Buildings of Pennsylvania
Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania |
| Lu Donnelly, H. David Brumble IV, and Franklin Toker |
| 656 pages, 7 x 10 |
| 342 b&w illustrations, 12 line drawings, 61 maps |
| Cloth ISBN 978-0-8139-2823-4 $75.00 |
| Buildings of the
United States |
| December 2009 |
 |
Buildings of Pennsylvania: Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania
considers the architecture, landscape, and town plans of thirty-one
counties west of Blue Mountain and north to Lake Erie, including
cities and communities big and small, from Pittsburgh, Beaver
Falls, Johnstown, and Altoona to Bellefonte, State College, Lock
Haven, Clarion, and Erie, and scores of places in between. The
first comprehensive look at the built environment in this large
and varied territory, the volume spans the years from the late
eighteenth century through to the first decade of the new millennium
and reveals a range of architectural surprises. The authors discuss
exemplary and everyday buildings and placesHarmonist villages,
Carnegie libraries, river communities, amusement parks, farms
and barns, the crossroads of Breezewood, and Frank Lloyd Wright’s
Fallingwater among themand canvass the scores of bridges,
railroads, and inclines that cross the region’s rivers,
hills, and mountains. Descriptions of close to 150 of the commonwealth’s
small settlements, from coal patches to pike towns, capture the
intense dialogue between industry and agriculture that typifies
western Pennsylvania. Close to 400 illustrations, including photographs,
maps, and drawings, bring the nearly 800 entries to life. Intended
to complement the forthcoming companion volumeBuildings
of Pennsylvania: Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvaniain
the Buildings of the United States series, this book will pique
the interest and curiosity of architectural historians and general
readers alike.
A volume in the Buildings of the United States series of
the Society of Architectural Historians
Lu Donnelly, an architectural historian
who writes a regular column entitled "Architecture Around Us"
in Western Pennsylvania History
magazine, is the author
of several books and National Register nominations on Allegheny
County topics and organized an exhibition on barns of Western Pennsylvania
for the Heinz Architectural Center at the Carnegie Museum of Art.
H. David Brumble IV, an alumnus of the University
of Pittsburgh, is a realtor in North Carolina. Franklin
Toker is Professor of the History of Art and Architecture
at the University of Pittsburgh and the author of a number of books,
including Pittsburgh: An Urban Portrait, Fallingwater Rising:
Frank Lloyd Wright, E. J. Kaufmann, and America's Most Extraordinary
House,
and Buildings of Pittsburgh.