Victoria regia's bequest to modern architecture

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Abstract

This paper will explore the relationship between the giant South American water lily, the Victoria regia (today named Victoria amazonica), and the 1914 Glashaus exposition building by the German architect, Bruno Taut. Starting with a general botanical introduction of Victoria regia, the paper exposes the first European cultivation of the lily by Joseph Paxton at Chatsworth, England, in 1849. Following this initial cultivation, Paxton subsequently develops a specialist greenhouse for the plant, that later becomes the prototype for all Victoria regia greenhouses. However, from about 1860 as Victoria regia cultivation spreads to continental Europe, a greenhouse that differs from Paxton's prototype subsequently evolves. An investigation of these later continental European greenhouses, coupled with an exposure of Taut's own writings concerning Victoria regia, reveals startling similarities to the Glashaus, which ultimately reveals the Glashaus as directly inspired by Victoria regia. © 2010 WIT Press.

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APA

Nielsen, D. (2010). Victoria regia’s bequest to modern architecture. WIT Transactions on Ecology and the Environment, 138, 65–76. https://doi.org/10.2495/DN100071

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