ARCHITECTURE, BUILDING, etc. ii 



ARCHITECTURE, BUILDING, etc. 



Construction. 



THE SCIENCE OF BUILDING : An Elementary Treatise on 

 the Principles of Construction. By E. Wyndham Tarn, M.A., Architect. 

 Second Edition, Revised, with 58 Engravings. Crown 8vo, 7s. 6d. cloth. 



" A very valuable book, which we itroiijily reconuneiul to all students." — Builder. 



" No architectural student should be without this handbook of constructional knowledge." — 

 .'Irc'tiUct. 



MUa ArcJutecture, 



A HANDY BOOK OF VILLA ARCHITECTURE : Being a 

 Scries of Designs for Villa Residences in various Styles. With Outline 

 Specifications and Estimates. By C. Wickes, Architect, Author of "The 

 Spires and Towers of England," &c. 30 Plates, 4to, half-morocco, £1 is. 

 ./ Also an Enlarged Edition of the above. 61 Plates, with Outline Speci- 

 fications, Estimates, &c. £2 2s. half-morocco. 



" The whole of the dcsijjns bear evidence of their being the work of an artistic architect, and 

 t)ie\ will prove very valuable and suy^gestive." — Building Xews. 



isffiff Tejrt-Booh for ArcJtifects, 



THE ARCHITECT'S GUIDE: Being a Text-Booh of Useful 

 Information for Architects, Engineers, Surveyors, Contractors, Clerks of 

 Works, &c. &c. By Frederick Rogers, Architect, Author of " Specifica- 

 tions for Practical Architecture," &c. Second Edition, Revised and Enlarged. 

 With numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 6s. cloth. 



" As a text-book of useful information for architects, engineers, surveyors, &c., it would be 

 hard to find a handier or more complete little volume." — Standard. 



" .\. young architect could hardly have a better guide-book." — Timber Trades yoiirnal. 



TaifJov and Cresy^s Home, 



THE ARCHITECTURAL ANTIQUITIES OF ROME. By 

 the late G. L. Taylor, Esq., F.R.I.B.A., and Edward Cresy, Esq. New 

 Edition, thoroughly revised by the Rev. Alexander Taylor, M.A. (son of 

 the late G. L. Taylor, Esq.), Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford, and Chap- 

 lain of Gray's Inn. Large folio, with 130 Plates, half-bound, £3 3s. 

 N.B. — This is the only book which gives on a large scale, and with the pre- 

 cision of architectural measurement, the principal Monuments of Ancient Rome 

 in plan, elevation, and detail. 



"Taylor and Cresy 's work has from its first publication been ranked among those professional 

 books which cannot be bettered. ... It would be difficult to find examples of drawings, even 

 among those of the most painstaking students of Gothic, more thoroughly worked out than are the 

 one hundred and thirty plates in this volume."— ^/rr/i;Vf</. 



Di'furinff for Builders and Students in ArcJiitecture, 



PRACTICAL RULES ON DRAWING, for the Operative 

 Builder and Young Student in Architecture. By George Pyne. With 14 

 Plates, 4to, ys. 6d. boards. 



Speeifications for Practical Architecture, 



SPECIFICATIONS FOR PRACTICAL ARCHITECTURE : 

 A Guide to the Architect, Engineer, Surveyor, and Builder; with an Essay 

 on the Structure and Science of Modern Buildings. By Frederick Rogers, 

 Architect. With numerous Illustrations, demy 8vo, 15s. cloth. 

 ' ,* .\ volume of specifications of a practical character being greatly required, and the old 



standard work of Alfred Bartholomew being out of print, the author, on the basis of that work 



lias produced the above. — Extract/roin Preface. 



The House-Owner^ s Estimator. 



THE HOUSE-OWNER'S ESTIMATOR ; or, What will it Cost 

 to Build, Alter, or Repair? A Price Book adapted to the Use of Unpro- 

 fessional People, as well as for the Architectural Surveyor and Builder. By 

 the late James D. Simon, A. R.I. B. A. Edited and Revised by Francis T. W. 

 Miller, A.R.I. B. A. With numerous Illustrations. Third Edition, Revised. 

 Crown 8vo, 3s. 6d. cloth. 



'• In two years it will repay its cost a hundred times over." — I'ield. 

 " .\. very hand)- book." — llii^liih Mechanic. 



