PublishedLars Mueller Publishe, February 2017 |
ISBN9783037784983 |
FormatHardcover, 416 pages |
Dimensions24cm × 17cm |
For nearly fifty years "the building" has primarily been viewed as a means rather than an end within architectural history and theory. This volume presents an alternative to that trend by reconceiving it as a central discursive category in its own right.
Contributors-including architects and academics from worldrenowned institutions-offer insightful discussions of key architectural structures conceived in Europe, Asia, and the U.S.A. over the last three decades. In doing so they propel architectural thinking's importance as a domain of knowledge. Further, in exploring those structures through a number of questions both intra- and meta-disciplinary, this book suggests ways in which buildings can trigger conceptual frameworks whose influence extends well beyond architecture. A balanced text-to-image ratio caters to readers in both practice and academia. AUTHOR: Jose Araguez is a New York-based independent architect and writer with working experience at offices inSpain (Antonio J. Torrecillas), the Netherlands (MVRDV), and London (dom/ACXT). He is an Adjunct Professor of Architecture at Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, and a PhD candidate in the History and Theory of Architecture at Princeton University. 416 illustrations