Bath- Georgian Architecture
Bath is
a city of Roman foundation near thermal sources, it is a city of thermal baths,
hence the name. Due to the warm baths, Bath was advertised as a holiday city.
Bath is a Georgian City and was built during the 18th century.
Repetition and homogeneity are main traits of Georgian Architecture. The houses
were formed in uniformed groups similar to the Medieval period, but these
buildings would form curves and crescents instead of straight blocks. Bath
became a model for cities built of circles and crescents.
Every
building consisted of many houses, the houses would be subleased to individual
builders who would take the responsibility to form the interior of the house,
but the exterior must conform to John Wood’s design. Symmetry was a priority in
the design of buildings, the exterior had simple facades constructed from brick
or stone. The buildings had repetitive windows and doors to let in natural light
and hipped roofs for curb appeal. The interior consisted of boxy rooms with
high ceilings and crown moldings.
Are these thermal baths still in existence today? Is there anything similar today?
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