Buildings & Landscapes-Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum

Papers
(The median citation count of Buildings & Landscapes-Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum is 0. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2020-01-01 to 2024-01-01.)
ArticleCitations
Disappearing the Enslaved: The Destruction and Recovery of Richmond's Second African Burial Ground2
The View from Rose Hill: Environmental, Architectural, and Cultural Recovery on a Piedmont Landscape2
<em>Viewpoint</em>: Spatial Ethnography of Devon Avenue, Chicago1
Industrial Networks and Urban Development: Kansas City's Film Row District and National Film Distribution1
Restoration and Slavery: Two New Exhibits1
The American Farm Pond1
Front Matter0
From Roman Temple to Baptist Church: Sin and Transformation in Southern Baptist Culture0
<em>Viewpoint</em>: Walk This Way: Reconsidering Walking for the Study of Cultural Landscapes0
Los Angeles's Indoor Swap Meet Boom and the Emergence of a Multiethnic Retailscape0
The Gyre Narrows, Again: Vernacular Buildings, Vernacular Landscapes, and Environmental History0
Back Matter0
Editor's Note0
Back Matter0
Front Matter0
Edward A. Chappell, An Appreciation: October 16, 1948–July 25, 20200
“This House Was Built by Newfoundlanders”: Race, Reconstruction, and Self-Reliant Landscapes in Southern Newfoundland0
<em>Research Notes</em>: Using Dendrochronology to Date First-Period Houses in the Georgia Backcountry0
<em>Viewpoint:</em> Landscape Disputed: What Environmental History Can Show Us0
Inheritors of the Street: Helen Levitt Photographs Children’s Chalk Drawings0
Back Matter0
“Selling Sunshine”: The Mackle Company's Marketing Campaign to Build Retirement and Vacation Communities in South Florida, 1945–19750
<em>Research Notes</em>: New Discoveries in Old Sources: A Neglected Ledger Reveals the Persons and Processes of Building in Late-Colonial Virginia0
“Where Tenants and Tenets Don't Agree”: Elisabeth Coit and the Planning Practices of the New York City Housing Authority (1934–51)0
Timber-Framed Dwellings of the Enslaved and Freedmen in the South Carolina Lowcountry: Continuities and Innovations in Building Practices and Housing Standa0
Editor's Note0
Front Matter0
“A Suitable Memorial”: The History of Public Health Centers in Post–World War II Virginia0
Blocked Out: Mount Rainier and the Landscape of Disappearance0
“Wealth and Beauty in Trees”: State Forestry and the Revitalization of Massachusetts's Rural Cultural Landscape, 1904–19190
Back Matter0
Front Matter0
Bleacher Bugs and Fifty-Centers: The Social Stratification of Baseball Fans through Stadium Design, 1880–19200
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