathroom&mdash;the contrasting virtues and defects become
-plain. The conditions that make possible good
-machine-work are, first of all, a complete calculation
-of consequences, embodied in a working drawing or<span class="pagenum">[219]</span>
-design: to deviate by a hair’s breadth from this calculation
-is to risk failure. The qualities exemplified
-in good machine-work follow naturally from the
-implements: they are precision, economy, finish, geometric
-perfection. When the workman’s personality
-intervenes in the process, it is carelessness. If he
-leave his imprint, it is a flaw.</p>
-
-<p>A good pattern in terms of the machine is one
-that fulfills the bare essentials of an object: the
-chairishness of a chair, the washiness of a basin, the
-enclosedness of a house, and any superfluity that
-may be added by way of ornament is a miscarriage
-of the machine-process, for by adding dull work to
-work that is already dull it defeats the end for which
-machinery may legitimately exist in a humane society;
-namely, to produce a necessary quantity of
-useful goods with a minimum of human effort.</p>
-
-<p>Craftsmanship, to put the distinction roughly,
-emphasizes the worker’s delight in production: anyone
-who proposed to reduce the amount of time and
-effort spent by the carver in wood or stone would be
-in effect attempting to shorten the worker’s life.
-Machine-work, on the other hand, tends at its best
-to diminish the inescapable drudgeries of production:
-any dodge or decoration that increases the time spent<span class="pagenum">[220]</span>
-in service to the machine adds to the physical burden
-of existence. One is a sufficient end; the other is,
-legitimately, only a means to an end.</p>
-
-<p>Our modern communities are far from understanding
-this distinction. Just as in art we multiply inadequate
-chromolithographs and starve the modern
-artist, so in architecture a good part of machine-work
-is devoted to the production of fake handicraft,
-like the molded stone ornamentation used in huge
-Renaissance fireplaces, designed frequently for small
-modern apartments that are superheated by steam.
-In turn, the surviving worker who now practices
-handicraft has been debased into a servile drudge,
-using his skill and love, like his predecessors in Imperial
-Rome, to copy the original productions of
-other artists and craftsmen. Between handicraft
-that is devoted to mechanical reproduction and machinery
-that is set to reproduce endless simulacra of
-handicraft, our esthetic opportunities in art and
-architecture are muffed again and again. An occasional
-man of talent, like Mr. Samuel Yellin, the
-iron-worker, will survive; but the great run of craftsmen
-do not.</p>
-
-<p>Now, with due respect to the slickness and perfection
-of the best machine-work, we enjoy it because of<span class="pagenum">[221]</span>
-the use that it fulfills: it may incidentally achieve
-significant form, but no one retains a pickle bottle,
-beautifully shaped though Messrs. Heinz and Co.’s
-are, for this reason: it was meant for pickles and it
-vanishes with the pickles. This is not merely true
-of today: it is true of all ages: the common utensils
-of life return to the dust, whereas those things that
-hold the imprint of man’s imagination&mdash;the amphoræ
-of the Greek potters, the fragile crane-necked bottles
-of the Persians, the seals of the Egyptians&mdash;are
-preserved from the rubbish heap, no matter how
-frail they may be or how small their intrinsic value.</p>
-
-<p>There is something in man that compels him to
-respect the human imprint of art: he lives more
-nobly surrounded by his own reflections, as a god
-might live. The very rage of iconoclasm which the
-Mohammedans and Puritans and eighteenth-century
-liberals exhibited betrayed a deep respect for the
-power of art; for we destroy the things that threaten
-our existence. Art, in a certain sense, is the spiritual
-varnish that we lay on material things, to insure
-their preservation: on its lowest terms, beauty
-is justified because it has “survival value.” The
-fact that houses which bear the living imprint of
-the mind are irreplaceable is what prevents them<span class="pagenum">[222]</span>
-from being quickly and callously replaced. Wren’s
-churches are preserved beyond their period of desuetude
-by Wren’s personality. This process is just
-the opposite to that fostered by the machine-system,
-and it explains why, in the long run, machine-work
-may be unsatisfactory and uneconomical&mdash;too
-quickly degraded.</p>
-
-<p>Art, in fact, is one of the main ways in which
-we escape the vicious circle of economic activity. According
-to the conventional economist, our economic
-life has but three phases: production, distribution,
-and consumption. We work to eat so that we may
-eat to work. This is a fairly accurate portrait of
-life in an early industrial town; but it does not apply
-to the economic processes of a civilized community.
-Everywhere, even in regions of difficulty, something
-more comes out of production than the current income
-and the current saving of capital: sometimes
-it is leisure and play, sometimes it is religion,
-philosophy, and science, and sometimes it is art.
-In the creation of any permanent work of art the
-processes of dissipation and consumption are stayed:
-hence the only civilized criterion of a community’s
-economic life is not the amount of things produced,
-but the durability of things created. A community<span class="pagenum">[223]</span>
-with a low rate of production and a high standard
-of creation will in the long run be physically richer
-than a modern city in which the gains of industry
-are frittered away in evanescent, uncreative expenditures.
-What matters is the ratio of production
-to creation.</p>
-
-<p>Here lies the justification of the modern architect.
-Cut off though he is from the actual processes of
-building, he nevertheless remains the sole surviving
-craftsman who maintains the relation towards the
-whole structure that the old handicraft workers used
-to enjoy in connection with their particular job.
-The architect can still leave his imprint, and even
-in the severely utilitarian factory he can take the
-simple forms of the engineer and turn them into a
-superb structure like Messrs. Helmle and Corbett’s
-Fletcher Building in New York. To the extent that
-honest engineering is better than fake architecture,
-genuine architecture is better than engineering: for
-it strikes the same esthetic and humane chord that
-painting and sculpture appeal to by themselves. The
-freedom to depart from arbitrary and mechanical
-precedent, the freedom to project new forms which
-will more adequately meet his problem are essential
-to the architect. Up to the present he has been<span class="pagenum">[224]</span>
-able, for the most part, to exercise this freedom only
-on traditional buildings, like churches and libraries
-and auditoriums, which are outside the reaches of
-the present commercial regime and have therefore
-some prospect of durability.</p>
-
-<p>But before the whole mass of contemporary building
-will be ready to receive the imprint of the architect,
-and before the handicrafts re-enter the modern
-building to give the luster of permanence to its
-decorations and fixtures, there will have to be a
-pretty thoroughgoing reorientation in our economic
-life. Whilst buildings are erected to increase site
-values, whilst houses are produced in block to be
-sold to the first wretch who must put a roof over
-his family’s head, it is useless to dwell upon the
-ministrations of art; and, unfortunately, too much
-of our building today rests upon this basis and exhibits
-all the infirmities of our present economic
-structure.</p>
-
-<p>From the aspect of our well-to-do suburbs and our
-newly-planned industrial towns, from the beginnings
-of a sound functional architecture in some of our
-schools and factories, it is easy to see what the
-architecture of our various regions might be if it
-had the opportunity to work itself out in a coherent<span class="pagenum">[225]</span>
-pattern. For the present, however, it is impossible
-to say with any certainty whether our architects are
-doomed to be extruded by mechanism, or whether
-they will have the opportunity to restore to our
-machine-system some of the freedom of an earlier
-regime; and I have no desire to burden this discussion
-with predictions and exhortations. But if the
-conclusions we have reached are sound, it is only the
-second possibility that holds out any promise to the
-good life.</p>
-
-
-<h3>VI</h3>
-
-<p>So far we have considered the regional and
-industrial bearing of architecture: it now remains
-to examine briefly its relation to the community
-itself.</p>
-
-<p>In the building of our cities and villages the main
-<em>mores</em> we have carried over have been those of the
-pioneer. We have seen how the animus of the pioneer,
-“mine and move,” is antagonistic to the settled
-life out of which ordered industries and a great
-architecture grow. We have seen also how this
-animus was deepened in the nineteenth century by
-the extraordinary temptation to profit by the increase
-in land-increments which followed the growth<span class="pagenum">[226]</span>
-of population, the result being, as Mr. Henry George
-saw when he came back to the cities of the East from
-a part of California that was still in the throes of
-settlement&mdash;progress <em>and</em> poverty.</p>
-
-<p>Now, to increase the population of a town and
-to raise the nominal values in ground rents is almost
-a moral imperative in our American communities.
-That is why our zoning laws, which attempt to regulate
-the use of land and provide against unfair competition
-in obtaining the unearned increment, almost
-universally leave a loophole through which the property
-owners, by mutual consent, may transform the
-character of the neighborhood for more intensive
-uses and higher ground rents. All our city planning,
-and more and more our architecture itself, is done
-with reference to prospective changes in the value
-of real estate. It is nothing to the real estate speculator
-that the growth of a city destroys the very
-purpose for which it may legitimately exist, as the
-growth of Atlantic City into a suburb of Broadway
-and Chestnut Street ruined its charm as a seaside
-fishing village. Sufficient unto the day is the evil
-he creates.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the important changes that must be effected
-in relation to industry and the land cannot<span class="pagenum">[227]</span>
-be accomplished without departing from these dominant
-<em>mores</em>&mdash;from the customs and laws and uneasy
-standards of ethics which we carry over from the
-days of our continental conquest. The pioneer inheritance
-of the miner, coupled with the imperial
-inheritance of the hunter-warrior, out for loot, lie
-at the bottom of our present-day social structure;
-and it is useless to expect any vital changes in the
-milieu of architecture until the miner and the hunter
-are subordinated to relatively more civilized types,
-concerned with the culture of life, rather than with
-its exploitation and destruction.</p>
-
-<p>I am aware that the statement of the problem
-in these elementary terms will seem a little crude and
-unfamiliar in America where, in the midst of our
-buzzing urban environment, we lose sight of the
-underlying primitive reality, or&mdash;which is worse&mdash;speak
-vaguely of the “cave-man” unleashed in modern
-civilization. I do not deny that there are other
-elements in our makeup and situation that play an
-important part; but it is enough to bring forward
-here the notion that our concern with physical
-utilities and with commercial values is something
-more than an abstract defect in our philosophy. On
-the contrary, it seems to me to inhere in the dominant<span class="pagenum">[228]</span>
-occupations of the country, and it is less to
-be overcome by moralizing and exhortation, than to
-be grown out of, by taking pains to provide for the
-ascendancy and renewal of the more humane occupations.</p>
-
-<p>Our communities have grown blindly, and, escaping
-the natural limitations which curbed even the Roman
-engineers, have not been controlled, on the other
-hand, by any normative ideal. One step in the direction
-of departing from our pioneer customs and
-habits would be to consider what the nature of a
-city is, and what functions it performs. The dominant,
-abstract culture of the nineteenth century
-was blithely unconcerned with these questions, but,
-as I have already pointed out, the Puritans not
-merely recognized their importance, but regulated
-the plan and layout of the city accordingly. The
-notion that there is anything arbitrary in imposing
-a limitation upon the area and population of a city
-is absurd: the limits have already been laid down
-in the physical conditions of human nature, as Mr.
-Frederic Harrison once wisely observed, in the fact
-that men do not walk comfortably faster than three
-miles an hour, nor can they spend on the physical
-exertion of locomotion and exercise more than a<span class="pagenum">[229]</span>
-few hours in every twenty-four. With respect to
-the needs of recreation, home-life, and health, the
-growth of a city to the point where the outlying
-citizen must travel two hours a day in the subway
-between his office and his place of work is unintelligent
-and arbitrary.</p>
-
-<p>A city, properly speaking, does not exist by the
-accretion of houses, but by the association of human
-beings. When the accretion of houses reaches such
-a point of congestion or expansion that human association
-becomes difficult, the place ceases to be a
-city. The institutions that make up the city&mdash;schools,
-clubs, libraries, gymnasia, theaters, churches,
-and so forth&mdash;can be traced in one form or another
-back to the primitive community: they function on
-the basis of immediate intercourse, and they can serve
-through their individual units only a limited number
-of people. Should the population of a local community
-be doubled, all its civic equipment must be
-doubled too; otherwise the life that functions
-through these institutions and opportunities will
-lapse and disappear.</p>
-
-<p>It is not my purpose to discuss in detail the various
-devices by which our practice of endless growth
-and unlimited increment may be limited. Once the<span class="pagenum">[230]</span>
-necessary conversion in faith and morals has taken
-place, the other things will come easily: for example,
-the social appropriation of unearned land-increments,
-and the exercise of the town-planner’s
-art to limit the tendency of a community to straggle
-beyond its boundaries.</p>
-
-<p>While a great many other ideas and measures are
-of prime importance for the good life of the community,
-that which concerns its architectural expression
-is the notion of the community as limited
-in numbers, and in area; and as formed, not merely
-by the agglomeration of people, but by their relation
-to definite social and economic institutions.
-To express these relations clearly, to embody them
-in buildings and roads and gardens in which each
-individual structure will be subordinated to the whole&mdash;this
-is the end of community planning.</p>
-
-<p>With the coherence and stability indicated by this
-method of planning, architectural effect would not
-lie in the virtuosity of the architect or in the peculiar
-ornateness and originality of any particular building:
-it would tend to be diffused, so that the humblest
-shop would share in the triumph with the most
-conspicuous public building. There are examples
-of this order of comprehensive architectural design<span class="pagenum">[231]</span>
-in hundreds of little villages and towns in pre-industrial
-Europe&mdash;to say nothing of a good handful in
-pre-industrial America&mdash;and community planning
-would make it once more our daily practice. That
-it can be done again the examples of Letchworth
-and Welwyn in England, and numerous smaller gardened
-cities created by municipal authorities in
-England and other parts of Europe, bear evidence;
-and where the precepts of Mr. Ebenezer Howard
-have been to any degree followed, architecture has
-been quick to benefit.</p>
-
-<p>The difference between community planning and
-the ordinary method of city-extension and suburb-building
-has been very well put in a recent report
-to the American Institute of Architects, by the Committee
-on Community Planning. “Community planning,”
-says the report, “does not ask by what desperate
-means a city of 600,000 people can add
-another 400,000 during the next generation, nor how
-a city of seven millions may enlarge its effective borders
-to include 29,000,000. It begins, rather, at the
-other end, and it asks with Mr. Ebenezer Howard
-how big must a city be to perform all of its social,
-educational, and industrial functions. It attempts
-to establish minima and maxima for different kinds<span class="pagenum">[232]</span>
-of communities, depending upon their character and
-function. If the established practices of industry,
-commerce, and finance tend to produce monstrous
-agglomerations which do not contribute to human
-welfare or happiness, community planning must question
-these established practices, since the values they
-create have nothing to do with the essential welfare
-of the community itself, and since the condition thus
-created is inimical to the stable, architectural development
-of the community.”</p>
-
-<p>The normative idea of the garden-city and the
-garden-village is the corrective for the flatulent and
-inorganic conception of city-development that we
-labor with, and under, today. So far from being a
-strange importation from Europe, the garden-city is
-nothing more or less than a sophisticated recovery
-of a form that we once enjoyed on our Atlantic
-seaboard, and lost through our sudden and almost
-uncontrollable access of natural resources and people.
-Here and there an enterprising and somewhat
-benevolent industrial corporation has attempted to
-carry out some of the principles of garden-city development;
-and the United States Housing Corporation
-and the Shipping Board had begun to build
-many admirable communities, when the war brought<span class="pagenum">[233]</span>
-this vast initiative to an end. These precedents are
-better than nothing, it goes without saying, but there
-will have to be a pretty thorough reorientation in
-our economic and social life before the garden-city
-will be anything more than a slick phrase, without
-content or power.</p>
-
-<p>Until our communities are ready to undertake the
-sort of community planning that leads to garden-cities,
-it will be empty eloquence to talk about the
-future of American architecture. Sheltered as an
-enjoyment for the prosperous minority, or used as a
-skysign for the advertisement of business, architecture
-will still await its full opportunity for creative
-achievement.</p>
-
-<p>The signs of promise are plenty, and if I have
-dealt with the darker side of the picture and have occasionally
-overemphasized the weaknesses and defects
-of the American tradition, it is only because in our
-present appreciation of what the American architect
-has already given form to, we are likely to forget the
-small area these achievements occupy. So far we
-have achieved patches of good building; more than
-once we have achieved the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mot juste</i>, but we have
-not learnt the more difficult art of consecutive discourse.
-With respect to the architecture of the<span class="pagenum">[234]</span>
-whole community, medieval Boston and medieval New
-Amsterdam had more to boast than their magnificently
-endowed successors. Just as Mr. Babbitt’s
-great ancestor, Scadder, transformed a swamp into
-a thriving metropolis by the simple method of calling
-it New Eden, so do we tend to lighten our burdens
-by calling them the “blessings of progress”;
-but it does not avail. Our mechanical and metropolitan
-civilization, with all its genuine advances,
-has let certain essential human elements drop out
-of its scheme; and until we recover these elements
-our civilization will be at loose ends, and our architecture
-will unerringly express this situation.</p>
-
-<p>Home, meeting-place, and factory; polity, culture,
-and art have still to be united and wrought together,
-and this task is one of the fundamental tasks of our
-civilization. Once that union is effected, the long
-breach between art and life, which began with the
-Renaissance, will be brought to an end. The magnitude
-of our task might seem a little disheartening,
-were it not for the fact that, “against or with our
-will,” our civilization is perpetually being modified
-and altered. If in less than a hundred years the
-feudal civilization of Japan could adopt our modern
-mechanical gear, there is nothing to prevent our<span class="pagenum">[235]</span>
-own civilization from recovering once more its human
-base&mdash;nothing, that is, except our own desires, aims,
-habits, and ends. This is an ironic consolation, perhaps,
-but the remedy it offers is real.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[237]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ENVOI"><i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ENVOI</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<p><em>The aristocracies of the world have never doubted
-the supremacy of the home and garden and temple
-over all the baser mechanisms of existence, and the
-folk-civilizations out of which aristocracies have
-so often risen have never strayed far from these
-realities. In the Norse fables, the dwarfs are regarded
-as queer monsters, because they are always
-“busy people” who have no pride or joy except in
-the work they perform and the mischief they cause.</em></p>
-
-<p><em>The great heresy of the modern world is that it
-ceased to worship the Lords of Life, who made the
-rivers flow, caused the animals to mate, and brought
-forth the yearly miracle of vegetation: it prostrated
-itself, on the contrary, before the dwarfs, with their
-mechanical ingenuity, and the giants, with their imbecile
-power. Today our lives are perpetually menaced
-by these “busy people”; we are surrounded by
-their machines, and for worship, we turn their prayer
-wheels of red-tape.</em></p>
-
-<p><em>It will not always be so; that would be monstrous.<span class="pagenum">[238]</span>
-Sooner or later we will learn to pick our way out of
-the débris that the dwarfs, the gnomes, and the giants
-have created; eventually, to use Henry Adams’
-figure, the sacred mother will supplant the dynamo.
-The prospects for our architecture are bound up
-with a new orientation towards the things that are
-symbolized in the home, the garden and the temple;
-for architecture sums up the civilization it enshrines,
-and the mass of our buildings can never be better
-or worse than the institutions that have shaped them.</em></p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum">[241]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="NOTES_ON_BOOKS">NOTES ON BOOKS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>I<br />
-<span class="smcap">Historical Background</span></h3>
-
-<p>The best introductions to the historic setting of
-our architecture and civilization are the local guide-books
-and histories. See, for example, Stokes’s excellent
-and exhaustive Iconography of Manhattan,
-and the Memorial History of Boston, edited by Justin
-Winsor. Both are profusely illustrated. In the
-wave of civic enthusiasm that swept over the country
-in the ’nineties, many local descriptions and
-histories were written. For the most part, they are
-loose, rambling, credulous, and devoid of sociological
-insight: but occasionally there is a nugget in the
-matrix. Powell’s Historic Towns series covers broad
-ground. As regional histories, Weeden’s Economic
-and Social History of New England, and Mr. Samuel
-Eliot Morison’s Maritime History of Massachusetts,
-stand in a class by themselves: in them we
-have the beginnings of what W. H. Riehl called a
-“natural history” of the human community.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[242]</span></p>
-
-
-<h3>II<br />
-<span class="smcap">Architectural History</span></h3>
-
-<p>Ever since colonial architecture was reappreciated
-after the Civil War, a large amount of material has
-appeared on the early architecture of the colonies.
-Before 1900 the greater part of this was uncritical.
-Isham and Brown’s work on the early architecture of
-Connecticut and Rhode Island made a new departure,
-which Messrs. Cousins and Riley’s studies of the
-architecture of Salem and Philadelphia have carried
-on. Mr. Fiske Kimball’s compendious study of the
-Domestic Architecture of the Colonies and the Early
-Republic brings together a large amount of authenticated
-data. Articles and illustrations dealing with
-particular aspects of our pre-industrial architecture,
-or with particular regions&mdash;like the Lebanon Valley
-in Pennsylvania&mdash;are scattered through the
-architectural periodicals. Beyond the early republican
-period, our architectural histories come to an
-end. Works like John Bullock’s The American Cottage
-Builder, New York: 1854, occur in almost every
-old library and are full of interesting data. To fill
-the gap in later years we must have recourse to a
-comprehensive German treatise, Das Amerikanische<span class="pagenum">[243]</span>
-Haus, by F. R. Vogel, Berlin: 1910. This may be
-supplemented by Homes in City and Country, by
-Russell Sturgis, J. W. Root and others, New York:
-1893.</p>
-
-
-<h3>III<br />
-<span class="smcap">Biographical Studies</span></h3>
-
-<p>Where formal description leaves off, the biographies
-of our principal architects enter. The following
-books traverse in order the entire period from
-the Revolution to the present generation.</p>
-
-<p>Samuel McIntire: His Life and Work. F. Cousins
-and P. M. Riley, Boston: 1916.</p>
-
-<p>The Life and Letters of Charles Bulfinch. Ellen
-Susan Bulfinch, New York: 1896.</p>
-
-<p>The Journal of Latrobe. Benjamin Henry Latrobe,
-New York: 1905.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Hobson Richardson. Mrs. Schuyler Van
-Rensselaer, Boston: 1888.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Follen McKim. A. H. Granger, Boston:
-1913.</p>
-
-<p>Daniel H. Burnham. Charles Moore, New York:
-1921.</p>
-
-<p>The Autobiography of an Idea. Louis H. Sullivan,
-New York: 1924.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum">[244]</span></p>
-
-
-<h3>IV<br />
-<span class="smcap">Contemporary Work</span></h3>
-
-<p>Portfolios of work by contemporary architects
-are so numerous that to single out any would be
-invidious. The files of the Architectural Record,
-the American Architect, House and Garden, and
-Arts and Decorations&mdash;to mention only the more
-available periodicals&mdash;should be consulted particularly
-for illustrations.</p>
-
-
-<h3>V<br />
-<span class="smcap">Esthetics</span></h3>
-
-<p>As an introduction to architecture in general the
-formal textbooks are occasionally useful. Let me
-commend particularly, however, Viollet-le-Duc’s The
-Habitations of Man in all Ages. The archæology
-and ethnology of this work are, it goes without saying,
-outmoded: but for all that it has a permanent
-interest, and it is high time that someone took up
-Viollet-le-Duc’s theme and redeveloped it in the
-light of contemporary research. While I am restoring
-a classic, let me add another: Ruskin’s
-The Seven Lamps of Architecture. Ruskin is disregarded<span class="pagenum">[245]</span>
-nowadays, as he was in his own generation,
-by people who have not yet caught up with
-him. His insight and unflinching intelligence are
-both needed, however, and it is no longer necessary
-to warn the student against his quirks and solecisms.
-Ruskin wrote the apology for modernism in art when
-he said: “There would be hope if we could change
-palsy for puerility,” and he anticipated modern
-decoration when he said: “I believe the only manner
-of rich ornament that is open to us is geometrical
-color mosaic, and that much might result from
-strenuously taking up that mode of design.” For
-that matter, Ruskin even predicted the architectural
-use of steel frames. The Seven Lamps of Architecture
-closes on a prophetic word which means far more
-to us today than to Ruskin’s contemporaries. “I
-could smile,” he said, “when I hear the hopeful exultation
-of many, at the new reach of worldly science
-and vigor of worldly effort; as if we were again at
-the beginning of new days. There is thunder on the
-horizon, as well as dawn.” We who have seen the
-lightning strike may well reread these words....</p>
-
-<p>As for modern books on architecture and esthetics,
-let me recommend a handful. Among them note
-W. R. Lethaby’s Form in Civilization. In sharp<span class="pagenum">[246]</span>
-contrast to Professor Lethaby is Geoffrey Scott’s
-The Architecture of Humanism, Boston: 1914. I
-do not accept Mr. Scott’s main position; but there
-is something to be said for it, and he says it well.
-Both points of view are embraced in the distinction
-Mr. Claude Bragdon makes between the Organic and
-the Arranged, in one of Six Lectures on Architecture.
-From a limited field, Rhys Carpenter’s
-Esthetic Basis of Greek Art reaches conclusions
-which illuminate almost every province of esthetics.
-There is an able exposition of the absolutist, mechanical
-point of view in Vers Une Architecture, by
-the architect whose pen-name is “Le Corbusier-Saugnier.”
-In Speculations, Mr. T. E. Hulme presents
-an interesting philosophic apology for mechanism.</p>
-
-
-<h3>VI<br />
-<span class="smcap">Sociology</span></h3>
-
-<p>For the civic and sociological background of this
-study, consult Professor Patrick Geddes’s Cities
-in Evolution, London: 1915, likewise his Principles
-of Sociology in Relation to Economics. The latter
-can be obtained through Le Play House, 65 Belgrave
-Road, London, S. W. 1. The chapter on Westminster,<span class="pagenum">[247]</span>
-by Mr. Victor Branford, in Our Social Inheritance,
-London: 1919, is a unique introduction to
-the direct study of social institutions and their
-architectural forms. The other volumes in The Making
-of the Future series, edited by Messrs. Geddes
-and Branford, should also have an important place
-on the student’s shelf.</p>
-
-<p>Light on our more immediate problems will be
-found in the files of the Journal of the American
-Institute of Architects. Note particularly Mr. F.
-L. Ackermann’s article on Craftsmen&mdash;Machines&mdash;Speed&mdash;Credit,
-June, 1923, and Mr. Benton Mackaye’s
-article on the proposed Appalachian Trail.
-See, also, the Power number of the Survey Graphic.
-The report of the Committee on Community Planning
-of the American Institute of Architects (1924)
-should be read in connection with the last chapter:
-it treats in detail the difficulties that the architect
-confronts under our present economic and social
-order. See, likewise, Mr. Ebenezer Howard’s
-classic Garden Cities of Tomorrow.</p>
-
-<p class="center p1"><span class="smcap">Finis</span></p>
-
-<hr class="tb x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<div class="transnote">
-<h2 style="margin-top: 0em">Transcriber’s Notes:</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation has been made consistent.</p>
-
-<p>Variations in spelling and hyphenation were retained as they appear in
-the original publication, except that obvious typographical errors
-have been corrected.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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