Jump to content

Mission Revival architecture: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m →‎References: reflist
→‎See also: Pueblo Revival Style architecture
Line 55: Line 55:
*[[Mediterranean Revival Style architecture]]
*[[Mediterranean Revival Style architecture]]
*[[Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture]]
*[[Spanish Colonial Revival Style architecture]]
*[[Pueblo Revival Style architecture]]


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 19:44, 20 December 2007

The Mission Revival Style was an architectural movement that began in the late 19th Century and drew inspiration from the early Spanish missions in California. The movement enjoyed its greatest popularity between 1890 and 1915, though numerous modern residential, commercial, and institutional structures (particularly schools and railroad depots) display this instantly-recognizable architectural style.

All of California's missions shared certain design characteristics, owing both to the limited selection of building materials available to the founding padres and an overall lack of advanced construction experience. Each installation utilized massive walls with broad, unadorned surfaces and limited fenestration, wide, projecting eaves, and low-pitched clay tile roofs. Other features included long, arcaded corridors, piered arches, and curved gables. Exterior walls were coated with plaster (stucco) to shield the adobe bricks beneath from the elements.

A view looking down an exterior corredor at Mission San Fernando Rey de España, a common architectural feature of the Spanish Missions that is often emulated in Mission Revival Style architecture.

Each of these elements are replicated, to varying degrees, in Mission Revival buildings. Modern construction materials and building practices render these characteristics largely cosmetic, however.

Plymouth Rock was a state of mind.
So were the California Missions.
Charles Fletcher Lummis
The Spanish Pioneers, 1929
Give me neither Romanesque nor Gothic;
much less Italian Renaissance,
and least of all English Colonial —
this is California — give me Mission.
Anonymous[1]

A list of structures designed in the Mission Revival Style

Gallery

References

File:Mission San Gabriel Arcangel 4-15-05 000 0011.JPG
The San Gabriel Civic Auditorium, a classic example of "Mission Revival Style architecture", was built between 1921 and 1927 as the "Mission Playhouse" under the guidance of poet, Los Angeles Times columnist, and author John Steven McGroarty specifically as a venue for his production of The Mission Play which chronicled the history of California, and under the benefaction of a syndicate comprised of The Mission Playhouse Corporation and The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce. The structure, modeled after the Mission San Antonio de Padua in Monterey County, was originally designed by architect Arthur Benton after sketches by McGroarty but completed by architect William J. Dodd who took over and redesigned the auditorium in 1926 to the newest engineering specifications when Benton became terminally ill. Dodd completed the auditorium in time for the opening of the "Mission Play" season on March 5, 1927.
  1. ^ Rey, Felix (1924). "A Tribute to Mission Style". Architect and Engineer. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  • Gustafson, Lee and Phil Serpico (1999). Santa Fe Coast Lines Depots: Los Angeles Division. Acanthus Press, Palmdale, CA. ISBN 0-88418-003-4.
  • Jones, R. (1991). The History of Villa Rockledge. American National Research Institute, Laguna Beach, CA.
  • Weitze, K. (1984). California's Mission Revival. Hennessy & Ingalls, Inc., Los Angeles, CA. ISBN 0-912158-89-1.
  • Yenne, Bill (2004). The Missions of California. Thunder Bay Press, San Diego, CA. ISBN 1-59223-319-8.

See also

External links