Eileen Chanin
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Australia House
Shaping Dominion status in the imperial capital, 1907–63
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Architecture is understood to be meaningful beyond mere structure. It is argued that a building conveys a host of different meanings as it evolves, from conception to construction, occupation and reception. Multiple understandings across different contexts, from the architect responsible, the client, the building’s occupants, and its reception by contemporaries and subsequent critics, provide evidence about it in terms of its immediate environment, wider culture, and historic context. Australia House is the first of London’s Dominion Houses, constructed by the British empire’s self-governing Dominions between 1913 and 1959 in an imperial precinct encircling Trafalgar Square. Australia House gave impetus to the idea of an imperial precinct and to a style of building that expressed an imperial presence and added to London’s architectural vocabulary. This chapter will show how new insights on the phenomenon of empire can be gained, explored, and explained through consideration of architecture that sprang from the imperial experience. It will do so by showing how Australia House is a manifestation and an enduring example of the impact of the wider British empire on the built environment of modern Britain. It will show how the complex history of empire within Britain can be read through its architecture.

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Inner empire

Architecture and Imperialism in the British Isles, 1550–1950

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