They All Fall Down: Richard Nickel's Struggle to Save America's Architecture
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
Author(s)Richard Cahan
PublisherWiley
ISBN / ASIN0471144266
ISBN-139780471144267
Sales Rank1,635,661
CategoryArchitecture
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
If Chicago is an architecture lover's paradise today, it is largely due to the efforts of a single individual. Richard Nickel (1928-1972) was not "just a photographer who happens to take pictures of buildings," as he modestly called himself. He was a soft-spoken missionary whose passionate one-man campaign to preserve Chicago's ornate 19th century architectural masterpieces--earmarked for destruction by Mayor Richard J. Daley in the name of progress--inspired a nationwide movement. Richard Cahan's superb biography of Nickel depicts the photographer's heroic and ultimately tragic struggle to salvage everything he could get his hands on, first with his trusty view camera and then with a hacksaw and chisel.
More Books in Architecture
Dynamics of Pavement Structures
View
Compact City Series: Achieving Sustainable Urban Form
View
Invisible Acts of Power: Channeling Grace in Your Ever…
View
Movements in Green: Conceptual Landscape Gardening
View
Building After Auschwitz: Jewish Architecture and the …
View
The Four Elements of Architecture and Other Writings (…
View
Some Assembly Required
View
The Architecture of O'Neil Ford: Celebrating Place
View
Art/Women/California, 1950-2000: Parallels and Interse…
View