Raimund Abraham [UN]BUILT
Author: Brigitte Groihofer
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Published: 2016-12-05
Total Pages: 348
ISBN-13: 3990437151
DOWNLOAD EBOOKNo detailed description available for "Raimund Abraham [UN]BUILT".
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Author: Brigitte Groihofer
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Published: 2016-12-05
Total Pages: 348
ISBN-13: 3990437151
DOWNLOAD EBOOKNo detailed description available for "Raimund Abraham [UN]BUILT".
Author: Raimund Abraham
Publisher: Copernicus
Published: 1996
Total Pages: 315
ISBN-13: 9783211826713
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThe Austrian architect Raimund Abraham, born in 1933 in Tyrol, Austria, has been living, working, and teaching in the USA since 1964. This monograph on this outstanding figure of the Austrian architectural avant-garde of the sixties contains his complete work in a three-part structure: imaginary architecture, projects, and constructed works.
Author: Otto Kapfinger
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Published: 1999
Total Pages: 340
ISBN-13: 9783764360313
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Bernard Tschumi
Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
Published: 2003
Total Pages: 168
ISBN-13: 9781568983820
DOWNLOAD EBOOK"Including an exhaustive presentation of sketches, models, computer renderings, working drawings, and photographs of the construction process and the finished work, this book documents the project at a level of detail that allows complete and careful study from its conception to its completion. This in-depth graphic presentation is accompanied by commentaries from the architect, as well as series editors Jeffery Kipnis and Todd Gannon, that further explore both the cultural and technical significance of this important building."--BOOK JACKET.
Author: Terence Riley
Publisher:
Published: 2002
Total Pages: 200
ISBN-13: 9780870700040
DOWNLOAD EBOOKFeaturing 165 expertly reproduced visionary architectural drawings from The Museum of Modern Art's Howard Gilman Archive, this collection brings together a selection of idealized, fantastic and utopian architectural drawings.
Author: Lebbeus Woods
Publisher: Princeton Architectural Press
Published: 1993
Total Pages: 44
ISBN-13: 9781568980119
DOWNLOAD EBOOKWar and Architecture is a timely and moving response by architect Lebbeus Woods to the bombing of Sarajevo. With text in both English and Croatian, accompanied by the author's exquisitely drawn, hauntingly beautiful proposals, the book is both dedicated and addressed to the citizens of this ravaged city. Lebbeus Woods has long been fascinated by the intimate ties between architecture and violence. He identifies the two predominant patterns for rebuilding cities following catastrophic destruction: restoring the city exactly to its previous, "historical" state; or "erasing" the remains of the city to construct a new utopia. These, he argues, are twin forms of denial. Woods draws an analogy to the process of biological and emotional healing, presenting architectural forms that act as "injections," "scabs," "scars," and "new tissue," within the complex organism of a city. "Only by facing the insanity of willful destruction," he argues, "can reason begin to believe again in itself."
Author: Kevin Bone
Publisher: The Monacelli Press, LLC
Published: 2014-05-13
Total Pages: 225
ISBN-13: 158093384X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKThis valuable reference for today’s green building movement examines twentieth-century modern architecture, including buildings by Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer, through the lens of sustainability. The hottest topics in contemporary architectural design and architectural history—the focus on sustainability and the evaluation of the modern movement—meet in Lessons from Modernism, a partnership with The Cooper Union that explores the ways in which the straightforward functional approach of modernist design creates environmentally sensitive solutions. Lessons from Modernism provides new insights into 25 buildings by a diverse selection of architects, including Frank Lloyd Wright, Paul Rudolph, Jean Prouvé, and Arne Jacobsen, and demonstrates how these architects integrated environmental concerns into their designs. Buildings are located across the United States, Central and South America, Cuba, Japan and more—and include houses, art centers, commercial buildings, and civic buildings. Lessons from Modernism is an affordable reference work for all interested in how architecture intersects with the green movement, pairing full descriptions of all buildings with analytical essays, featuring charts of climate zones and solar movement, and concluding with a comprehensive chronology that details how environmental consciousness evolved throughout the twentieth century.
Author: Esra Akcan
Publisher: Birkhäuser
Published: 2018-04-09
Total Pages: 407
ISBN-13: 303561377X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKToward an "open architecture": the International Building Exhibition in Berlin.
Author: Hashim Sarkis
Publisher: National Geographic Books
Published: 2020-03-17
Total Pages: 0
ISBN-13: 0262043963
DOWNLOAD EBOOKArchitects imagine the planet: fifty speculative world-scale projects from Patrick Geddes, Alison and Peter Smithson, Kiyonori Kikutake, Juan Navarro Baldeweg, Luc Deleu, and others. The world's growing vulnerability to planet-sized risks invites action on a global scale. The World as an Architectural Project shows how for more than a century architects have imagined the future of the planet through world-scale projects. With fifty speculative projects by Patrick Geddes, Alison and Peter Smithson, Kiyonori Kikutake, Saverio Muratori, Takis Zenetos, Sergio Bernardes, Juan Navarro Baldeweg, Luc Deleu, and many others, documented in text and images, this ambitious and wide-ranging book is the first compilation of its kind. Interestingly, architects begin to address the world as a project long before the advent of contemporary globalism and its assorted anxieties. The Spanish urban theorist and entrepreneur Arturo Soria y Mata, for example, in 1882 envisions a system that connects the entire planet in a linear urban network. In 1927, Buckminster Fuller's “World Town Plan—4D Tower” proposes to solve global housing problems with mobile structures delivered and installed by a Zeppelin. And Joyce Hsiang and Bimal Mendis visualize the conditions of a worldwide “City of Seven Billion” in a 2015–2019 project. Rather than indulging the cliché of the megalomaniac architect, this volume presents a discipline reflecting on its own responsibilities.
Author: Robin Evans
Publisher: MIT Press
Published: 2000-08-25
Total Pages: 460
ISBN-13: 9780262550383
DOWNLOAD EBOOKRobin Evans recasts the idea of the relationship between geometry and architecture, drawing on mathematics, engineering, art history, and aesthetics to uncover processes in the imagining and realizing of architectural form. Anyone reviewing the history of architectural theory, Robin Evans observes, would have to conclude that architects do not produce geometry, but rather consume it. In this long-awaited book, completed shortly before its author's death, Evans recasts the idea of the relationship between geometry and architecture, drawing on mathematics, engineering, art history, and aesthetics to uncover processes in the imagining and realizing of architectural form. He shows that geometry does not always play a stolid and dormant role but, in fact, may be an active agent in the links between thinking and imagination, imagination and drawing, drawing and building. He suggests a theory of architecture that is based on the many transactions between architecture and geometry as evidenced in individual buildings, largely in Europe, from the fifteenth to the twentieth century. From the Henry VII chapel at Westminster Abbey to Le Corbusier's Ronchamp, from Raphael's S. Eligio and the work of Piero della Francesca and Philibert Delorme to Guarino Guarini and the painters of cubism, Evans explores the geometries involved, asking whether they are in fact the stable underpinnings of the creative, intuitive, or rhetorical aspects of architecture. In particular he concentrates on the history of architectural projection, the geometry of vision that has become an internalized and pervasive pictorial method of construction and that, until now, has played only a small part in the development of architectural theory. Evans describes the ambivalent role that pictures play in architecture and urges resistance to the idea that pictures provide all that architects need, suggesting that there is much more within the scope of the architect's vision of a project than what can be drawn. He defines the different fields of projective transmission that concern architecture, and investigates the ambiguities of projection and the interaction of imagination with projection and its metaphors.