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New
Exhibit:
Impressing
the Client
1868-1940 |
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This exhibit examines ways architects present their work to
potential clients. Part I features proposals for tombs and
memorials from the Albert Weiblen Marble & Granite Company;
part II features residence proposals from New Orleans architect James Freret.
The original items are on display in Room 300, Jones Hall.
Click the image to view the online version of the exhibit. |
The Southeastern Architectural Archive (SEAA), a
department within Tulane University Library's
Special Collections
Division, is one of the larger collections of architectural
records in the southern U.S. Since its founding in 1980,
SEAA has built an archival collection for the study of the built
environment of New Orleans and Louisiana. Our
holdings include work by James Gallier, Henry Howard and other
architects who shaped the antebellum city; James Freret and Thomas
Sully, from the later nineteenth century; and modernist work by Curtis and Davis,
Freret and Wolf, Leonard Reese Spangenberg, James
Lamantia, and other New Orleans architects who changed the scale and
style of architecture in the city after the
second world war.
Specialized research collections
include plans and records from one of the South's largest funerary
monument designers, the Albert Weiblen Marble and Granite Company; extensive photographic holdings; and the
Garden Library of the
New Orleans Town Gardeners.
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NEW!
Online Finding Aids
Access searchable finding aids to SEAA collections.
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NEW!
Special Collections
Vertical Files
Special Collections is pleased to announce an
online search tool
for our extensive vertical files.
Our vertical file collection preserves Louisiana flyers,
brochures, menus, and other small printed items going back to the
very early 19th-century and covering almost almost every aspect of
Louisiana society and culture. Subjects include neighborhood
organizations, parks, schools, churches and synagogues,
post-Katrina planning and renewal, and other aspects of
Louisiana's built environment, which may be beneficial in
architectural research.
Special Collections vertical files are located in the main Special
Collections reading room, Jones Hall, Room 202.
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Digital Sanborn Maps, 1885-1951
Provides
access to New Orleans and other Louisiana towns and cities.
Founded in 1867 by D. A. Sanborn, the Sanborn Map Company was the
primary American publisher of fire
maps for over 100 years, repeatedly mapping towns
and cities as they changed. The maps
provide a wealth of information, such as building
outline, size and shape, construction materials, height, building
use, windows and doors, street and sidewalk widths, boundaries,
house numbers, and more. The plans often include information and
shading for steel beams or reinforced walls, plus symbols for
stables, garages, warehouses, etc.
In electronic
form, Sanborn Maps take on much improved value over the microfilm
versions of the same maps, allowing for greater flexibility of use
and improved viewing possibilities. Users have the ability to
easily manipulate the maps, magnify and zoom in on specific
sections, and layer maps from different years.
*Accessing Sanborn Maps from off-campus
If you are on the Tulane campus, any computer linked directly to
the school's server will give you access to the Sanborns. If you
are off-campus,
click here
for information about accessing Tulane's online resources.
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Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) and the Historic
American Engineering Record (HAER)
HABS and HAER are
collections of documentary measured drawings, photographs, and
written historical and architectural information for over 35,000
structures and sites in the United States and its territories.
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The Robinson Atlas
Atlas of the City of New Orleans, Louisiana,
published by E. Robinson in New York City in 1883 contains thirty
maps compiled from surveys conducted by New Orleans city surveyor
and architect John F. Braun. Braun most likely created the maps
during the latter part of the 1870s.
Originally created for the use of insurance companies, Robinson’s
Atlas is now a rich source of information that records existing
lots, buildings (noting whether wood or brick), and geographic
landmarks. Printed street names are contemporaneous to
publication; hand-written name changes were added at a later
undetermined date, making the Robinson Atlas an excellent source
for tracing street names.
The Robinson Atlas online is a service of the
New Orleans Notarial Archives. |
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Website and online exhibits created by Kevin
Williams
The
Southeastern Architectural Archives a department within the
Special
Collections Division of Howard-Tilton Memorial Library. |
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Tuesday, April 29, 2008 01:29 PM. We welcome your comments and
suggestions. |
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