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Your Places or Mine

Podkast av Clive Aslet & John Goodall

engelsk

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Les mer Your Places or Mine

A podcast about places and buildings, with tales about history and people.  From author and publisher Clive Aslet and the architectural editor of Country Life, & John Goodall

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54 Episoder

episode Dons and Divinity: The Marvellous History of Cambridge cover

Dons and Divinity: The Marvellous History of Cambridge

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2467470/fan_mail/new] John has been to Cambridge to see the castle, the mound of which still survives.  Although a graduate of Peterhouse and now a Visiting Professor of Architecture, associated with the Ax:son Johnson Centre for the Study of Classical Architecture at Downing College, Clive comes new to this early history but many stories of more recent times.  Together the pair mull over the development of this remarkable city, famous for one of the most beautiful ensembles of buildings in England.   The castle reminds those who might have forgotten – or never knew – how important this fenland settlement was to William the Conqueror in the Norman period.  Scholars arrived from Oxford in the 13th century, to establish what became the university.  It rose to glory under the patronage of Henry VII, his mother Lady Margaret Beauford and his son Henry VIII.  King’s College Chapel was finished in this era; Trinity College, St John’s College and Christ’s College were all founded.  It is not only the buildings that give Cambridge its character but the open landscape of the Backs, one of the triumphs of the Picturesque.  Today Cambridge is a boom town, thanks to the knowledge economy associated with the university’s record in scientific and mathematical research.   There has been rapid growth in housing, served by two new railway stations, Cambridge North and Cambridge South.  Can the qualities for which Clive and John love the place survive the pressure?

16. mai 2026 - 1 h 0 min
episode THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN COUNTRY HOUSE: DEVELOPING AN IDEA cover

THE STORY OF THE AMERICAN COUNTRY HOUSE: DEVELOPING AN IDEA

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2467470/fan_mail/new] Clive is writing a book for Yale University Press on the Story of the American Country House. John indulges him by discussing an introductory overview of the subject, with which Clive has been engaged since Yale published his The American Country House in 1990.  Here is a rich and colourful theme, celebrating a sometimes spectacular architectural tradition shaped by remarkable individuals.   There are numerous reasons people in Colonial American and the developing United States wanted houses outside the city.  Rural simplicity expressed a godlier life; country air was good for the health; the drama of the American landscape appealed to the Romantic imagination.  By 1900 there was a school of highly sophisticated architects who could serve any need.  While some American country houses bore a resemblance to their cousins across the Atlantic, they were, in the early 20th century, built for a different purpose, which was recreation and sport.  There was little sense that these were dynastic seats.  As soon as fashion changed or money ran out, owners moved on.  Hundreds of country houses on Long Island, for example, were demolished after the Great Crash in the 1920s. Clive and John consider these and other aspects of the subject, in the light of the renaissance of country house building that can be seen in many parts of the US today.

9. mai 2026 - 58 min
episode The Story of Stowe House: A School of Marble and Memory cover

The Story of Stowe House: A School of Marble and Memory

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2467470/fan_mail/new] When the German Prince Puckler Muskau visited England in 1826, he told his divorced wife that it would take her ‘at least 420 years to see all the parks of England, of which there are undoubtedly at least 100,000, for they swarm in every direction.’  One of the most splendid was that at Stowe in Buckinghamshire. The garden was accompanied by an equally important country house, if not palace. John has just been there and describes this extraordinary creation, the product of many generations. What we see today is largely a product of the 18th-century owner Lord Cobham and his descendants.  It was Cobham who employed ‘Capability’ Brown to turn Stowe into (to quote the poet Alexander Pope) ‘as near an approach to Elysium as English soil and climate will permit.’  Sir John Vanbrugh, William Kent and Robert Adam were among the many architects who worked on the house. Through marriage the family became Dukes of Buckingham and Chandos.  But their princely extravagance hit the buffers in 1848 when a Great Sale of the contents was held.  Not even this could not keep the debts at bay indefinitely and much of the rest of the property was sold after the First World War.  The park came into the ownership of the National Trust and the house became a school.  Since 1977, the Stowe House Preservation Trust has been restoring the State Dining Room ceiling and returning Classical sculptures to the North Hall, among other projects. John describes the progress made in this magnificent endeavour.

2. mai 2026 - 1 h 1 min
episode Perhaps The Finest Street In Europe - The History of The Strand cover

Perhaps The Finest Street In Europe - The History of The Strand

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2467470/fan_mail/new] ‘Let’s all go down the Strand!’ ran a popular music hall song.  But what sort of street were they singing about?  The future Prime Minister Benjamin Disraeli called it ‘perhaps the finest street in Europe’ in 1847.  Which is quite a claim to live up to.  Certainly the Strand, one of London’s most famous and important thoroughfares, has had a long and colourful history, with much shape-shifting over the centuries.  John and Clive reveal the secrets of a street where splendour lived next door to vice. Lying between the City of London and the City of Westminster, it formed an important ceremonial route. Until the 19th century, though, it was as much defined by access to the river Thames as by its function as a road.  During the Middle Ages, great prelates such as the Archbishop of York built palaces – sometimes known as inns – along the shore, convenient to reach by barge and within a short distance of the Palace of Westminster.   In the Tudor period, many of these buildings had become the preserve of great courtiers like the Duke of Buckingham – assuming that they had not fallen into the hands of the King himself.  Somerset House was named after the Duke of Somerset, Lord Protector of England until he had his head chopped off.  It was then particularly associated with Queens such as Henrietta Maria. All this changed when Whitehall Palace burnt down at the end of the 17th century and monarch preferred Kensington Palace or Buckingham Palace over Westminster.  The inns were redeveloped, famously by the Adam Brothers who nearly ruined themselves building the Adelphi.  To Victorian London, the Strand was theatreland – to visit which was as good as a holiday: hence the song.  But with theatres, given the proximity of some notorious slums, went other forms of nightlife.  Prostitution was rife.  So the newly formed London County Council introduced the Strand Improvement Act at the end of the 19th century.  The Strand was widened, new buildings arose -- but Clive and John uncover a surprising number of survivals from the ancient of days, such as a Roman bath.   What is the Strand today?  Crowded, but once again being improved – look at James Gibbs’s church of St Mary le Strand, now set off by a new piazza that links it with King’s College London and dazzling Somerset House.  The reopening of the celebrated restaurant Simpsons in the Strand, in the premises it has occupied since 1904, is (to adopt a culinary metaphor) the cherry on the cake.

25. april 2026 - 59 min
episode Last of The Laskett? A Great British Garden Under Threat (EMERGENCY BROADCAST) cover

Last of The Laskett? A Great British Garden Under Threat (EMERGENCY BROADCAST)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2467470/fan_mail/new] The Laskett in Herefordshire is one of the most remarkable gardens to have been created in the 20th century but now it’s future is threatened.  Sir Roy Strong, scholar, museum director and the author of over 70 erudite books, and his theatre-designer wife Julia Trevelyan Oman created it as a bolt hole from London, beginning in 1973 – a bleak time of industrial unrest and inflation.  It grew to become the largest formal garden made in the UK since the Second World War.  This intensely personal arcadia was a place of memory, where plants, statuary and garden spaces remembered people whom the Strongs knew and important and recorded important events in the Strongs’ life together.  Clive and John describe the origins and importance of this Elysium, which can be comipared to Horace Walpole’s Strawberry Hill. After a long and painful reflection, the National Trust turned down Sir Roy’s offer to g give it them.  It seemed though that a solution had been found when half a dozen years ago it went instead to the gardening charity Perennial.  Perennial has found that it cannot generate the visitors needed to make it pay, not least because they have not succeeded in making a car park.  Since their main charitable purpose is to support working gardeners in old age, illness or hard times, they cannot keep a loss-making property on their books and have decided, if possible, to find a new owner.  If one does not come forward, The Laskett will be broken up.  Already the catalogue of a sale at the Cotswolds auction house of Chorley’s has been published, although the date of the auction has been postponed from the end of this month until June.   In this emergency episode of ypompod, John and Clive discuss The Lastkett’s importance.  How will it be viewed by future generations?  Is it possible for gardens to keep their soul once the people who first made them have left?  What should we think of this cultural catastrophe in the making?

19. april 2026 - 58 min
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