The Canadian Home: From Cave to Electronic Cocoon

Front Cover
Dundurn, Sep 1, 1994 - Art - 256 pages

Would you want to live in a factory-molded cube made of plastic, asbestos, and UFFI? With an "H-bomb shelter" and the nuclear furnace underneath? Or a house designed by God to harmonize with the cosmic Muzak?

The Canadian Home explains how our housing came to be including the pagan origins of "colonial" homes, why "Tudor" is not Tudor, and where so many predictions went wrong. But the book is not just about tastes and floor plans; it also celebrates technological innovation, from prehistoric Inuit windows (of stretched seal guts) to the R-2000 house and habitation in space. For the first time, records of the Canadian Home Builders’ Association have been opened to reveal the power plays of bureaucrats, developers, architects, and financiers and how they affect the quality, affordability, and choice of our housing today. Fiery debates over the sublime and the ridiculous (e.g. 1940s architectural articles on whether Toronto should be bombed) are set against the backdrop of Canadian politics and industrial history. Whether the reader’s interest is in construction, politics, or home decor, this book explains why the roof over our heads is the way it is." Pierre Berton

"In his fascinating study of Canadian shelter, Marc Denhez takes us on a 20,000-year journey from the days of the cave, the tipi, and the igloo, to the H-bomb shelter and the mobile home. This is, in short, a lively as well as an erudite study of the development of housing . [It] deserves a permanent position on any library shelf."

"If you live in a house or own one or build one if you have a roof over your head read this book. A housing book with punch and humour immensely enjoyable."

-Charles Lynch author, journalist and former governor of Heritage Canada.

 

Contents

Introducing the Characters
1
Caves and Abstract Theories
7
Canada to 1600
15
16001763
30
17631850
36
Electrifying 18501914
47
19141939
66
19391946
79
19691975
148
19751982
163
19821988
179
19881994
195
Beyond 1994
217
The Leadership of CHBA and CMHC and Federal Ministers Responsible for Housing
227
Notes
229
Illustration Credits
246

19461954
93
19541960
108
19601969
127
Selected Readings
248
Index
249
Copyright

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About the author (1994)

Other Books by Marc Denhez:

Legal and Financial Aspects of Architechtural Conservation

The Heritage Strategy Planning Handbook

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