Alsop and Stormer

Alsop and Stormer

Author: Alsop & Störmer Architects

Publisher: Images Publishing

Published: 1999

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 9781864700015

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Alsop and Stormer continually explore form colour function social and behavioural issues in their architecture. This monograph illustrates William Alsop's strength as an architect as well as an artist.


William Alsop and Jan Störmer

William Alsop and Jan Störmer

Author: Will Alsop

Publisher:

Published: 1993

Total Pages: 148

ISBN-13:

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Reviews the position of Alsop and Stoermer as one of Europe's leading architectural practices. Alsop's developmental paintings are featured throughout and tell of the organic processes involved, of the goal to create space that is indeterminant.


Environmentally Friendly Cities

Environmentally Friendly Cities

Author: Eduardo Maldonado

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2014-11-19

Total Pages: 704

ISBN-13: 1134256221

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The 15th Passive and Low Energy Architecture (PLEA) conference considered the issues of sustainability and environmental friendliness at the city scale. Some 150 papers address the many and varied questions faced by architects and planners in reducing the impact on the environment of cities and their buildings.


Architects Today

Architects Today

Author: Kester Rattenbury

Publisher: Laurence King Publishing

Published: 2006-08-10

Total Pages: 248

ISBN-13: 9781856694926

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This volume offers both an introduction to and an insight into key contemporary architects as well as giving a snapshot of the varied nature of architecture today. For each architect there are details of their life and work and illustrations of their most representative and iconic buildings.


Maximalism

Maximalism

Author: Aurora Cuito

Publisher: A. Asppan S.L.

Published: 2003

Total Pages: 112

ISBN-13: 9788496048508

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The aesthetic movement that is the subject of this book gathers the objectives of designers who are constructing a new, complex and eclectic modernity. Maximalism has affected all disciplines and prompted them to merge with each other, even creating new projects.


London's Contemporary Architecture

London's Contemporary Architecture

Author: Ken Allinson

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2007-06-07

Total Pages: 270

ISBN-13: 1136347054

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London is a living architectural exhibition. This handy pocket guide: * aids navigation of the city’s greatest sights with a clear map-based format * features more than 260 buildings, with full notes and references * provides a superb full colour photographic record of the capital London's Contemporary Architecture is a practical and highly illustrated guide to the best modern buildings. Now in its fourth edition, this location-based book has been fully updated to cover the latest additions to the London skyline. This guide looks at London district by district. It identifies the buildings most worth visiting and offers essential information about the selected architectural gems. Packed with fascinating informative commentary and useful location maps, it also includes examples of London's finer older buildings that are found near to the key contemporary sites.


The Sociology of Architecture

The Sociology of Architecture

Author: Paul Jones

Publisher: Liverpool University Press

Published: 2011-07-26

Total Pages: 209

ISBN-13: 1781388245

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States have long been active in commissioning architecture, which affords one way to embed political projects within socially meaningful cultural forms. Such state-led architecture is often designed not only to house the activities of government, but also to reflect political-economic shifts and to chime with a variety of ‘internal’ and ‘external’ publics as part of wider discourses of belonging. From the vantage point of sociology, this context necessitates critical engagement with the role of leading architects’ designs and discourses relative to politicized identity projects. Focusing on the mobilization of architecture in periods of social change, The Sociology of Architecture uses critical sociological frameworks to assess the distinctive force added to political projects by architects and their work. Through engagement with a range of illustrative examples from contested contemporary and historical architectural projects, Paul Jones analyses some of the ways in which architects have sought to position their architecture relative to state projects and wider publics. A central objective of the book is to situate major architectural projects as a research agenda for sociologists and others interested in the relationship between power, culture, and collective identities. Adopting a critical approach to such questions, The Sociology of Architecture frames architecture as a field of contestation over symbolic and material resources, which in turn provides an entry point for questioning the inextricably political ways in which collective identities are constructed, maintained and mobilized.