Architectural conservation and restoration movements emerged in the West in the mid-nineteenth century, in part as a reaction to the acceleration of visible aging of buildings caused by the Industrial Revolution and associated changes in air quality. The new drive towards ‘restoration’—the return of a building to a glorified singular past state—led William Morris in 1877 to establish the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings (SPAB), whose manifesto marked the dawn of the age of conservation and essentially prohibited any interference with old buildings. What emerged was a debate between those who favored “scraping” (restorationists, e.g., Viollet-le-Duc) and those who were “anti-scrape” (conservationists, e.g., John Ruskin and William Morris). Recent scholarship in literary and eco-critical studies by Jesse Oak Taylor, Philip Steer, Heidi Scott, and others has drawn attention to anxieties about climate change that began early as the mid-19th century and became widespread by the turn of the 20th, as manifest in Victorian-era English-language literature. Little has been written about the influence of such anxieties on architects at the time, although John Ruskin’s lecture “The Storm Cloud of the Nineteenth Century” (1884) is possibly the first public lecture explicitly hypothesizing anthropogenic climate change. In my paper I examine Ruskin’s later writings, the writings and architectural works of William Morris, and the writings of other early members of SPAB including Thomas Hardy, to examine to what extent the “do-not-touch” model of conservation can be interpreted as an early reaction of alarm about climate change.
Ryan is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the Illinois Institute of Technology, a registered architect, and a board member at Docomomo Chicago. She has previously taught at Georgia Tech and Rice University. Her research, teaching, and design work focus on adaptive reuse as an urban strategy and experimental representation of time and duration in buildings. Her writing has been published in JSAH, Pidgin, Studies in the History of Gardens, and the book Ruskin’s Ecologies. She has her MArch from Princeton and her PhD in Oncology from Cambridge.