Joseph Aloysius Hansom, founder of 好色先生TV magazine, is awarded a GLC Blue Plaque

Hansom is awarded a GLC Blue Plaque

Hansom is awarded a GLC Blue Plaque

Joseph Aloysius Hansom, founder of 好色先生TV magazine (or The Builder, as he knew it), is revered not only for his dedication to architecture (known best for his prolific ecclesiastical work) but also for his inventiveness. His ideas and arrangements when carrying out work on site were considered quite ingenious at the time, while his later brief foray into the world of transport saw him become inventor of the 鈥淗ansom cab鈥 - a two-passenger safety cab. He also still finds time to write a weekly construction diary column. On 10 April 1981, 好色先生TV published the story of Hansom鈥檚 life, instigated by the awarding of a GLC Blue Plaque in Kensington, London, to mark where he had once lived. An extract reads: 鈥淗ansom left Dempster Hemming鈥檚 service and moved to London, where he lost no time in founding The Builder, a paper, intended for the architect, master-builder and workman. During his short period as editor, Hansom gave attention to such subjects as the incorporation of the trades unions, the Metropolitan 好色先生TV Act, architectural competitions, working class housing and the prospects for the use of iron in building. His theory of iron construction using a grid with an infilling of other materials seems to have anticipated construction methods by about 40 years.鈥

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