Noddy housing: Difference between revisions
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==Design and appearance== |
==Design and appearance== |
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Noddy houses usually appear to tip towards traditional ideals of British house-building through use of brick and masonry detail, [[gable]]d and [[Hip roof|hipped roof]] forms, and window and door styles derived from older methods of construction. Because of the commerciality of volume house-building and the desire for companies to cut costs in construction, these elements suffer - with bricks being less attractive and mass-produced kinds, and windows and doors being standardised models of non-traditional [[uPVC]] and [[fibreglass]] with only suggestions of traditional detail by way of fake 'integral' [[glazing bar]]s or sometimes imitation [[lead]] [[came]]. |
Noddy houses usually appear to tip towards traditional ideals of British house-building through use of brick and masonry detail, [[gable]]d and [[Hip roof|hipped roof]] forms, and window and door styles derived from older methods of construction. Because of the commerciality of volume house-building and the desire for companies to cut costs in construction, these elements suffer - with bricks being less attractive and mass-produced kinds, and windows and doors being standardised models of non-traditional [[uPVC]] and [[fibreglass]] with only suggestions of traditional detail by way of fake 'integral' [[glazing bar]]s or sometimes imitation [[lead]] [[came]]. |
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==See also== |
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*[[Tract housing]] |
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==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 15:03, 3 November 2020
Noddy housing (sometimes called "Noddy Box Housing"[1] or "Shoddy Noddy Boxes")[2][3] is commercially built housing of low build quality or design merit.[4][5][6][7][8][9]
Noddy houses are typically small homes on narrow plots of land built since the early 1990s by large property development companies. They are normally considered to be far less spacious than homes built in preceding decades of the 20th century and are perceived as being poorly executed architecturally and aesthetically.
Design and appearance
Noddy houses usually appear to tip towards traditional ideals of British house-building through use of brick and masonry detail, gabled and hipped roof forms, and window and door styles derived from older methods of construction. Because of the commerciality of volume house-building and the desire for companies to cut costs in construction, these elements suffer - with bricks being less attractive and mass-produced kinds, and windows and doors being standardised models of non-traditional uPVC and fibreglass with only suggestions of traditional detail by way of fake 'integral' glazing bars or sometimes imitation lead came.
References
- ^ Beacom, Brian (1 July 2009), "'Noddy box' housing would be banned in Wayne's world", The Herald, retrieved 1 June 2010
- ^ Dorelia Baird-Smith (4 April 2007). "No more shoddy Noddy boxes says RIBA". architecture.com. Archived from the original on 8 June 2011. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
- ^ "In praise of ... ideal homes", The Guardian, 27 July 2007, retrieved 1 June 2010
- ^ Hetherington, Peter (21 October 2003), "Prescott to outlaw 'Noddy' housing", The Guardian, retrieved 1 June 2010
- ^ Davis, Colin (2005), The Prefabricated Home, Reaktion Books, p. 162, ISBN 1-86189-243-8
- ^ Peter Hetherington (4 October 2011). "New homes must be fit for purpose, says leading architect". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
- ^ Stuart Baseley (19 October 2011). "Labelling new properties 'Noddy boxes' is simply unfair". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
- ^ Andrew Liddle (13 October 2012). "No more noddy boxes! Design judges' dismay at British buildings". The Independent. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
- ^ Graeme Leach (10 May 2018). "Housing reform is the only way to solve generational inequality". City A.M. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
(Kevin McCloud) "identikit Noddy houses built at the lowest possible cost."
External links