Skip navigation
    University of Texas Press contacts  
shopping cart
  Find a book. Journals. For authors. Booksellers & educators. About the Press.  
 
 

Click above to view inside spreads

2003

11 x 11 in.
156 pp., 32 color photos, 89 halftones, 39 line drawings

ISBN: 978-0-292-70526-5
$34.95, hardcover with dust jacket
33% website discount: $23.42

 
 
 
     

The Hacienda in Mexico

By Daniel Nierman and Ernesto H. Vallejo
Translated by Mardith Schuetz-Miller
Foreword by Elena Poniatowska

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

 

"Never in our country has an architectural study of the haciendas been made; never before was there a typological study of all the spaces. Now, with the work of Nierman and Vallejo, we are able to return to the daily life of the hacienda as it was: the equipment, the carriage, the daily awakening, the humid night, and the sleeplessness."

—from the Foreword by Elena Poniatowska, winner of the 2001 Premio Alfaguara de Novela

The Mexican hacienda was a work place, a residence, a place of leisure and of religion—in short, a closed and self-sufficient rural world in which landowners and workers engaged in agricultural and livestock production. Constructed and modified from the sixteenth until the beginning of the twentieth centuries, they are today some of Mexico's architectural treasures. The hacienda's layout and buildings, though derived from earlier Spanish forms, constitute a uniquely Mexican vernacular architecture that deserves to be widely known and celebrated.

The Hacienda in Mexico is the first detailed architectural study of these rural communities. In this beautifully illustrated book, Daniel Nierman and Ernesto Vallejo present color and black-and-white photographs, site plans, building plans, and elevations to document all aspects of the hacienda—the compound, big house, chapel, spaces for production, materials and construction methods, and architectural details. In the accompanying text, they discuss each of these elements, as well as the hacienda's historical development and the ways in which its productive activities shaped its architecture.

To produce this work, the authors traveled extensively in the states of Hidalgo, Tlaxcala, and San Luis Potosí, photographing and drawing haciendas, interviewing their owners and state and federal authorities, and researching in hacienda archives. This in-depth treatment of the hacienda clearly identifies the architectural elements that make it unique, while adding a new chapter to architectural history and to the history of New Spain.

Daniel Nierman is Professor of Architecture, Composition, and Visual Communication at the Universidad Iberoamericana, UIA, and Creative Director and founder of DNP Advertising in Mexico City. Ernesto Heliodoro Vallejo Diaz, an architect who graduated from the Universidad Iberoamericana, UIA, has been a teacher of architecture workshops at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and the Universidad Anahuac del Sur, both in Mexico City. At present, he is practicing his profession by running his own construction company, founded in 1992. Mardith Scheutz-Miller is an independent scholar in Tucson, Arizona, who has researched and written extensively on the archaeology, ethnohistory, history, and colonial architecture of New Spain.

Roger Fullington Series in Architecture

 Of Related Interest Lyons, Remembering the Hacienda
Mullen, Architecture and Its Sculpture in Viceregal Mexico

Search Books  |  Orders |  Catalogs |  Current Season

Terms of Sale |  Privacy Policy | UT Austin Web Accessibility Guidelines
Copyright © 2003-9 University of Texas Press. All rights reserved.