File:Hilton Road and Rosehill Drive (SC 1142034).png

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Hilton Road and Rosehill Drive   (Wikidata search (Cirrus search) Wikidata query (SPARQL)  Create new Wikidata item based on this file)
Photographer
Miles Glendinning  (1956–)  wikidata:Q84041438
 
Description British architectural historian, photographer and architect
Date of birth 1956 Edit this at Wikidata
Work location
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q84041438
Title
Hilton Road and Rosehill Drive
Description
View of Hilton Road and Rosehill Drive development
Depicted place Aberdeen
Date 1983
date QS:P571,+1983-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Medium Scanned from Kodachrome slides.
institution QS:P195,Q160302
Current location
institution QS:P195,Q5338172
Credit line Heritage Lottery-funded project, 2017
Notes Multi-storey block details: two 10-storey blocks containing 113 dwellings; Multi-storey block name(s): Hilton Court SC56; Stewart Park Court SC57 ; Image detail: View of Hilton Road and Rosehill Drive development Original Commissioning Authority City of Aberdeen District Council City of Aberdeen District Council Aberdeen City Council Construction period (from/to): 1976 1980 Context: Tower Block UK is a project supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, bringing together public engagement and an openly-licensed image archive in an attempt to emphasise the social and architectural importance of tower blocks, and to frame multi-storey social housing as a coherent and accessible nationwide heritage. The Tower Block UK image archive is a searchable database of around 4,000 images of every multi-storey social housing development built in the UK. The photographs were largely taken in the 1980s by Miles Glendinning and are made available here for public use. As many of the blocks documented and photographed have since been demolished, the archive functions in part as a repository of information on an important aspect of UK heritage that is now vanishing. The archive itself catalogues multi-storey blocks as part of the developments within which they were initially commissioned and built. It gives details of notable dates, such as when local authorities approved the developments and when construction began or finished. Alongside this, the archive provides information on the local authorities, architects, and other agents involved in the processes of commissioning, designing, and constructing mass social housing. While the most historically 'accurate' identification labels in the database are the original overall development or project names, the archive also contains details of the individual blocks built.
References Tower blocks’ crumbling image restored in new archive of high life. Heritage Fund (12 February 2015). Retrieved on 16 August 2021.
Source
The Tower Block UK project is a Heritage-Lottery funded initiative, whose active data-gathering phase operated from the University of Edinburgh between 2014 and 2019. The database generated and presented by the project emphasises the social and architectural importance of tower blocks and frames multi-storey social housing as a coherent and accessible nationwide heritage. As multi-storey blocks increasingly vanish from our horizons, this project responds to the need to document and create an engagement with the history of multi-storey social housing at a local and national level.
This image can be accessed on the University of Edinburgh's DataShare repository, 2701 and from the Tower Block UK website

Details are available on the DataShare repository

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current17:33, 17 August 2021Thumbnail for version as of 17:33, 17 August 20214,000 × 2,660 (13.18 MB)Valfreyja1 (talk | contribs)pattypan 20.04

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