ABSTRACT

This book captures concepts and projects that reshape the discipline of architecture by prioritizing people over buildings. In doing so, it uncovers sophisticated approaches that go beyond standard architectural protocols to explore experience-based aesthetics, encounters, action-based research, critical practices, and social engagement.

If these are widely understood as singular or incompatible approaches, the book reveals that they form a growing network of interrelations and generate levels of flexibility and dynamism that are reshaping the discipline.

The thirteen chapters analyze thought-provoking projects – branded museums, restaged exhibitions, home/work spaces, multi-cultural spaces, ageing apartment blocks, abandoned homes, and urban slums amongst them. Together, they enliven the stalled debate about a single architectural response to the complex challenges of the contemporary world by highlighting pluralistic perspectives on architecture that offer fresh solutions on how architecture can improve people’s lives.

Featuring essays from an international range of authors, this book makes a vital contribution to our understanding of the wider conditions under which, and in relation to which, contemporary architecture is produced.

part I|2 pages

Experience

chapter 2|8 pages

Architectural Aesthetics

From tent to tectonic and back again

chapter 3|25 pages

Hippie modernism

Curation and knowledge production

chapter 4|17 pages

Close encounters

Architecture as experience

part II|2 pages

Encounter

part III|2 pages

Action and critique

chapter 7|25 pages

Home-Work Displacements

chapter 8|14 pages

Home controls

On the transformative redesign of urban housing

chapter 9|14 pages

Pictures of architects

Documentary photography, persona, and the visual evidence of work life and professional identity in architecture

part IV|2 pages

Social engagement

chapter 11|30 pages

‘They don’t listen’

The urban professions, education, and the urban poor

chapter 12|14 pages

Whereabouts