Librería: Antiquariaat A. Kok & Zn. B.V., Amsterdam, Holanda
EUR 88,00
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoAmsterdam, Uitgevers-maatschappij 'De Hooge Brug', 1921. 38 pp. (pages 19 - 38 are advertisements). [18] b./w. ills. Orig. lithographed wrappers (bound as a block book and tied together by hand with raffia cord) after a design by Bernard Bijvoet & Jan Duiker. Large square 4to. - Edges and spine sl. worn / dam.; cover with tear of ca. 65 mm. in top right corner. (Wendingen. Maandblad voor bouwen en sieren van Architectura et Amicitia, Jaarg. 4, nr. 12). - - Despite the damage still a fairly neat copy.* Le Coultre, Wendingen 1918 - 1932, pages 124-125, d. - Copy of the Dutch softcover edition (circulation of this softcover edition approx. 1000 copies). Introductory text by A.J. Derkinderen and H.Th. Wijdeveld. Typography by H.Th. Wijdeveld. - - The Dutch architects Jan Duiker and Bernhard Bijvoet won the competition in 1917 to design the new building for the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam. It was ultimately never built due to budget cuts.
Librería: Antiquariaat A. Kok & Zn. B.V., Amsterdam, Holanda
EUR 93,50
Cantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Añadir al carritoAmsterdam, Uitgevers-maatschappij 'De Hooge Brug', 1921. 38 pp. (pages 19 - 38 are advertisements). [18] b./w. ills. Orig. lithographed wrappers (bound as a block book and tied together by hand with raffia cord) after a design by Bernard Bijvoet & Jan Duiker. Large square 4to. - Dameged spot (rubbed surface) of cia 2 square cm. on the front cover; small written number i ink on the lower right corner of the title-page. (Wendingen. Maandblad voor bouwen en sieren van Architectura et Amicitia, Jaarg. 4, nr. 12). - - Despite the minor damage on the cover still a fairly good copy. * Le Coultre, Wendingen 1918 - 1932, pages 124-125, d. - Copy of the Dutch softcover edition (circulation of this softcover edition approx. 1000 copies). Introductory text by A.J. Derkinderen and H.Th. Wijdeveld. Typography by H.Th. Wijdeveld. - - The Dutch architects Jan Duiker and Bernhard Bijvoet won the competition in 1917 to design the new building for the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam. It was ultimately never built due to budget cuts.