
- 280 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
Dublin's teeming slums, long regarded as the worst in Europe, were teetering on the brink of structural and sanitary public catastrophe during the early twentieth century. To tackle the crisis, Herbert Simms was appointed the city's first housing architect. During a sixteen-year period, from 1932 until 1948, Simms and his team planned, commissioned and built an astounding 17, 000 homes –some as inner-city flat complexes, others as family houses in newly-created suburbs such as Crumlin and Cabra.
Like the city's acclaimed Georgian squares, the Simms-designed Corporation flats in particular have stood the test of time, injecting a touch of art deco and modernist glamour to neglected neighbourhoods. This comprehensive guide to the Simms buildings also highlights the many struggles with politicians and bureaucrats Simms and his staff experienced as they did their best to build well-designed, affordable housing for the people of Dublin.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Copyright
- Title
- Epigraph
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1 The Move into the Cities
- 2 Corporation Housing: the first buildings 1877–1913
- 3 A Grand Plan for Dublin: 1914–30
- 4 The ‘Million Pound Scheme’
- 5 Herbert Simms: a man with a mission
- 6 The Housing Crisis Reaches a Peak
- 7 The 1939 Inquiry
- 8 The ‘Emergency’ and War Work
- 9 The Final Projects 1945–8
- 10 What Followed Simms
- Appendices
- Bibliography and Sources
- Acknowledgements