Bookmark the site

Return to Homepage


US Shopping
UK Shopping



 










Books : Modern Architecture Through Case Studies 1945 to 1990: Divergence Within the Post-War Consensus



Search Books - select a category

Buy Modern Architecture Through Case Studies 1945 to 1990: Divergence Within the Post-War Consensus online at Discounted New and Used prices. Delivered to your door with Off-The-Bookshelf.
See Larger Image

Modern Architecture Through Case Studies 1945 to 1990: Divergence Within the Post-War Consensus

by: Peter Blundell Jones, Eamonn Canniffe

List Price: £29.99
Off The Bookshelf's Price: £28.49
You Save: £1.50 ( 5%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 724.6
EAN: 9780750663748
ISBN: 075066374X
Label: Architectural Press
Manufacturer: Architectural Press
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 256
Publication Date: March 21, 2007
Publisher: Architectural Press
Studio: Architectural Press
Sales Rank: 182086




Related Items: Browse for similar items by category:
Related Items:
Modern Architecture through Case Studies Modern Architecture Since 1900 Modern Architecture: A Critical History (World of Art) see more


Editorial Review:

Review:
Peter Blundell Jones holds a particular place among British architectural historians. Anti-establishment by instinct, his work tends to champion the underdog, the unsung hero. In his earlier writings this meant attacking the Modernist orthodoxy formed by Sigfried Giedion and Nikolaus Pevsner, with its fetish for the abstract tendencies of the Neues Bauen (New Building). In his efforts to show there were other approaches to Modernism, Blundell Jones greatly enhanced our appreciation of figures like Hugo Häring and Hans Scharoun, who d been unfairly expunged from the canon. More recently Blundell Jones has concentrated on unpicking the impact of critical theory on British architectural writing since the 1990s. He does this by conducting a forensic study of completed buildings, using these as the acid test of architects design ideas and their impact on clients, users and cities. His first volume of case studies looked mainly at examples of inter-war Modernism (AJ 13.03.03); now, helped by a colleague, Eamonn Canniffe, he takes the same approach to post-war architecture... ...What we are presented with instead are 18 fascinating investigations, beginning with Case Study House No 8 in Pacific Palisades, by Charles and Ray Eames, and travelling through in chronological order to Venturi Scott Brown s National Gallery extension in Trafalgar Square. Blundell Jones generally talks about continental European buildings typified by a softer, organic vision of Modernism, usually set delicately in a historical urban context. Canniffe takes on harder-edged, technologically derived designs which often sit in opposition to their surroundings, including Foster s Willis Faber Dumas offices in Ipswich and Rogers and Piano s Pompidou Centre in Paris. The book succeeds best with those buildings where Blundell Jones sheer knowledge and enthusiasm for the architects shine through. His chapters on Aldo van Eyck s Orphanage in Amsterdam and Gunter Behnisch s Munich Olympics complex are particularly illuminating. The former is especially strong because Blundell Jones doesn t shirk the inherent limitation of Dutch Structuralism; that is, by seeking to design for the role of the user in such prescriptive detail, the approach unwittingly became the handmaiden of the worst institutional tendencies of the welfare state. --Architects Journal

Post-War architecture has recently been getting the thorough critical chewing it deserves, and this book digests 18 tasty morsels, following Peter Blundell Jones s earlier book along the same lines. This time he has a collaborator, and the individual studies are credited separately. Blundell Jones goes for the well-stewed, meaty dishes mostly German, van Eyck or members of Team 10 which are in some ways the core of the whole book, and help to situate the individual members in a wider field. Canniffe prefers the sharp-tasting and brittle, including examples of hi-tech, from the Eames House through Willis Faber to the Pompidou Centre, but he also covers Scarpa, Eisenmann and Venturi. The double act works well, and the authors unite in framing the book with broader thoughts on shifting idea during the period under review... ...The book has obvious pedagogic intent, and might at moments be deemed academic in its concerns, but it is refreshing to read such jargon-free criticism based on substantial information. --Building Design 4 star review

Where this new volume scores is in its intelligent and collective overview which cuts across the ubiquitous monographs and theoretical treatises, offering a bit of each while at the same time providing an architect's insight into the built form. Like David Wild's collage on the dust jacket this book includes a little bit of everything. I look forward to the next one in the series. --C20 Winter 07/08

Review:
Reviews of Modern Architecture through Case Studies:
'Peter Blundell Jones has compiled a first rate selection of detailed case studies of modern architecture which should really be required reading for every student.'
The Architectural Review

'The use of case studies gives the subject a tangible feel providing a close link between theory and practice. The illustrations are well judged and plentiful, the text is both scholarly, accessible and, in places, contentious.'
RIBA Bookshops review

'The idea of discussing modern architecture through a series of specific built designs seems to me excellent and emphasises the tangible aspect of architecture. It does not prevent making linkages between ideas about buildings but focuses on the fact that most projects are realised in a particular place for a particular client by a particular architect. I am therefore extremely sympathetic to the assumption behind this book'
Professor Michael Brawne, Architect, ex-Professor of Architecture at the University of Bath, UK, and author of Architectural Thought and the Design Process.

'... what I have read is clear, direct, informative, scholarly, designerly and insightful ... I found it to be an optimistic book and therefore one which may have a positive role to play in enhancing the statue of modern architecture'.
Dr Julienne Hanson, Reader, Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London, UK

"Where this new volume scores is in its intelligent and collective overview which cuts across the ubiquitous monographs and theoretical treatises, offering a bit of each while at the same time provides an architects insight into the built form. Like David Wilds collage on the dust jacket this book includes a little bit of everything. I look forward to the next one in the series." - C20 Winter 2007/08

Product Description:
Once again, new interpretations are presented of some of the most famous architecture of the period. Work by lesser-known architects, whose influence and role have been overlooked by conventional histories of the subject, is discussed. The case study structure allows each example to be discussed and used as a springboard to explore different theoretical approaches. Filled with beautiful photographs, plans and architect's drawings, this is a clear and accessible discussion on a period of architecture that engages many questions still under debate in architecture today.

* The second instalment of this unique commentary on modern architecture
* Provides the reader with a fresh approach to the analysis of post-war architecture
* Beautifully illustrated case studies provide an accessible and inspiring source of information

Synopsis:
Once again, new interpretations are presented of some of the most famous architecture of the period. Work by lesser-known architects, whose influence and role have been overlooked by conventional histories of the subject, is discussed. The case study structure allows each example to be discussed and used as a springboard to explore different theoretical approaches. Filled with beautiful photographs, plans and architect's drawings, this is a clear and accessible discussion on a period of architecture that engages many questions still under debate in architecture today. The second instalment of this unique commentary on modern architecture provides the reader with a fresh approach to the analysis of post-war architecture. Beautifully illustrated case studies provide an accessible and inspiring source of information.

About the Author:
By Peter Blundell Jones, Professor of Architecture, University of Sheffield,United Kingdom; and Eamonn Canniffe, Lecturer, School of Architecture, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom






 



Off The Bookshelf.co.uk gives you a unique shopping experience, you can find all the Books products you like within a few minutes online, locate the latest charting CD's, DVD's & Games, read Books reviews on the bestselling Books Books and Books products. All Books are available to buy Used (at a greater saving) or New (at a great discounted RRP). Add the Books items you would like to your shopping basket, pay securely online and we send these products to be delivered to your door. We take great pride in being able to offer you the great savings partnering with Amazon, offering you cheaper prices than the high street retailers, we have thousands of discounts on all the the Books's you can buy off the shelf and hope you find the website easy to use.

Thanks for visiting and browsing Off The Bookshelf.co.uk


 

In association with Amazon.co.uk
SME-WS
HolidayHavens - Holiday Rental Accommodation