Hello, from the town of Ardossan, Scotland. The Montgomery / Montgomerie influence can still be seen in many of the street names.
@briansieve4 күн бұрын
Great stuff. Utah presenter. Please use your voice instead of vocal fry.
@11th_defender518 күн бұрын
Very interesting lecture
@SP-io3zp9 күн бұрын
Thank you for making this video. What a beautiful serene place to live and call home. I wonder, could a neighbourhood not be designated a heritage site to prevent such drastic changes? We must live in harmony with the environment, nature and each other. Trees are essential for life and spirit. 🕊
@ageofechochambers946911 күн бұрын
#4:40 such a delusional premise, she married 1 the most eligible bachelor her rank allowed. She wasn't marrying a royal ( not allowed 🚫 ) a rich duke was the best she could do . Lives for both men and women were scripted back then you could rebel and become an outcast or play your part and reap the rewards. But there was no hot summer for females who wished the best prospects . Or to take a few years "to discover themselves " . Fyi the above is not a moral argument, justification or criticism its just explaining how things were . The speaker is not speaking in good faith , shes talking as if choices that are available today were available back then which wasn't the case .
@Dev1nci12 күн бұрын
3:34 spolia
@verticalmatt20 күн бұрын
Thank you!!!
@billpitney75524 күн бұрын
Calder Loth is so knowledgeable. Watching his videos is like being a student at the Ecole de Beaux Arts in Paris before 1968.
@titeness24 күн бұрын
The great salt lake has really diminished within the past few years
@anthonylemkendorf311424 күн бұрын
Why can’t we make beautiful things anymore?That culture no longer exists but they were our ancestors and in many ways, better people than we are today..no matter what race or earning status. We buy our sometimes Ape what they created m,but vaguely come close to who they were.
@lebowskiduderino8926 күн бұрын
I was a carpenter for about 45 years and I worked with a lot of these columns and capitols, various details we installed on houses, but I never really knew where the idea of them came from. It's very interesting to see how all these things evolved over time. Great videos. Thanks for uploading.
@juliechs833627 күн бұрын
How many Air BnB's are downtown? One, Two thousand? No one addresses it, why?
@Nostalg1a20 күн бұрын
BnB's seem to be a natural thing were there attractive places. There are only two ways to fight it, government limitations on the number of them or build more.
@pedroaibeo7295Ай бұрын
The initial map of the extent of the roman empire has one region marked as Iberia (Spain). There is no reason to have spain stated there, ignoring the older sovereign country, Portugal.
@mrmaestroukАй бұрын
COULDNT READ ONE ..MEASUREMENT… what’s the fooking point
@pux0rbАй бұрын
Extremely engaging and interesting, and packed with knowledge. This was a pleasure to watch!
@pux0rbАй бұрын
This was a great lecture! I learned so much about bricks.
@mohammadbahrampour3417Ай бұрын
Perfect as always
@rorkgoose6114Ай бұрын
The large dining room is awful. Those white walls ruin it, and the tiny splashes of color can't rescue the room. Please stop using whites as a primary color.
@bobbyboy1797Ай бұрын
This audio is so bad.
@shanenolan5625Ай бұрын
For the algorithm. Sent you stuff about mental illness, mental hospitals, torture and execution, French feminist, ( female erotic) a thing about freud and young ( movie trailer) A thing about French married couples affairs. Something about a famous ancestor of princess Diana. Movie trailer and a documentary about her
@billybuck491Ай бұрын
Omg … around the mulberry bush
@StereoSpaceАй бұрын
What is killing cities is not architecture. It is high crime, high taxes, and poor services (dirty streets and sidewalks, bad roads, dirty and unsafe mass transit). The crime and dirt are the worst offenders, and people will rightly avoid those cities. That said, architectural planning certainly has a place, but will serve no purpose if the city is not safe and clean.
@MrOliverwoodsАй бұрын
Couple of points. Dirty streets are the product of use. Like are gardener’s hands. High taxes are the product of the high cost of residence. Which means people are competing to live there. Millions of people take mass transit daily with a lesser crime rate than an NFL game. Quit watching Fox and visit Charleston.
@StereoSpaceАй бұрын
@@MrOliverwoods I have visited Charleston. And dirty streets and crime are not just a product of use, they're a product of neglect, just like a dirty house. It's not OK. Places like Tampa and San Diego gets lots of use, and they're not dirty and crime ridden. Want to people to visit and live in your city? Keep it clean and safe.
@MrOliverwoodsАй бұрын
@@StereoSpace Charleston’s population has risen +25% for three decades. What did Yogi say “no one goes there, it’s too crowded.” San Diego is 81st in the US rating for cities. There isn’t a SC city in the top 100.
@StereoSpaceАй бұрын
@@MrOliverwoods I was talking about why people aren't going to cities, and what is killing them in general. You have contorted that observation into some kind of attack on Charleston. How about you climb down off your war horse and read what I wrote, instead of what you imagine I was saying?
@MrOliverwoodsАй бұрын
@@StereoSpace you are talking about what you don’t like when you visit and this video is about preserving history and building the future. Did you visit Charleston to see the historic character of the city ? This is about what’s the best way to build out Charleston to preserve its character, not what makes it suck.
@DirMichaelDavidАй бұрын
sad that they're ruining a great place with post modernist junk
@apollocobain8363Ай бұрын
he sounds like Bryan Cranston
@manojkumar-qn3mwАй бұрын
Prithvi Raj Kapoor Cellular Jail no 44, Thihar GhainaGobardhanPur Jhangirabad UP H445, rehne na hum..
@Booka60Ай бұрын
Excellent speaker!
@pcatfulАй бұрын
Great to see Steve Mouzon here.
@everett8208Ай бұрын
Im currently writing a paper on this at the University of Amsterdam. I find it to be a very important topic and these presentations are a great resource. Keep it up.
@RonRobertson-lafranceАй бұрын
This was fascinating, and I learned a lot, plus some other ways of looking at these issues. Very helpful.
@doeixoАй бұрын
Its funny how in this channel the comments are "people hating modern architecture" instead of anything to do with the video. Guys, calm down, its not modern architecture, its laws and their economic consequences. Just check the works by Carlo Scarpa, Sigurd Lewerentz, Victor Lopez Cotelo, Ted'a Arquitectes, the Malaparte House, Micheluccis Santa Maria Novella station, the lighthouse of Punta Nariga... there are lots of quality modern architecture. Architecture that learns from and continues with historical architecture, it's materiality, it's intensity, it's humanity. This is being built and taught in architecture schools. Maybe not currently in the U.S. I don't know.
@doeixoАй бұрын
There's lots of shit historical architecture too, and a lot more of it existed but is not longer around
@andreaandrea6716Ай бұрын
The pale, pale mint green with brown (1:46) ... "NOooooooooooo!!!!!!!" ... makes me feel ill. Seriously. That is a dreadful colour combination. I'm afraid that the mixtures chosen for this house (old/new, dark/light, etc.) are NOT successful. They look amateurish. I don't walk into these rooms and think "Oh! What a lovely, imaginative but also restful room!" I think "Dear God, WHO was given this project?" Sorry, but I am not impressed.
@andreaandrea6716Ай бұрын
(2:56) I do not understand what would possess someone to choose those cushions. They're awful.
@andreaandrea6716Ай бұрын
The dark Prussian blue is one of the best features of this video. That is a stunning, rich colour choice.
@macedonian_catholic_Ай бұрын
Αre there any architects left who can design such building? I am curious! Please someone who knows to answer me
@sky9apache2 ай бұрын
Amy Jane Cohen was asked at a fireside chat at the Philadelphia Library Company - "If she thought Black Americans that descend from slavery in America should receive reparations?" Her answer was that Reparations should be some form education... Not cash payments... yet she makes her money form telling the stories of Black people... you have to watch these white liberals
@sky9apache2 ай бұрын
Aren't Jewish people White?
@sky9apache2 ай бұрын
Abele was buried in a Black Cemetery
@CheeseBae2 ай бұрын
I was in Charleston just a few weeks ago. I ate at Chez Nous and realized we were close to Catfiddle Street so I walked over and checked it out!
@skmail54742 ай бұрын
As a Charleston native and employee of the City of Charleston, I’m extremely grateful to see these videos being released. Thanks to everyone involved with this. It is so important that we keep the spirit of this craftsmanship in the forefront of our minds while this city continues to develop and grow. Charleston has and always will be a beacon of hope for me as this world falls into disorder. The ideas and influences behind our architecture cannot be lost. I have watched this channel ever since Calder gave his lecture on classical architecture and used many examples in Charleston, so to see such a feature on my own city brings me even greater pride in the place I call home. The entire city is full of the same rich history, and it is presented in a way that I believe is unmatched. Again, thank you, to everyone involved.
@paullewis24132 ай бұрын
No problem with the banquettes, relieve the look of too much wood and not overtly contemporary. Have a problem with the weak modern sconces, out of place in that room for sure. 😊
@andreaandrea6716Ай бұрын
Agreed! (Lack of cohesion mixing old and new. Strange choices).
@gorygremlin132 ай бұрын
Great lecture
@verticalmatt2 ай бұрын
Magnificent!!!
@exoticroyaltiesinc.30462 ай бұрын
Thank you for helping ti give the story if my family
@georgeallen78872 ай бұрын
Bravo!
@ImaneBou302 ай бұрын
I can’t believe this is a London townhouse!!!!
@cherianneraddatz74522 ай бұрын
🌈 Promo sm
@jacq95272 ай бұрын
I love the bold contemporary & traditional furniture, beautiful colours 💕 beautiful townhouse
@andreaandrea67162 ай бұрын
I find the idea of leaving ones entire life, all the things one has collected, behind... and having SOMEONE ELSE choose ones home furnishings FOR ONE (!!) absolutely abhorrent. It rather signifies that one doesn't HAVE any sort of taste or preferences or creativity or ideas of ones own... quel horreur!
@andreaandrea67162 ай бұрын
Velvet on the walls? For people with more money than sense. Who is going to clean that... and HOW?
@Sunshine-zm1fxАй бұрын
They are vacuumed clean regularly. I have a timber home and vacuuming is how timber walls are meant to be cleaned. Quilts displayed on walls are also vacuumed to keep them clean. Heavy curtains and lampshades should also be regularly vacuumed.
@andreaandrea6716Ай бұрын
@@Sunshine-zm1fx That is so intelligent! (It's also a huge amount of work! Some places are far more dirty than others. When I lived in Paris (in the 80s and 90s) I would dust... 15 mins later, the area I had just dusted would be dusty again. It was a never ending struggle. Now, in a suburb of Seattle, WA, USA, the air is so much cleaner. I actually wash my walls once a year... which means taking all the pictures down, as the walls are covered, and cleaning those too).
@inglishhomeandgarden83862 ай бұрын
I find myself loving the house itself, all the lovely boiserie, and the stairwell wall paintings. - But the modern stuff is not for me.