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A Classical Adventure: The Architectural History of Downing College, Cambridge

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A Classical Adventure:
The Architectural History of
Downing College, Cambridge
A Classical Adventure book jacket
Jacket with photograph by
Tim Rawle and Louis Sinclair[1]
Author
Illustrator
  • Tim Rawle (photographs)
  • Louis Sinclair (photographs)
  • Jeremy Bays (aerial perspective drawings)
Cover artistTim Rawle and Louis Sinclair
LanguageEnglish
Release number
1st edition
SubjectCambridge, history of architecture, architectural photography
GenreReference
PublishedCambridge
PublisherOxbridge Portfolio
Publication date
10 September 2015
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Pages200
ISBN978-0-9572867-4-0 (Hardcover)
OCLC931005141
WebsiteBook's official web page

A Classical Adventure: The Architectural History of Downing College, Cambridge is a book written by Tim Rawle and first published in 2015. The book is an introduction to the architectural history of Downing College, Cambridge with photographs of the college buildings by Rawle and Louis Sinclair.

Summary

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Founded in 1800, through the will of Sir George Downing, 3rd Baronet, Downing College was the first major scheme in England to be built in the Neoclassical Greek Revival style, and the first college to be built in Cambridge for more than two hundred years. The architect William Wilkins won the commission to design the college but owing to a protracted legal battle instigated by the last Lady Downing, Wilkins's concept was never fully built.

Rawle's book tells the story from the beginnings of the college to the present day and shows how it has remained committed to the Neoclassical tradition in most of the later buildings erected, including the Senior Combination Room by Howell, Killick, Partridge & Amis and the Howard Theatre by Quinlan and Francis Terry.

Critical reception

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"Often overlooked by tourists and 'tucked away' from its more famous counterparts, Cambridge's only classical college has been brought into the spotlight, in a new book by a former student," wrote the Cambridge News.[2] The Georgian commented, “a beautifully-illustrated and well-researched architectural history of Downing College,” and Historic House called the book, "an essential read".[3]

References

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  1. ^ The Hall, Downing College, Cambridge, looking east towards the Master's Lodge.
  2. ^ Cambridge News, 10 October 2015, p. 12.
  3. ^ The Georgian, Issue 1, 2016, pp. 35–6; Historic House, Spring 2016, pp. 55–4.
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