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Paul Dobraszczyk

    Animal Architecture
    Global Undergrounds
    Architecture and Anarchism
    Iron, Ornament and Architecture in Victorian Britain
    Future Cities
    London's Sewers
    • London's Sewers

      • 64pages
      • 3 heures de lecture
      3,8(11)Évaluer

      Outlines the history of London's sewers from the nineteenth century onwards, using a variety of colour illustrations, photographs and newspaper engravings to show their development from medieval spaces to the complex, citywide network, largely constructed in the 1860s, that is still in place today.

      London's Sewers
    • "Though reaching ever further toward the skies, today's cities are overshadowed by multiple threats: climate change, overpopulation, social division, and urban warfare all endanger our metropolitan way of life. The fundamental tool we use to make sense of these uncertain city futures is the imagination. Architects, artists, filmmakers, and fiction writers have long been inspired to imagine cities of the future, but their speculative visions tend to be seen very differently from scientific predictions: flights of fancy on the one hand versus practical reasoning on the other. In a digital age when the real and the fantastic coexist as near equals, it is especially important to know how these two forces are entangled, and how together they may help us best conceive of cities yet to come. Exploring a breathtaking range of imagined cities--submerged, floating, flying, vertical, underground, ruined, and salvaged--Future Cities teases out the links between speculation and reality, arguing that there is no clear separation between the two. In the Netherlands, prototype floating cities are already being built; Dubai's recent skyscrapers resemble those of science-fiction cities of the past; while makeshift settlements built by the urban poor in the developing world are already like the dystopian cities of cyberpunk. Bringing together architecture, fiction, film, and visual art, Paul Dobraszczyk reconnects the imaginary city with the real, proposing a future for humanity that is firmly grounded in the present and in the diverse creative practices already at our fingertips."-- (Source of summary not specified)

      Future Cities
    • Iron, Ornament and Architecture in Victorian Britain

      Myth and Modernity, Excess and Enchantment

      • 342pages
      • 12 heures de lecture

      Focusing on the evolution of mechanised architectural ornament in iron during the nineteenth century, this book explores its reception, theorization, and the cultural contexts that allowed it to thrive. It provides fresh insights into the concept of modernity within Victorian architecture, highlighting how these decorative elements influenced architectural practices and aesthetic values of the time.

      Iron, Ornament and Architecture in Victorian Britain
    • Architecture and Anarchism

      • 248pages
      • 9 heures de lecture

      A groundbreaking look at sixty works of anarchist architecture. This book documents and illustrates sixty projects, past and present, that key into a libertarian ethos and desire for diverse self-organized ways of building. They are what this book calls "anarchist" architecture, that is, forms of design and building that embrace the core values of traditional anarchist political theory since its divergence from the mainstream of socialist politics in the nineteenth century. As Architecture and Anarchism shows, a vast range of architectural projects reflect some or all of these values, whether they are acknowledged as specifically anarchist or not. From junk playgrounds to Freetown Christiania, Slab City to the Calais Jungle, isolated cabins to intentional communities--all are motivated by core values of autonomy, voluntary association, mutual aid, and self-organization. Taken as a whole, they are meant as an inspiration to build less uniformly, more inclusively, and more freely. This book broadens existing ideas about what constitutes anarchism in architecture and argues for its nurturing in the built environment. Understood in this way, anarchism offers a powerful way of reconceptualizing architecture as an emancipatory, inclusive, ecological, and egalitarian practice.

      Architecture and Anarchism
    • Opens up new ways of thinking about architecture and the more-than-human.

      Animal Architecture