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The Tennessee Valley Authority: Design and Persuasion

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Description

In the wake of the Great Depression, one of Franklin Roosevelt’s most successful New Deal programs used to be the formation of the Tennessee Valley Authority, a federal government owned corporation created in 1933 to revitalize the Tennessee River Valley. The TVA provided navigation, flood regulate, electricity generation, strategic materials for national defense, economic development, unemployment relief, and an overall improvement of living conditions in this once-impoverished rural area. The TVA Architects Place of work built a huge collection of structures right through the late 1930s and early 1940s, including the many dams that dramatically altered life in the Tennessee River Valley. Its design agenda used to be comprehensive, addressing all scales of design from door handles to landscape with equal dedication. The Tennessee Valley Authority: Design and Persuasion, the most in-depth examination of the TVA ever assembled, includes essays by experts in the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, graphic design, industrial design, and the fine arts.
In serving the social, political, and economic endeavors of the government, TVA architects straight away contributed to shaping the nascent American design culture and, arguably, create the finest extended body of modernist architecture and indisputably its most technologically sublime in North The united states. Featuring an afterword by Senator Howard Baker, Jr. and new photography by Richard Barnes, The Tennessee Valley Authority interweaves technical, political, aesthetic, and cultural concerns to complete a missing chapter in the study of brand new American architecture and design.

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