Search Books
Bleak Houses: Disappointmen… Rail and the City: Shrinkin…

Buildings Must Die: A Perverse View of Architecture (MIT Press)

Author Stephen Cairns, Jane M Jacobs
Publisher The MIT Press
Category Architecture
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
27.57 39.95 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $22.18

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
PublisherThe MIT Press
ISBN / ASIN0262026937
ISBN-139780262026932
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank888,802
CategoryArchitecture
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Buildings, although inanimate, are often assumed to have "life." And the architect, through the act of design, is assumed to be their conceiver and creator. But what of the "death" of buildings? What of the decay, deterioration, and destruction to which they are inevitably subject? And what might such endings mean for architecture's sense of itself? In Buildings Must Die, Stephen Cairns and Jane Jacobs look awry at core architectural concerns. They examine spalling concrete and creeping rust, contemplate ruins old and new, and pick through the rubble of earthquake-shattered churches, imploded housing projects, and demolished Brutalist office buildings. Their investigation of the death of buildings reorders architectural notions of creativity, reshapes architecture's preoccupation with good form, loosens its vanities of durability, and expands its sense of value. It does so not to kill off architecture as we know it, but to rethink its agency and its capacity to make worlds differently.

Cairns and Jacobs offer an original contemplation of architecture that draws on theories of waste and value. Their richly illustrated case studies of building "deaths" include the planned and the unintended, the lamented and the celebrated. They take us from Moline to Christchurch, from London to Bangkok, from Tokyo to Paris. And they feature the work of such architects as Eero Saarinen, Carlo Scarpa, Cedric Price, Arata Isozaki, Rem Koolhaas and François Roche.

Buildings Must Die is both a memento mori for architecture and a call to to reimagine the design values that lay at the heart of its creative purpose.

The Evolution of Library and Museum Partnerships: Hist…
View
The Pantheon: Design, Meaning, and Progeny, With a New…
View
Optical System Design, Second Edition
View
The Designer's Atlas of Sustainability: Charting the C…
View
The Architecture Student's Handbook of Professional Pr…
View
Michael Smiths Elements of Style
View
UN Studio: Design Models - Architecture, Urbanism, Inf…
View
Architectural Drawing: A Visual Compendium of Types an…
View