A History of Homebuilders from Early Modern to Modern Times provides a diachronic account of homebuilders’ more than 500 years history in the Anglosphere nations of the U.S., Britain, Canada, and Australia. The comparative absence of individual homebuilders’ histories in the literature, despite builders’ importance in providing our dwellings and over 70% of our entire urban built environments, is surprising. Part One introduces homebuilders from several perspectives. These are useful for evaluating the homebuilders’ whose histories are presented in Part Two, and in providing a balanced understanding of homebuilders and the societal value of what they do. The actual, albeit brief, histories of mainly large homebuilders for more than 500 years in Part II, supply historians with some particulars of homebuilder attitudes, practices, ingenuity, and resourcefulness in how they operated over the centuries, with a modest trending to community building rather than just housebuilding. Part Three specifically focuses on the following evolutionary changes in homebuilding practices: 1) increasing standardization of dwelling components, 2) increasingly institutionalized sources of financial assistance, and 3) changes in production scale. Three technical appendices on dates of homebuilder ‘firsts’ in practices; in conceptualizing housing markets; and some government regulations, follow, with a fourth appendix on homebuilders’ organizational changes over the centuries.
Les mer
A History of Homebuilders from Early Modern to Modern Times provides a diachronic account of homebuilders’ more than 500 years history in the Anglosphere nations of the U.S., Britain, Canada, and Australia.
Les mer

List of Tables and Figures
Foreword, Richard Peiser
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part One: Overview of Homebuilders and Society
Chapter One: Background on Housing and Homebuilders
Chapter Two: Commonalities in Homebuilding Down Through the Centuries
Chapter Three: The Perplexing Homebuilder Setting
Chapter Four: Homebuilders’ Creative Performances
Chapter Five: Homebuilders’ Calling, Origins, and Dispositions
Part Two: Homebuilders’ Histories
Chapter Six: Preamble to Homebuilders in Early Modern times
Chapter Seven: Homebuilders in Early Modern London and America
Chapter Eight: Homebuilding in Eighteenth Century Britain and the U.S.
Chapter Nine: The Nineteenth Century’s Start of Mass Homebuilding in Britain, and Homebuilding in Its Colonies
Chapter Ten: Nineteenth-Century Mass Homebuilding in the United States
Chapter Eleven: Anglosphere Homebuilders, 1900-1950
Chapter Twelve: Anglosphere Homebuilders, 1951-2000
Part Three: Homebuilding Trends
Chapter Thirteen: Advances in Standardization of Housing Components
Chapter Fourteen: Progress in Homebuilder Financing, yet Continuing Bankruptcies
Chapter Fifteen: Evolving Scale of Homebuilders’ Production
Conclusion: What the Future Portends for Anglosphere Housing Shortages in Light of the Past
Appendix One: ‘Firsts’ in Homebuilding Practices
Appendix Two: ‘Firsts’ in Conceptualizations for Housing Market Analysis
Appendix Three: ‘Firsts’ in Selected Government Interventions
Appendix 4: Basic Historical Organizations for Homebuilding
References
About the Author

Les mer
A History of Homebuilders from Early Modern to Modern Times provides a diachronic account of homebuilders’ more than 500 years history in the Anglosphere nations of the U.S., Britain, Canada, and Australia.
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781666956894
Publisert
2024-11-30
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
256

Forfatter
Innledning av

Biografisk notat

William C. Baer is emeritus professor of policy, planning, and development at the University of Southern California’s Price School of Public Policy.