The great myth of Baron Haussmann is that 'modernity' began with his
monumental reconstruction of Paris in the second half of the nineteenth
century. Constructing Paris in the Age of Revolution argues that
'Haussmannisation before Haussmann' in the late 1700s also made Paris
the capital of the eighteenth century. In particular, due to the
persistence of the black legend of uninterrupted revolutionary
vandalism, few historians have researched the construction of
revolutionary Paris, yet if formed a core sector of revolutionary urban,
social, labour and industrial policy. Allan Potofsky thus rehabilitates
the vitality of building during the Revolution, and - while
architectural and urban historians have often treated the history of
construction through the exclusive optic of careers and tastes of
architects and urban planners, or through the structure and aesthetics
of buildings, streets, and cities - his book examines the social and
political history of workers and entrepreneurs engaged in constructing
the French capital, in the period, 1763 to 1815.