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Building California
Technology
and the Landscape
May
6 - August 15, 1998
The history
of California building is one of physical materials -- wood, brick, iron,
steel, and concrete and changing technology. It is also a history of the
relationship between building technologies and the natural and cultural
landscapes.
This relationship
implies an understanding of the landscape as a visible record of human
beings living on the land, and leads to an exploration not only of the
physical appearance of places, but also the social and environmental influences
that shape technologies. Building California: Technology and the Landscape
addresses the range of connections between building technologies and the
world around them.
Tracing the
development of the built landscape in northern California from pre-colonial
times through World War II reveals an intricate and layered view of the
structures we see around us. Photographs, drawings, documents, and artifacts
illustrate how shifts in population have brought new technologies and
materials into use, how natural resources and disasters have affected
the growth of California cities and towns, and how roads, electrical lines,
and aqueducts linked urban and rural landscapes. This evolution of the
use of structures and materials serves as a framework for understanding
individual buildings, and as a foundation for the continuing process of
building California.
NATIVE
CALIFORNIA
The materials
and styles of Native Californian structures varied according to place
and season, reflecting the diverse natural landscapes and climates within
the region. Buildings also varied according to precipitation, soil, vegetation,
and the proximity of usable tools. Although some communities, such as
the Yurok, built permanent villages, most native peoples built settlements
to last only from season to season, or for a few years. Constructed of
local materials, the built landscape echoed the colors and textures of
the natural landscape. Once abandoned, most village sites quickly reverted
to their original condition. None of the structures built during the pre-colonial
period exist today.
COLONIALISM:
IMPORTED TECHNOLOGIES
The colonial
period in California saw enormous changes to the region's culture and
architecture. When the Spanish arrived in northern California in the 1770s,
they brought building traditions and technologies from Europe and Mexico.
Colonial structures were larger and more complex than those of Native
Californians. They required both the craftsmanship of skilled artisans
and physical labor provided by Spanish and Native workers, and animals.
Like Native
Californians, colonial settlers relied primarily on local materials. The
most prevalent type of construction used adobe bricks, made from clay
and straw, and a masonry technology common in Spain and Mexico. Walls
were constructed of adobes held together with mud mortar. Buildings had
flat or pitched roofs, made of clay tile or thatching, and were often
covered with a white limestone coating. More substantial buildings were
constructed of stone from local quarries.
THE GOLD
RUSH
The Gold
Rush brought tens of thousands of people to a place without enough buildings
to accommodate them, and without an industrial structure sufficient to
produce building materials from the region's natural resources. Gold Rush
builders applied technologies from other places and were forced to import
building materials produced nationally and internationally.
Initially,
settlers resorted to temporary or makeshift solutions such as tents or
lean-tos, and shanties. Abandoned ships, still afloat or grounded on the
tidal flats, often provided shelter or raw materials, and even served
as first stories for larger buildings. Prefabricated buildings, made of
wood or metal, were shipped from manufacturers around the world.
INSTANT
SETTLEMENTS
Mining camps,
port cities, agricultural towns, and commercial centers appeared throughout
California following the Gold Rush. These instant settlements required
readily available building materials and labor to build structures quickly.
A building industry sprang up rapidly to supply the booming economy and
population. Because wood was plentiful in the vast virgin forests, lumber
was the first building material to be produced industrially in northern
California.
Permanent
and portable sawmills were established throughout the region to prepare
the lumber needed to facilitate efficient construction. Two related landscapes
emerged as a result of the newly established lumber industry. Within California
forests, hillsides once dense with trees stood bare. As trees disappeared
from the natural environment, cites and towns constructed primarily of
wood appeared throughout the state.
URBAN
FIRES
During the
1850s, almost every Gold Rush city was badly damaged by fire. These instant
settlements were textbook cases of hazardous conditions. Rows of wooden
buildings linked by wooden sidewalks, poorly constructed fireplaces and
chimneys, oil and candle lighting, and the dangerous storage of gun powder
and lighting oil next door to saloons and residences all contributed to
the problem.
Response
to fire danger resulted in the reconstruction of central business areas
in fire-resistant materials. Following devastating fires, towns originally
established without any legal codes for construction began enacting laws
to require more fire-resistant buildings, and the relocation of hazardous
materials away from congested areas. Safety requirements for new buildings
included iron shutters over window and door openings, and brick walls
with parapets.
NINETEENTH
CENTURY EARTHQUAKES
California's
built landscape was shaped in part by natural events. Seasonal flooding,
for example, led to the construction of buildings over raised basements
along the Sacramento Delta. In other places, the brick districts of new
cities, which were safer from fire than the wooden towns that preceded
them, were more vulnerable to earthquakes.
Following
the earthquakes of 1865 and 1868, builders, engineers, architects, and
businessmen became conscious of the dangers of earthquakes and responded
with a proliferation of new construction techniques. Because masonry buildings
tended to break into pieces during earthquakes, techniques were developed
to bind the individual bricks and stones into a single unit. These included
numerous inventions to reinforce masonry walls with grids of vertical
bars and horizontal bands called bond iron. Fear of earthquakes contributed
to height restrictions in building and resulted in the persistent use
of wood for residences.
INDUSTRIAL
AND MILITARY ENGINEERING
During the
late-nineteenth century, with the emergence of the modern corporation,
the scale of enterprises such as shipping, storage, manufacturing, and
transportation increased tremendously. The needs of private-sector industry
coincided with government interests in expanding military and economic
capacity. Both needed large, secure buildings as well as increased control
over the environmental elements that affected commerce, travel, and trade.
Engineers
trained in public, private, and military universities around the country
developed solutions for large-scale industrial projects required by both
industry and the government. This was also a period of experimentation
in which inventors and business entrepreneurs played an important role
in developing new materials and technologies.
BUSINESS
EXPANSION:
THE DEVELOPMENT OF DOWNTOWN
By the 1870s,
business offices began to be concentrated in a new kind of urban community
or neighborhood with a new name ?-- downtown. The stacking of office floors
in a single building, and the clustering of office buildings in a specialized
district reflected the desire of businesses to be located near similar
businesses and a variety of services.
The first
office buildings were three to six story structures constructed out of
fire-resistant materials, generally brick walls, cast-iron or heavy timber
columns, and brick or decorative cast-iron fronts. In 1888, construction
began on San Francisco's first skyscraper, the Chronicle Building. Like
other tall office buildings, it required a structural skeleton of iron
and steel, as well as electricity and modern mechanical and communication
systems.
The expansion
of cities beginning in the late nineteenth century resulted in urban landscapes
characterized by a proliferation of new building types and by the concentration
of larger, taller buildings that define the cities of today.
TECHNOLOGY,
INFRASTRUCTURE
AND THE LANDSCAPE
The economic
development of mining, hydraulic engineering, hydroelectric power, and
transportation during the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries
transformed the California landscape. These technologies provided strong
ties between urban and rural areas, forging a permanent link between industrial
development and population growth in cities, and the natural resources
that supported them. The physical features of this infrastructure -- bridges,
power lines, dams, aqueducts, and roads -- have become conspicuous features
of the modern landscape.
The evolution
of materials and technology used to build the infrastructures paralleled
those used to construct buildings. Designs for structures required for
deep-quartz mining may have provided engineers with ideas for tall steel-frame
buildings. The technology of wooden flumes used in hydraulic mining was
applied to lumbering and irrigation as well as the design and construction
of aqueducts, land reclamation projects, and hydroelectric power.
By the 1920s,
the natural rural landscape had become domesticated. The flat alluvial
lands of the Central Valley, inland valleys, and around the San Francisco
Bay were overlaid with the grid of the federal land survey, crisscrossed
by local roads and electric distribution lines, and bordered by irrigation
canals and reclamation systems. Today, most of rural California is an
altered landscape of logged forests, grazed grasslands, irrigated farmlands,
and drained wetlands reclaimed for agriculture and development.
1906 DISASTER
AND RECONSTRUCTION
The cities
and suburbs of the Bay Area underwent striking changes both in building
methods and materials following the devastating earthquake and fire of
1906. The combination of these disasters revived old fears and resulted
in renewed efforts to build structures that would resist future seismic
events. Although fire-resistant construction was well understood, knowledge
of earthquake-resistant construction was still in its infancy. This complicated
the adoption of new building codes. As late as 1927, the San Francisco
building code provided standards for bracing tall buildings against wind,
but did not require additional measures for earthquakes.
Despite limitations,
rebuilding from the 1906 disaster brought about construction practices
that greatly improved the safety of buildings. New regulations changed
the face of the urban landscape. Buildings formerly clad in stone were
now faced in terra cotta and cast concrete. Streets once dominated by
brick walls now included concrete buildings covered with stucco, and there
were new taller steel-frame buildings changing the skyline.
BETWEEN
THE WARS
Throughout the early-twentieth century, industrial research produced new
building and decorative materials. While in the past, developments in
architecture and building practice had often been initiated and adopted
locally, technological changes and standards of this era became more national
in scope. As building technologies were quickly and uniformly adopted,
there was an increasing similarity in the use of structures and materials,
and in the appearances of buildings throughout California and the United
States.
By the time
of the construction boom of the 1920s, most significant projects were
built by large construction companies relying on organized labor. Complex
buildings with sophisticated structural designs and electrical and mechanical
systems required workers with specialized skills and equipment. Engineers
refined the invisible structural features of buildings such as foundations,
reinforcing bars (rebar), steel frames, and fire-resistant materials.
Architects experimented with a variety of materials and technology for
decoration including terra cotta, artificial stone, and sheet metal.
WORLD
WAR II
The impact
of World War II on the use of structures and materials in California building
was comparable in scope to the establishment of the missions, the Gold
Rush, urban fires, and the earthquakes of 1868 and 1906. Old technologies
were discarded and new ones adopted to address military needs, wartime
housing requirements, and shortages of building materials diverted to
the defense industry. In response to the shortage of building materials,
new materials were developed and existing materials such as plywood, concrete
block, and aluminum were used more widely. There was also increased experimentation
with pre-fabricated buildings and building parts.
The construction
that took place between 1942 and 1944 made a lasting impact on the environment.
Dozens of large new military bases, major industrial complexes, and vast
housing developments dwarfed existing elements of the landscape and set
the stage for the rapid construction of automobile suburbs in the 1950s.
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