Robert Tavernor

Robert Tavernor (born 1954) is an English Emeritus Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE),[1] and founding director of the Tavernor Consultancy in London that has advised on many prominent urban design projects in the city.[2] He is an internationally renowned architecture historian and urbanist, who published widely on architecture and urban design, including the impact of tall buildings on historic cities.[3] He has a long and distinguished academic career, having been appointed to the prestigious Forbes Chair in Architecture at the University of Edinburgh at age 36.

Biography

Tavernor was born in England and studied architecture in London (BA and Dip. Arch with Distinction, 1973–79), Rome (British Prix de Rome in Architecture at the British School at Rome, 1979–80[4]), and at the University of Cambridge (St John's College, 1980–83, doctorate awarded 1985), where his PhD thesis, Concinnitas in the Architectural Theory and Practice of Leon Battista Alberti,[5] was supervised by Joseph Rykwert. He is a registered architect and a member of the Royal Institute of British Architects (since 1985).

He has held multiple academic posts in the UK. He was formerly Forbes Professor of Architecture at the University of Edinburgh (1992–95), Professor of Architecture and Head of the Department of Architecture and Civil Engineering at the University of Bath (1995–2005), LSE Professor of Architecture and Urban Design (2005–2011) and Director of the LSE Cities Programme (2005–08). He held various visiting academic posts internationally, including Visiting Professor at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA, 1998), European Union Visiting Scholar in planning and conservation at the University of Texas A&M (2002); and Visiting Professor in Architecture and Urbanism at the University of São Paulo, Brazil (2004), and the University of Bath (since 2009).

He founded the Centre for Advanced Studies in Architecture (CASA) at Bath, and with Vaughan Hart, its current Director, established a focus on Classical and Italian Renaissance architectural treatises; between them they have translated and written about the leading classical architectural theorists – including, Vitruvius, Alberti, Serlio and Palladio. He was a Higher Education Funding Council for Education (HEFCE), and national assessor for the Architecture and the Built Environment sub-panel of the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE2008). He is on the Faculty of the Fine Arts of the British School at Rome.[6]

Tavernor initiated (with co-authors) a series of acclaimed modern translations of the principal classical architectural treatise writers – Vitruvius, Alberti and Palladio – and is the sole author of equally widely acclaimed parallel monographs on these subjects published by the world's leading presses (Yale[7] and MIT).[8] His book on Alberti, for example, was described as "the last and the best of the books on Alberti on this scale in the twentieth century" (Chronique).[9] He pioneered the use of the computer to visualise urban forms in architectural exhibitions,[10] co-curating with Rykwert in 1994 the international exhibition of Alberti's work at Palazzo Te in Mantua for the computer firm Olivetti. As a consultant architect and urbanist he applied his knowledge of architectural history, design and the visual representation of buildings in advising planners and architects on the form, character and height of the tallest buildings in the City of London (including Heron Tower and The Pinnacle) and along the south bank of the Thames. He advised on several large urban masterplan projects in London (including Battersea Power Station), which led to him being invited in 2007, by former Russian Senator Gordeev, to assemble and to contribute his expertise to an international masterplanning team to re-configure the city of Perm (population of 1 million) in the southern Urals. The published masterplan led by KCAP was awarded the Grand Prix at the Moscow Architecture Biennale in May 2010.

Works

As an architectural historian and theorist, he is an expert in the foundations of Italian Renaissance architecture and the transmission of associated ideas and forms to England and America. He is the author of Palladio and Palladianism (1991 – subsequently translated into Italian, Chinese and Korean) and On Alberti and the Art of Building (1998). He is co-translator of two English translations of architectural treatises: Leon Battista Alberti’s 16th century De re aedificatoria, as On the Art of Building in Ten Books (1988); and Andrea Palladio’s 17th century I quattro libri dell’architettura, as The Four Books on Architecture (1997), and co-edited and provided the introduction to Vitruvius' On Architecture (2009).

Tavernor's translation works have become the standard texts in art historical scholarship, used by students and scholars throughout the world. His book Smoot’s Ear: The Measure of Humanity (2007 and 2008) pulls together much of his earlier writings and sets measures and measuring in a cultural context and shows how deeply they are connected to human experience and history.

He was co-editor of Body and Building: Essays on the changing relation of Body to Architecture (2002 and 2005), a collection of essays on art and architecture dedicated to Rykwert. He founded the Alberti Group with Rykwert, which led to the 1994 international exhibition on Alberti for Olivetti. Photogrammetric drawings relating to research for the exhibition can be found on the CASA website at Bath University. Tavernor was subsequently commissioned by the Royal Academy of Arts to produce computer animated urban and architectural reconstructions through CASA for exhibitions in London and internationally, for the Sir John Soane Exhibition (1999), Aztecs Exhibition (2003), and by Tate Britain for the Sir Stanley Spencer Exhibition (2001).[11]

Robert Tavernor is also a practising architect and urban designer. Through the London-based Tavernor Consultancy he provides architectural, heritage and urban planning advice to institutions, developers and architects in London on projects that include large-scale masterplanning and building design submissions (Greenwich Peninsula, Croydon Gateway, New Wembley, Bishopsgate Goods Yard, and Battersea Power Station) and the design of individual buildings. He also provides heritage advice nationally and internationally relating to the design of modern buildings in an historic urban context, and has developed a heritage strategy as part of a major masterplan to reconfigure the city of Perm in the Russian Urals.

He has given expert evidence at over 40 major planning inquiries in London since 2001. Tavernor is one of the leading consultants in his field in the UK, and has the most distinguished academic background of the few whose work has impacted in this way. He has offices in Bath and London.

Publications (selection)

See also

References

  1. "Professor Robert Tavernor - Academic staff - Who's who - Department of Sociology - Home". .lse.ac.uk. 2011-02-23. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  2. "Home | Tavernor Consultancy Architecture + Heritage". Tavernorconsultancy.co.uk. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  3. "House of Commons - Transport, Local Government and the Regions - Memoranda". Publications.parliament.uk. 2002-01-22. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  4. "Rome Prize in Architecture « The British School at Rome". Bsr.ac.uk. 2011-10-26. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  5. "Concinnitas in the architectural theory and practice of Leon Battista Alberti". Dspace.cam.ac.uk. 1985-11-12. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  6. "Governance « The British School at Rome". Bsr.ac.uk. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  7. "Smoot's Ear - Tavernor, Robert - Yale University Press". Yalepress.yale.edu. 2007-09-24. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  8. "Robert Tavernor | The MIT Press". Mitpress.mit.edu. Retrieved 2014-07-17.
  9. "On Alberti and the Art of Building". Yalepress.yale.edu. 1999-01-11. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  10. "Cambridge Journals Online - arq: Architectural Research Quarterly - Abstract - Architectural history and computing". Journals.cambridge.org. Retrieved 2013-11-05.
  11. "Stanley Spencer - Virtual Church-House". tate.org.uk. October 27, 2009. Archived from the original on May 19, 2014. Retrieved May 19, 2014.

External links