000 03117nam a2200229Ia 4500
005 20200123152246.0
008 170108s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a9780415825009
041 _aeng
082 _a720.103
_bCON
245 _aConsuming architecture :
_bon occupation, appropriation and interpretation of buildings /
_cedited by Daniel Maudlin and Marcel Vellinga
260 _bRoutledge,
_c2014.
_aLondon :
300 _axvi, 300 p.
505 _aPart 1. Occupations : The (in)complete architecture of the suburban house / Wouter Bervoets and Hilde Heynen -- House behaviour in the Australian suburb: consumption, migrants and their houses / Mirjana Lozanovksa -- Performing their version of the house: views on an architectural response to autism / Stijn Baumers and Ann Heylighen -- Transformation unwanted! Heritage-making and its effects in Le Corbusier's Pessac estate / Anita Aigner -- A progressive attachment: accommodating growth and change in varo Siza's Malagueira neighbourhood / Nelson Mota -- Part 2. Appropriations : Becoming visible: transforming the spaces of apartheid South Africa / Lisa Findley and Liz Ogbu -- Simla or Shimla: the Indian political re-appropriation of Little England / Siddharth Pandey -- Ideological regeneration: the Cafesjian Centre for the Arts and the new Yerevan / Malcolm Miles -- 'The winter of discount tents': Occupy London and the improvised dwelling as protest / Benjamin Taylor -- On the origins of hip hop: appropriation and territorial control of urban space / Adam Evans -- Part 3. Interpretations : 'Why does it never rain in the Architectural Review?': photography and the everyday life of buildings / David Cowlard -- Scenarios 'For poetry makes nothing happen': art and architectonic urban experimentations / Ronny Hardliz -- Doors don't slam: time-based architectural representation / Eleanor Suess -- SE11: [re]generations / James Swinson -- Between the cloud and the chasm: architectural journals, waste regimes and economies of attention / C. Greig Crysler.
520 _aProjecting forward in time from the processes of design and construction that are so often the focus of architectural discourse, Consuming Architecture examines the variety of ways in which buildings are consumed after they have been produced, focusing in particular on processes of occupation, appropriation and interpretation. Drawing on contributions by architects, historians, anthropologists, literary critics, artists, film-makers, photographers and journalists, it shows how the consumption of architecture is a dynamic and creative act that involves the creation and negotiation of meanings and values by different stakeholders and that can be expressed in different voices. In so doing, it challenges ideas of what constitutes architecture, architectural discourse and architectural education, how we understand and think about it, and who can claim ownership of it.
650 _aAR
650 _aArchitecture and society
650 _aArchitecture
_xHuman factors
700 _4ed
_aMaudlin, Daniel
700 _4ed
_aVellinga, Marcel
942 _cBK
999 _c7153
_d7153