ABSTRACT

This book presents an expansive overview of the development of architectural and environmental research, with authoritative essays spanning Dean Hawkes’ impressive 50-year academic career.

The book considers the relationship between the technologies of the environment and wider historical and theoretical factors, with chapters on topics ranging from the origins of modern ‘building science’ in Renaissance England to technology and imagination in architecture. It includes numerous architectural examples from renowned architects such as Christopher Wren, Peter Zumthor, Alvar Aalto, Robert Venturi and Carlo Scarpa.

Aimed at students, scholars, and researchers in architecture and beyond, this illustrated volume collates important and wide-ranging essays tracing the definition, scope and methodologies of architectural and environmental studies, with a foreword by Susannah Hagan.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter Essay 1 1|6 pages

The centre and the periphery

Some reflections on the nature and conduct of architectural research

chapter Essay 2 1|10 pages

The architect and the academy

chapter Essay 1 1|12 pages

The shaping of architectural research

chapter Essay 1 1|10 pages

Bridging the cultures

Architecture, models and computers in 1960s Cambridge

chapter Essay 1 1|14 pages

The environment of the Elizabethan house

Hardwick Hall

chapter Essay 7 1|12 pages

The measurable and the unmeasurable of daylight design

chapter Essay 8 1|22 pages

The selective environment

Environmental design and cultural identity

chapter Essay 9 1|11 pages

The technical imagination

Thoughts on the relation of technique and design in architecture

chapter Essay 10 1|28 pages

Typology versus invention

Acoustics and the architecture of music performance

chapter Essay 11 1|12 pages

Musical affinities

Aalto and Kokkonen, Scarpa and Nono