The Mary Rose Museum

1995

“The Mary Rose Museum”, the eight volume of “The Center for Environmental Structure Series” on architecture published by Oxford University Press, tells the story of how this large building was conceived and designed.
In 1982, more than four hundred years after Mary Rose mysteriously sank off the English coastline; she was raised and towed to a dry dock in the beautiful and historic harbor at Portsmouth, where she lies today, an enduring symbol of Britain’s seafaring past.
In 1991, Christopher Alexander was commissioned by the Prince of Wales and the Mary Rose Trust to design a museum to house this national treasure. Grounded in his techniques and principles for a new way of building that have earned Alexander a worldwide following over the last several decades, this book explains Alexander’s vision of a permanent home for the Mary Rose. Spanning from the first inception of its design to finished models and drawings, it includes detailed, step-by-step explanations of the way this vision could be realized in structure and construction. Emphasizing the unification of design and construction, with hands-on construction management by the architect, it provides a model for the way a large and highly technical building can be designed with proper importance given to human comfort and human feeling, while using the most advanced and sophisticated technology.

Authors:
Christopher Alexander, Gary Black, Miyoko Tsutsui
Publisher:
Oxford University Press, New York, NY, U.S.A.
No of pages:
128 pp
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