This book is about women’s relationship to buildings and to the spaces between them – our created surroundings, including homes, their arrangement in ...
Continue Reading →For over sixty years Sir Nikolaus Pevsner’s study of European architecture has been regarded as a seminal work which has inspired countless students ...
Continue Reading →Jeff Speck has dedicated his career to determining what makes cities thrive, and he has boiled it down to one key factor: walkability. ...
Continue Reading →The role of material forensics in articulating new notions of the public truth of political struggle, violent conflict, and climate change are the ...
Continue Reading →Written in 1977, it was the first to define Post-Modernism in architecture – an event which led to its subsequent adoption in other ...
Continue Reading →Having been one the most successful boomtowns of the early twentieth century, Atlanta saw a transition from a town known for its Southern ...
Continue Reading →Our thermal environment is as rich in cultural associations as our visual, acoustic,olfactory, and tactile environments. This book explores the potential for using ...
Continue Reading →In 1901, Gustav Stickley began to create the first uniquely American style of furniture and home design—known as Craftsman. Stickley’s principles of home ...
Continue Reading →Key texts by one of the main modernist architects and theorists, the founder of the Bauhaus School, Walter Gropius. Compiled by the author ...
Continue Reading →When Heinrich Hübsch published In What Style Should We Build? in 1828, German Neoclassicism―like its counterpart in France―was in rapid descent, thereby opening ...
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