Function v. Rhetoric 
Peter Campbell
It is difficult to work out who gets the credit for a building – so many people are involved, from owners, contractors and governments to bricklayers and roofers – but it is particularly hard to decide what is due to the architect and what to the engineer. Andrew Saint, in his new book, sees them as sibling rivals, and in tracing how their relations have changed over time, looks for answers to three questions. Was there a time when the roles of architect and engineer were indistinguishable? If so, how and why did they separate? And, finally, have they now been reconciled?
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Peter Campbell is the London Review’s resident designer and art critic.
Other articles by this contributor:
At Tate Britain · Thomas Girtin
At the Baltic · Antony Gormley
At Tate Modern · Bruce Nauman’s Raw Materials
At Tate Modern · Like a badly iced cake
At the Whitechapel · Mies van der Rohe
In Regent Street · A Mile of Style
At Tate Britain · the art of protest
At Tate Modern · Rothko