Moshe Safdie Volume 1
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Moshe Safdie: Volume 1
Author | : Moshe Safdie |
Publisher | : Images Publishing |
Total Pages | : 273 |
Release | : 2009 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1864701625 |
Safdie is one of the greatest and most energetic architectural thinkers of our time. This book features essays on his work, illustrated in color photographs.
Global Citizen
Author | : Donald Albrecht |
Publisher | : Scala |
Total Pages | : 152 |
Release | : 2015-10-15 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : |
This elegantly designed book features new photography and essays examining Safdie's role in the move toward architectural globalisation.
Yad Vashem
Author | : Moshe Safdie |
Publisher | : Lars Muller Publishers |
Total Pages | : 142 |
Release | : 2006-10-20 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : |
175 meters long, the museum bores like a triangular beam through the Har Hazikaron, or Mount of Remembrance. It juts out from the hillside at either end, allowing visitors to enter and look out. This spectacular architecture is the setting for a lavish and impressive exhibition commemorating the Holocaust. The structure is the culmination of Moshe Safdiea (TM)s work in Israel. The architect, a student of Louis Kahn who began his career with the sensational residential complex Habitat at the 1967 Montreal Worlda (TM)s Fair, maintains offices in Boston, Toronto, and Jerusalem. The museum, its architecture, and its series of interior spaces with their carefully designed exhibition facilities are documented in an indepth photo essay and illustrated with texts and plans.
Form and Purpose
Author | : Moshe Safdie |
Publisher | : Boston : Houghton Mifflin |
Total Pages | : 170 |
Release | : 1982 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : |
For Everyone a Garden
Author | : Moshe Safdie |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 256 |
Release | : 1974-01 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9780262690676 |
Edited by Judith Wolin.
Lord of the Wings
Author | : M. Eekhout |
Publisher | : IOS Press |
Total Pages | : 142 |
Release | : 2016-03-10 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1614995508 |
Buildings are neither conceived nor realized by architects in a vacuum; the architect forms part of a larger team of builders, craftsmen, engineers and other experts who join forces to bring together their diverse fields of knowledge. This book describes the design and development of the building process for the wings at the Yitzhak Rabin Centre in Tel Aviv, and demonstrates how collaborative building, technical design and development can lead in an integrated and innovative, but risky process to an extreme innovation, an Octatube ‘Moonshot’. The challenge posed by the Rabin Centre wings was to develop an entirely novel technology for constructing free form shells. It is necessary for many disciplines to collaborate in such a process, and these must be coordinated throughout the entire process, including all of its unforeseen and experimental stages. The results of the process then have to be integrated into one technical artifact that satisfies all requirements and delivers effective answers or compromises in all of its life phases, be that conceptual design, material design, detail design, engineering, production, assembly, installation, loading behavior, functional use as a building, meaning of the building as an artifact (even as architecture) and, in both its local and global context, in its meaning as an integral part of the building.
Canadian Modern Architecture
Author | : Elsa Lam |
Publisher | : Chronicle Books |
Total Pages | : 544 |
Release | : 2019-11-19 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1616898836 |
Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (RAIC) President's Medal Award (multi-media representation of architecture). Canada's most distinguished architectural critics and scholars offer fresh insights into the country's unique modern and contemporary architecture. Beginning with the nation's centennial and Expo 67 in Montreal, this fifty-year retrospective covers the defining of national institutions and movements: • How Canadian architects interpreted major external trends • Regional and indigenous architectural tendencies • The influence of architects in Canada's three largest cities: Toronto, Montreal, and Vancouver Co-published with Canadian Architect, this comprehensive reference book is extensively illustrated and includes fifteen specially commissioned essays.
Architecture
Author | : Francis D. K. Ching |
Publisher | : John Wiley & Sons |
Total Pages | : 1784 |
Release | : 2012-07-16 |
Genre | : Architecture |
ISBN | : 1118004825 |
A superb visual reference to the principles of architecture Now including interactive CD-ROM! For more than thirty years, the beautifully illustrated Architecture: Form, Space, and Order has been the classic introduction to the basic vocabulary of architectural design. The updated Third Edition features expanded sections on circulation, light, views, and site context, along with new considerations of environmental factors, building codes, and contemporary examples of form, space, and order. This classic visual reference helps both students and practicing architects understand the basic vocabulary of architectural design by examining how form and space are ordered in the built environment.? Using his trademark meticulous drawing, Professor Ching shows the relationship between fundamental elements of architecture through the ages and across cultural boundaries. By looking at these seminal ideas, Architecture: Form, Space, and Order encourages the reader to look critically at the built environment and promotes a more evocative understanding of architecture. In addition to updates to content and many of the illustrations, this new edition includes a companion CD-ROM that brings the book's architectural concepts to life through three-dimensional models and animations created by Professor Ching.
The Man-Made City
Author | : Gerald D. Suttles |
Publisher | : University of Chicago Press |
Total Pages | : 336 |
Release | : 1990-03-21 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 9780226781938 |
With its extraordinary uniform street grid, its magnificent lake-side park, and innovative architecture and public sculpture, Chicago is one of the most planned cities of the modern era. Yet over the past few decades Chicago has come to epitomize some of the worst evils of urban decay: widespread graft and corruption, political stalemates, troubled race relations, and economic decline. Broad-shouldered boosterism can no longer disguise the city's failure to keep pace with others, its failure to attract new "sunrise" industries and world-class events. For Chicago, as for other rust-belt cities, new ways of planning and managing the urban environment are now much more than civic beautification; they are the means to survival. Gerald D. Suttles here offers an irreverent, highly critical guide to both the realities and myths of land-use planning and development in Chicago from 1976 through 1987.