The Houses of Parliament in London is one of the most famous buildings in the world. A masterpiece of Victorian Gothic architecture which incorporates survivals from the medieval Palace of Westminster, it was made a World Heritage Site by UNESCO along with Westminster Abbey, and St Margaret’s Church, in 1987. With its restoration and renewal in the news, find out more about the background in this interactive timeline.
The post Rebuilding and restoring the Houses of Parliament [timeline] appeared first on OUPblog.
Wells, Rosemary and Secundino Fernandez. My Havana: Memories of a Cuban Boyhood. Illus. by Peter Ferguson. Candlewick, 2010. Ages 8-12. 
Memories can move us forward or backward, depending on how we use them. My Havana: Memories of a Cuban Boyhood evokes the intensity of one child’s connection to his home in 1950s Havana. Prolific children’s book author Rosemary Wells once heard a radio interview with the Cuban-American architect Secundino Fernandez and years later located Fernandez and worked with him to produce this resonant little historical novel burnished with hope and light.
Secundino, or Dino, relishes his city avenues “lined with coral-stone archways, ancient doors, and window frames painted bright as birds-of-paradise.” As twilight arrives, neighbors begin their checker games, and the cafes fill with people. Dino loves to sketch the buildings, with their porticoes and marble columns. The first time Dino leaves the city of his heart, he crosses the Atlantic to spend time with his grandparents in Spain. When he finally returns home, he expects to stay. Dictators — first Batista, then Castro — take over, though, and the family abandons their restaurant to join relatives in New York City.
So homesick in this dark and dreary new environment, Dino relies on his memory to recreate his beloved Havana in the confines of his bedroom. With great care, he cuts out cardboard to represent its archways, balconies and cafes. Aluminum foil glued to plywood and glazed with blue nail varnish becomes a sparkling turquoise harbor. The double-spread illustration depicting the imaginative boy, scissors in hand, beautifully captures his resourceful nature. The novel closes with Dino adapting to his new world: “New York sunlight, shimmering with the promise of summer, settles round my shoulders like the arms of my mother. It is almost like my Havana.” This brief novel would brighten units on immigration, Cuba, or architecture.
Macaulay, David. Built to Last. Houghton Mifflin, 2010. Ages 9 and up.
In my decade as a school librarian, I often watched children poring over Macaulay’s remarkable architecture books. Rather than merely compiling his acclaimed books, Castle, Cathedral, and Mosque, Macaulay has created new colored illustrations, revised the text, and clarified some explanations.
While some might still long for the previously published cross-hatched illustrations, Macaulay’s changes enhance the reader’s experience of the architecture of the past. He ushers us into his Castle, for instance, with a double-spread illustration of a purple-robed king surveying a map, with pawns awaiting strategic placement. The castle Macaulay highlights is imagined but based on castles built for the conquest of Wales between 1277 and 1305, His interesting perspectives of the workers and how they go about building still capture the hearts of readers, young and old. In Cathedral, Macaulay was inspired by the 13th-century Gothic cathedrals of France. It’s hard to resist sharing Macaulay’s passion for the plans, methods and tools used by those builders “whose towering dreams still stand today.” Finally, the least changed a
Lovely photographer/designer friend Catherine was interested in seeing more of the architecture of the University of Washington campus - so here you go:

It was lovely seeing the building tops peeking through the trees - looking for all the world like castles...

- with a bit of modern thrown in next to the more vintage...

...every floor has a different style of window...

(I wonder if one can go up into the various towers and 'gazebos' on the roofs. I'll bet the views are great...)

And here is the arts building. Even *it* has towers!

Just a small sampling of some of the cool building exteriors....

More 'gazebos' on the rooftops (what are these really called???)

In the fall, the extensive growth of Boston Ivy turns a gorgeous bright red...

...so many different roof lines...

...turrets and archways....

We toured UW at the behest of my almost-senior daughter (on the right) and her best friend/twin-separated at birth.

Although most of our touring was outdoors, the little bit of interior we saw was also lovely-

There was many a beautifully detailed and shaped window-

- look at all that varied and fancy glass!

-and even the newer interiors are filled with arches and curves everywhere...

...and the odd piece of headless art...
My youngest child will be a high school senior this fall. She's thinking ahead to college, so we are touring some local campuses in the next week.

Today we went to the University of Washington, with all its gorgeous Gothic architecture.

The main library especially, has always been a favorite of mine.

Built to represent a 'cathedral of learning'...

Parts of the interior also look like the inside of a cathedral.

Or a castle...

...massive stone archways and curves....

And then there is the graduate-student library!

Hogwarts anyone?

If it wasn't for all the sun-drenched windows and walls, it would feel remarkably like its wizardly counterpart...

All the beautiful, ornate details...

A magical place indeed.
I've never seen UW before.
And the decorative font with the flowers and everything is so fitting for the arts building it makes me grin :)
Oh how I do love all things that are Gothic and Medieval :) Awesome shots!
squirrels on the school of art stone? not sure what they look like
oh I LOVE these buildings. lets pass a law that every building of more than one story MUST have at least 1 tower. ah, heck... no limits. ALL buildings, regardless of height, must have towers....
I have to say, if it were merely a question of choosing a school by its architecture, so far UW would win by a long sight.