ABSTRACT

The Return of Nature asks you to critique your conception of nature and your approach to architectural sustainability and green design. What do the terms mean? Are they de facto design requirements? Or are they unintended design replacements? The book is divided into five parts giving you multiple viewpoints on the role of the relations between architecture, nature, technology, and culture. A detailed case study of a built project concludes each part to help you translate theory into practice. This holistic approach will allow you to formulate your own theory and to adjust your practice based on your findings. Will you provoke change, design architecture that responds to change, or both?

Coedited by an architect and a historian, the book features new essays by Robert Levit, Catherine Ingraham, Sylvia Lavin, Barry Bergdoll, K. Michael Hays, Diane Lewis, Andrew Payne, Mark Jarzombek, Jean-Francois Chevrier, Elizabeth Diller, Antoine Picon, and Jorge Silvetti. Five case studies document the work of MOS Architects, Michael Bell Architecture, Steven Holl Architects, George L. Legendre, and Preston Scott Cohen.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

The Return of Nature

part I|50 pages

Organic Conceits

chapter 1|11 pages

Design's New Catechism

chapter 2|19 pages

Faculty of Omnipotence

chapter 3|8 pages

The Raw and the Cooked

part II|42 pages

The Sublime Past

chapter 4|12 pages

The Nature Parallel

chapter 5|8 pages

Next to Nothing

chapter 6|8 pages

Nature after Mies

part III|60 pages

Sustaining Nature

chapter 7|20 pages

On Limits

chapter 8|10 pages

Eco-Pop

part IV|36 pages

The Nature of Infrastructure

part v|28 pages

Nature, Unnaturally