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Library | Item Barcode | Call Number | Material Type | Item Category 1 | Status |
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Searching... | 30000010235571 | NK1520 D474 2010 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
Searching... | 30000010235570 | NK1520 D474 2010 | Open Access Book | Book | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
Contemporary architects are under increasing pressure to offer a sustainable future. But with all the focus on green building, there has been little investigation into the meaningful connections between architectural design, ecological systems, and sustainability. A new generation of architects and engineers aims to recast the green movement for the twenty-first century and transform design into a positive agent by balancing the societal needs of humans with environmental considerations. Design in this sense is a larger concept having as much to do with politics and ethicsas with buildings and technology.
Design Ecologies is a groundbreaking collection of never-before-published essays and case studies by today's most innovative "green" designers. Their design strategiessocial, material, technological, and biologicalrun the gamut from the intuitive to the highly technological. One essay likens window-unit air conditioners in New York City to weeds in order to spearhead the development of potential design solutions. Latz +Partner's Landscape Park integrates vegetation and industry in an urban park built amongst the monumental ruins of a former steelworks in Duisburg Nord, Germany. The engineering firm Arup presents its thirty-three-square-mile masterplan for Dongtan Eco City, an energy-independent city that China hopes will house half a million people by 2050. An introduction by designer Bruce Mau leads off a stellar list of emerging designers, including Jane Amidon, Blaine Brownell, David Gissen, Gross.Max, Peter Hasdell, Stephen Kieran and James Timberlake, R&Sie(n), Studio 804, and Work Architecture Company.
Author Notes
Lisa Tilder is an architect and an associate professor at the Knowlton School of Architecture at Ohio State University, where she teaches design, representation, and theory. She has received design awards including the Young Architect's Award from the Architectural League of New York and the Far Eastern International Digital Architectural Design Award.
Beth Blostein is an associate professor at the Knowlton School of Architecture at Ohio State University and a partner with Bart Overly in the architecture firm Blostein/Overly Architects. Their work has been exhibited nationally at venues including the National Building Museum and the Center for Architecture in New York.
Table of Contents
Preface | p. 7 |
Acknowledgments | p. 8 |
Design and the Welfare of All Life | p. 10 |
Weeding the City of Unsustainable Cooling, or, Many Designs rather than Massive Design | p. 26 |
Ecologies of Access | p. 40 |
APE | p. 62 |
I'mlostinParis | p. 76 |
Green Screens: Modernism's Secret Garden | p. 84 |
Pneuma: An Indeterminate Architecture, or, Toward a Soft and Weedy Architecture | p. 92 |
Tabling Ecologies and Furnishing Performance | p. 114 |
Public Farm 1(P.F.1) | p. 130 |
Float On: A Succession of Progressive Architectural Ecologies | p. 146 |
Big Nature | p. 164 |
Garden for a Plant Collector, Glasgow | p. 182 |
Regenerative Landscapes-Remediating Places | p. 188 |
Studio 804 | p. 196 |
Dongtan Eco City | p. 204 |
Toward an Ecological Building Envelope: Research, Design, and Innovation | p. 210 |
Material Ecologies in Architecture | p. 220 |
Toward a Productive Excess | p. 238 |
Image Credits | p. 255 |