Cover image for Ecoarchitecture : the work of Ken Yeang
Title:
Ecoarchitecture : the work of Ken Yeang
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
Chichester, [England] : Wiley, 2010
Physical Description:
272 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), col. maps, plans ; 28 cm.
ISBN:
9780470721407

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30000010236983 NA1525.8.Y4 H37 2011 f Open Access Book Book
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30000010253378 NA1525.8.Y4 H37 2011 f Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

Ken Yeang is internationally recognised as the leading proponent of ecological design in architecture. In 2008, he was tipped by The Guardian to be one of the '50 people who could save the planet'. He has built over 200 buildings globally and published numerous books advocating an environmentally responsive approach to design. He is probably best known as the inventor of the green skyscraper; it was his innovative idea to incorporate bioclimatic features in a high-density building type. It is for this and his ecological urban design that he has gained a uniquely influential position within architecture. Though he has authored many books about his work and his ideas, this is the first definitive book to cover his forty-year career.

Featuring 22 of Yeang's most significant projects, EcoArchitecture begins with his earliest work on environmental design, executed as a student at the Architectural Association and then a Phd student at Cambridge in the early 1970s, and with his most recent projects with Llewelyn Davies Yeang in London and TRHY in Kuala Lumpur. A preface by Lord Foster and an introductory essay by Professor John Frazer provide the full context of Yeang's thinking. The main text by contributing editor of Architectural Record , Sara Hart, and lecturer and freelance author, David Littlefield, provide some critical reflection on the development of his work.


Author Notes

Sara Hart received a Master of Architecture degree from Columbia University in New York City. After many years in practice in New York, she turned to design journalism, specialising in building technology and innovation. She has written extensively about new materials, technologies and sustainable practices. She is a New York-based writer and contributing editor at Architectural Record .

David Littlefield is a senior lecturer at the University of the West of England. He has written and edited a number of books, including: Architectural Voices: Listening to Old Buildings (2007) and Liverpool One: Remaking a City Centre (2009), which are both published by John Wiley & Sons.