ABSTRACT

One of the trends in twentieth century architecture and planning has been to denigrate and ignore the site, or larger context (both physical and social), surrounding a building or set of buildings.

Focussing on Le Corbusier's designs, Site Matters presents that first considered theory and vocabulary for the inevitable reaction against Modernism in planning, beginning in the 1960s and swelling through the 1980s as architects and planners alike developed a new appreciation of site, reincorporating the wider context into their plans.

Theoretical essays and empirically grounded pieces combine to provide the language and theory of this re-emergence of site, looking at Le Corbusier's designs, contemporary suburbs, and the planning agendas involved at the World Trade Center site.

Groundbreaking and innovative, Site Matters provides valuable theory and vocabulary for planners and architects.

chapter |2 pages

NATURE/CULTURE

chapter |2 pages

VISIBILITY/BOUNDARIES

chapter |2 pages

INVISIBILITY

chapter |2 pages

SITES OF SUSTENANCE

chapter |2 pages

FREEDOMS

chapter |2 pages

CIVIC BOUNDARIES

chapter |3 pages

NEW NARRATIVES

chapter |2 pages

FINAL THOUGHTS

chapter |3 pages

Notes

chapter 4|30 pages

Groundwork

chapter |4 pages

Notes

chapter |7 pages

Site Fragments

chapter |12 pages

BEYOND SITE CITATIONS

chapter 6|3 pages

Shifting Sites

chapter |12 pages

THE NATURE OF A BOUNDED PLACE

chapter 7|23 pages

Contested Contexts

chapter |5 pages

Notes

chapter |29 pages

THE PHYSICAL SITE

chapter |4 pages

DEVELOPMENT AND DIVISION

chapter |13 pages

APARTMENTS APART AND A PART

chapter |3 pages

SOCIAL CONCERNS

chapter |14 pages

CONCLUSION

chapter 11|6 pages

Defining Urban Sites

chapter |7 pages

REPRESENTING URBAN SITES

chapter |1 pages

Urban Constellation

chapter |2 pages

DEFINING THE INDEFINITE

chapter 12|11 pages

High-Performance Sites

chapter |3 pages

THE UNSETTLED SITE

chapter |4 pages

Engaging the Field

chapter |1 pages

Biographical Information

chapter |1 pages

ROBERT A. BEAUREGARD

chapter |1 pages

KRISTINA HILL

chapter |1 pages

PAUL MITCHELL HESS

chapter |2 pages

CAROL J. BURNS

chapter |2 pages

Figure Credits