- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Architecture
Full Description
This book addresses the complex relationship between architecture and public life. It's a study of architecture and urbanism as cultural activity that both reflects and gives shape to our social relations, public institutions and political processes.
Written by an international range of contributors, the chapters address the intersection of public life and the built environment around the themes of authority and planning, the welfare state, place and identity and autonomy. The book covers a diverse range of material from Foucault's evolving thoughts on space to land-scraping leisure centres in inter-war Belgium. It unpacks concepts such as 'community' and 'collectivity' alongside themes of self-organisation and authorship.
Architecture and Collective Life reflects on urban and architectural practice and historical, political and social change. As such this book will be of great interest to students and academics in architecture and urbanism as well as practicing architects.
Contents
Part I: Contradictions in a common world 1. Introduction 2. A tale of two villages: Jane Jacobs, Marshall McLuhan and their visions of collective life 3. Interview with Reinier de Graaf 4. Neofeudalism: The end of capitalism? 5. Alternative models of tenure: Recovering the radical proposal of collective housing Part II: New geography and the planners 6. A proprietary polis: Silicon Valley architecture and collective life 7. Hyper-gentrification and the urbanisation of suburbia 8. The dubious high street: Distinctiveness, gentrification and social value 9. Zero-institution culture Part III: Authority 10. Authorship and political will in Aldo Rossi's theory of architecture 11. The heterotopias of Tafuri and Teyssot: Between language and discipline 12. Interruptions: A form of questionable fidelity Part IV: The welfare state 13. Constructed landscapes for collective recreation: Victor Bourgeois's open-air projects in Belgium 14. Vienna's Hofe: How housing builds the collective 15. Learning from Loutraki: Thermalism, hydrochemistry and the architectures of collective wellness 16. BiG: Living and working together Part V: Autonomy and organisation 17. Design precepts for autonomy: A case study of Kelvin Hall, Glasgow 18. Calcutta, India: Dover Lane - a cosmo-ecological collective life of Indian modernity 19. The city of ragpickers: Shaping a faithful collective life during les trente glorieuses 20. Visions of Ecotopia Part VI: Practice and life 21. Intraventions in flux: Towards a modal spatial practice that moves and cares 22. Ethics of open types 23. The Age of Ecology in the UK 24. Opinions - or, from dialogue to conversation 25. Epilogue The Wally Close Tenement: The collective close