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Art and Photography - Urban and Land Use Planning books

Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Hok-Lin Leung. By University of Toronto Press. The regular list price is $36.95. Sells new for $30.55. There are some available for $28.64.
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No comments about Land Use Planning Made Plain.




Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by P. Hubbard. By Routledge. The regular list price is $38.95. Sells new for $28.97. There are some available for $26.73.
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1 comments about The City (Key Ideas in Geography).

  1. This book does a good job of laying out the main perspectives in contemporary urban theory. A very good book for an "urbanist" to have as a synthesis to prevailing theories.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Diana Tixier Herald and Bonnie Kunzel. By Libraries Unlimited. Sells new for $52.00. There are some available for $46.00.
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No comments about Fluent in Fantasy: The Next Generation (Genreflecting Advisory Series).




Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Gwendolyn Wright. By University Of Chicago Press. The regular list price is $32.50. Sells new for $29.25. There are some available for $19.95.
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No comments about The Politics of Design in French Colonial Urbanism.




Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

By Earthscan Publications Ltd.. The regular list price is $136.00. Sells new for $87.12. There are some available for $59.85.
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No comments about Environmental Design of Urban Buildings: An Integrated Approach.




Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

By Actar. Sells new for $42.00.
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No comments about Elemental: A Do Tank for Urban Projects in Contexts of Scarce Resources.




Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Oliver Gillham. By Island Press. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $31.50. There are some available for $22.21.
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2 comments about The Limitless City: A Primer On The Urban Sprawl Debate.

  1. The best and most unusual thing about this book is that it is more balanced than most: while most sprawl-related books are pure attacks or defenses (or are too superficial to adequately cover either side of the argument), Gillham gives a significant amount of space to the arguments, counter-arguments and counter-counter arguments on both sides (though on balance he is definitely more antisprawl than not). In addition, the book covers a wider range of issues than many sprawl related books; instead of being focused on quality of life issues (like most New Urbanist books are) or on environmental issues, Gillham goes into both. Also, Gillham discusses the political lineups on sprawl related issues: who's for changing the status quo, who defends sprawl and why.


  2. This book delivers a thorough, unbiased and thoughtful approach to the problem of sprawl. The issues are clearly defined and the myths debunked when necessary. After reading this book, one feels that the problems and potential solutions can be grasped. The writing is clear,and concise and draws the reader through the complexities of the issues.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Luigi Rizzi. By The MIT Press. There are some available for $40.00.
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1 comments about Relativized Minimality (Linguistic Inquiry Monographs).

  1. Can you believe that? I hit the wrong button, and now I have to write something here. Let that be a lesson to all of you. Don't be tempted to review Syntax monographs - it only leads to tears.

    I would like to take this opportunity to say that it is a book - it has pages (several of them, I believe), and many of these pages have words on them. Some of these words are large, but on average, they seem to be of average size. The book is green, which goes nicely with other green books you may happen to own. The cover has an abstract design on it, which is, apparently, necessary for any and all linguistics books published these days.

    If you know what Relativized Minimality is, you already have read this book. If you don't know, but think you'd like to, I would recommend reading each page, beginning at the front, until you come to the back. At the back, you can close the book and say with some satisfaction "There! THAT was Relativized Minimality!". And you can then replace it on the shelf with other green books that you own - perhaps others by MIT even (though this series has many other colors in it). I would recommend against choosing an MIT Linguistics book based solely on its color. For example, although this book and Andrea Moro's Dynamic Antisymmetry are BOTH green - they do in fact have different conceptions of syntactic theory. This may mislead the uninitiated (and William Safire), but the more seasoned among us will learn to spot a different theory by the difference in names of the syntacticians on the cover.



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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Ken Worpole. By Reaktion Books. The regular list price is $35.00. Sells new for $2.93. There are some available for $0.01.
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1 comments about Here Comes the Sun.

  1. Here Comes The Sun: Architecture And Public Space In Twentieth-Century European Culture focuses on developments in Northern Europe in terms of the planning of the "spaces between", the connective tissue of the modern city in the form of parks, public squares, open-air museums, promenades, lidos, and other public leisure facilities, including cemeteries. Educator, activist and author Ken Worpole demonstrates how open-air public spaces become sought-after commissions and projects for many early modernist architects. The reader is provided examples of utopian experiments such as Port Sunlight and Bournville, and discussions of the influence of Ruskin and William Morris. A very highly recommended contribution to urban planning studies history and reference collections, Here Comes The Sun shows how town planning became an internationalist, modernizing movement and an important, essential aspect of urban and cultural policy development and implementation today.


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Posted in Art and Photography (Wednesday, November 19, 2008)

Written by Philip Nobel. By Holt Paperbacks. The regular list price is $16.00. Sells new for $1.50. There are some available for $1.43.
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3 comments about Sixteen Acres: Architecture and the Outrageous Struggle for the Future of Ground Zero.

  1. `'Sixteen Acres. Architecture and the outrageous struggle for the future of Ground Zero'' by Philip Nobel.

    `'Architecture is the art of compromise.''
    Daniel Liebeskind
    One of the top architecture critics , Philip Nobel takes the readers of his book on an amazing trip, deep into the world of `' the outrageous struggle'' among architects, politicians, developers and businessmen responsible for the rebuilding of Ground Zero in order to fill in the void that has been created at those sixteen acres. It has been an enriching and at the same time interesting experience to read it. This non- fictional account of what has been happening behind the scenes at Lower Manhattan among some crucial players in this game like Larry
    Silverstein, Port Authority, the LMDC, Governor George Pataki and other politicians or members of families who lost their loved ones in the tragedy, in fact reads like an extraordinary novel. With his in- depth analysis and an incredibly realistic style of writing, his work can be easily understood not only by professionals but those who know nothing about architecture as well. The book artfully blends some historical information about architecture together with real dramatic life events and very often shocking, hair-rising gossip. As Liebeskind puts it, you need compromise in order to design and create new buildings, ones that will `' speak the unspeakable'' and fairly fill in the void, and at the same time satisfy everyone's needs and wishes. Can this actually be achieved in real life? With so many players involved it might turn out to be a pretty difficult task. Who is the winner and who looses? The book written by Nobel is a great eye-opener shedding new lights on this controversial issue of rebuilding Ground Zero.
    To put the message across the author decided to divide the book into twelve chapters devoting extra space for prologue and epilogue. Starting with the description on Ground Zero, touches upon some architectural streams in the past. The plot is expanded with every chapter, rising climax in middle chapters speaking of the competition and actual struggle.
    At first it seems almost incredible how by chance the star architects like Gehry or Koolhaans just happen to be in New York when the attack happens. Many designers make numerous trips to the site in order to understand, contemplate, explain, search for reasons and answers. Was the void indeed fixable? Or maybe it should remain intact. Questions were piling up. As Giedion puts it buildings are `' human landmarks which men have created as symbols for their ideals , their aims, and for their actions''. The commercial buildings of WTC represented so many ideals, standing symbolic and triumphant in the skyline of the city. `'Buildings bear silent witness to what we do'' Nobel suggests, they are our immortality on the earth and they are our landmarks. Now that they are torn down mankind looses witness to humanity. How can one rebuild those lost landmarks? The meaning is lost, now it was left to architects to find it back.
    The competition for the new design was certainly a controversial and time consuming task. The author presents us with an in- depth report of what actually happened, all the intrigues and insurmountable questions being asked by a wide cast of characters involved. Money driven developers together with architects loose themselves in searching for meaning. With every single page flipped over the plot shifts its pace, competition gets more and more dramatic, most of all due to that convoluted bureaucratic processes. Finally at its peak Daniel Liebeskind appears with the answer, and his `' Memory Foundations'' win the contest. This Jewish immigrant from Poland happens to know the answer, which is freedom, democracy and independence. His soaring Freedom Tower is going to reach up till 1,777 feet high in order to make a connection with Declaration of Independence. At the end of his presentation he says: `'Life victorious!''. Soon after that he is chosen to be the master planner for the reconstruction of the site. Time will show that this will not be the end, but an offset for another struggle, this time with the powerful Port Authority and LMDC. Before the developers intrude and start influencing Libeskind` s vision, eventually forcing him to cooperate with David Childs, the milk is spilled and gossip enters the media. The media takes its part in it `' tarring the Liebeskinds as alien- worshipping cloners'' Just how far one can go with the intrigues of the century` s most decisive and charged building project. For some players it seemed that George Pataki was the final decision maker in the game. Many questions still remain unanswered. The author tells the story proper with minute details and indeed is meticulous in recording it. At times it almost reads like a soap opera.
    In my opinion, what the book lacks is the images or pictures of the designs mentioned. That would help a lot to envision what was being said at times.
    The final chapter of the book deals with another contest, this time for the memorial design, which eventually is won by Arad and his `' Reflecting Absence''. Libeskind` s vision is changed from the original one, money wins again, in the end, like all politics, the final decisions for the site were created by a compromise. Again I will quote the master planner: `'Architecture is the art of compromise''. To reach that is definitely difficult, `'to build Art with a capital A'' (Steve Cuozzo) is as well difficult those days, especially when politics and business gets involved in the process.

    by Joanna Pszczola, Poland


  2. Sixteen Acres is a gripping read for any architect or citizen who hopes that a monumental building in this era can be transcendent. No where have I seen such a thorough accounting of the forces that come to bear on the form of a building. Sixteen Acres is the record of how the desire of the American people to find an expression for the loss they suffered-or the telling off they wished to do-was shaped by the many powerful forces that acted on the site: Governor Pataki's aspirations, the widows', the mayor's, the LMDC, the Port Authority, Larry Silverman's 99 year lease. The book is truly about the profession of "architecture and the outrageous struggle for the future of Ground Zero."

    As Mr. Nobel says "...architecture remains the most prominent and most culturally engaged of all the arts. It is also the most contingent-an art that is neither high nor low, an art that gets to art only after locking lips with reality: satisfying a client, securing funds and permits and insurance, getting built." This book paints the lip lock in glowing detail. He has the wisdom to recognize that at the end of the day "...when the politicians line up to cut their ribbons, whatever [building] shades the dais that day will be at once stranger and more fitting than anything they had imagined when they set about to govern its birth. In a way it will be perfect."

    For young architects and those who think design is about the power of their vision, this eye-opener will help them see that in addition to having their vision, they must also design the process; that is, they must so understand the interests of the various parties that they can target the area of the overlap. In that area, on any particular job, will be the perfect solution.


  3. Several months ago I read the James Glanz and Eric Lipton book "City In The Sky: The Rise and Fall of The World Trade Center". That book, authored by a pair of New York Times reporters, chronicled the long history of the project from the germ of an idea at the 1939 World's Fair, to the design and planning of a project unlike any other in the history of mankind, to the cataclysmic events of September 11th, 2001. Since I enjoyed that book so much I was very excited when I came across "Sixteen Acres". It seemed to me the perfect sequel to "City In The Sky". Author Philip Nobel writes about architecture for the New York Times and set about the business of documenting the incredibly complicated and sometimes acrimonious process of redeveloping the World Trade Center site.
    As one might well imagine, the job of designing a replacement for the WTC was an almost impossible task. There were pressures from so many stakeholders including the families of the victims, the politicians, the various bureaucracies, the tenants as well as from Larry Silverstein, who just six weeks before the attack, had signed a 99 year lease to operate the WTC. Then there was the epic struggle between the competing architects and their visions of what the real estate should look like when all was said and done.
    I found that Nobel did a pretty fair job in describing the process and introducing the reader to the various players involved in this drama. But I also found that the author frequently seemed to forget that many readers have absolutely no training in design and architecture. While I thought I was getting the gist of what he was trying to convey, I often felt I was missing something in the translation. And that is why illustrations would have been so helpful. Had I been able to turn to refer to drawings of the proposals Nobel was discussing, I feel I could have gotten a great deal more from this book. It is really too bad and for this reason "Sixteen Acres" is not a book that I can enthusiastically recommend.


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Last updated: Wed Nov 19 10:48:13 EST 2008