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Design Matters with Harriet Harriss, Pratt Institute

“Architects After Architecture”

Urban Regeneration and Sustainability (URS) conference 2022

Following the success of the 1st Edition and 2nd Edition international conference on “Urban Regeneration and Sustainability”, this year's 3rd edition will address all the aspects of the urban environment. Urban regeneration is discussed thoroughly in this conference, by rendering it as a process and a strategy that aims to transform and renovate areas in hopes of upgrading public housing, public buildings, private buildings, infrastructure, and services. It could also be considered as a highly effective way to improve urban performance by targeting countless areas and taking their economic levels and developments into consideration which could affect society either negatively or positively.

Daniels Faculty Outreach Programs FALL 2021/WINTER 2022

The following online programs at the Daniels Faculty are open for registration for Winter 2022 (January 16 - March 27)

Building Black Success Through Design

The Daniels Faculty at the University of Toronto and Black Students in Design (BSD) are launching a 10-week mentorship program called Building Black Success through Design (BBSD). BBSD is a free mentorship + design competition created by Black students for Black students interested in design and architecture. Participants in this program will work with Black architecture and design university students who will act as mentors, guiding them through a series of workshops that reflect each step of the design competition. Learn more about the BBSD Mentorship program by visiting our website, or join our online information session on Thursday December 2nd at 6PM.

Garage Mural. Tour

Join us to tour the liminal space between public and private realm. We're talking about public art on (private) garage doors.

How Architecture Tells 9 Realities That Will Change the Way You See

The general reading public is likely to think of architecture as
buildings. But, with this book, Robert Steinberg would like to help
readers understand that architecture shapes lives. Architecture can
help communities integrate and thrive. Architecture can touch us,
influencing how we feel, and how we interact with others. In short,
architecture can fundamentally improve our quality of life.
As a young graduate architect fresh from Berkeley, Steinberg began
to discover the potential of architecture to shape communities.
Working with his father, an architect who had studied with Mies van
der Roe (and whose father was also an architect), one of Steinberg’s
first projects was to draft and redraft a parking garage in downtown
Silicon Valley, CA. As he mediated between the two architects in
charge of the project—his father and the city architect—he noticed
that with each evolution, the garage became more beautiful and
refined. And with each improvement, this garage became more able
to succeed in the goal of reviving the dying downtown core of Silicon
Valley.
The garage was a huge success, and Steinberg began to codify
what he had learned. Thanks to the garage, he wrote the first of
what would become the 9 Realities of Architecture: Architecture is
the Pursuit of Perfection—a magnificent take-away from a humble
parking garage project. As Steinberg eventually rose to become CEO
Title: How Architecture Tells
Size: 8.6” x 10.6” Portrait
Pages: 296pp
Binding: Hardbound
Publication Date: Fall 2021
ISBN: 978-1-954081-31-4
Price: $60.00
World Rights: Available
of his firm and grew it into a global practice with six regional offices
including Austin and New York, and a major office in Shanghai, he
used his drive for creating thriving communities to eventually touch
the lives of countless people around the world.

Mise-en-Scène The Lives and Afterlives of Urban Landscapes

Mise-en-Scène is an immersive exploration of the social lives of urban landscapes—the actors and actions that compose the daily theater of urban life. Conceived as a unique collaboration between an urbanist, Chris Reed, and a photographer, Mike Belleme, the book combines photo essays, original maps and drawings, newly commissioned essays, excerpts from historical writings, and interviews with residents. The book is centered around seven visual case studies depicting life in seven American cities: Los Angeles, Galveston, St. Louis, Green Bay, Ann Arbor, Detroit, and Boston. The result is a rigorous and artful examination of the social, cultural, environmental, and economic challenges of life in American cities today.

Blue Papers

During the last thirty years, the use of digital technologies in
architecture has exponentially increased. New computational tools
and methods are significantly changing the way we design and
perform our buildings.
The book analysis the current digital evolution of architecture through
a series of considerations related to several aspects of the ongoing
digital era, ranging from the problem of authorship and human
creativity in computational design to notions related to architectural
pedagogy, professional practice, and robotic construction. This
publication aims to identify an alternative and possible understanding
of architecture in the current digital era based on the relationship
between technological development and human progress

Rem Koolhaas / OMA + AMO, Spaces for Prada Source Books in Architecture No. 14

Source Books in Architecture No.14: Rem Koolhaas / OMA + AMO
Spaces for Prada is the most recent volume in the Source Books
in Architecture series. Among the topics discussed in the book
are the long-standing relationship with Prada and how the early
objectives in that relationship have both maintained and shifted.
An underlying theme to the conversations held with students and
faculty of the Knowlton School community is the topic of architectclient relationships, their history, their problems, and how they
have contributed to the discipline over time. Explicitly, a focus of
the conversation is a number of projects that OMA has developed
or completed with Prada, a large number of which are installationscale environments that manifest in the form of runway shows and
exhibitions. The challenge of such projects is to retain a commitment
to the political and cultural agenda that OMA embeds in the larger
and permanent buildings. Given the ephemerality and role of these
environments as literal backgrounds to highlighted events, the
projects are ideal scenarios in which to develop an architecture that
lacks the permanence of buildings while still carrying potency and
contributing to larger cultural discussions involving, for example,
event, place, concept, product, staging, the crowd, lighting, and
materiality.

Tramonto

Tramonto is a contemporary single-family home that integrates the
natural beauty of the adjacent state park and ocean views. The
placement of the home overlooks the canyon, the surrounding Santa
Monica Mountains, and the California coastline. The diffusion of the
built form defines the approach for this 17,000-sqft, single-family
residence (14,500-sqft main house and 2,500-sqft accessory
building) into the surrounding landscape. The two-acre site embraces
the steep topography, contending with the context to inform the
building’s siting and orientation. The project is terraced into the
natural contours of the hillside, breaking up the overall building mass
while using its sub-grade structure to reinforce the hillside. The book
provides a look into the 17,000-sqft home and its indoor-outdoor
lifestyle. Emphasis on significant custom elements highlights the
detail-oriented approach that can be found throughout the entirety
of the home. From the initial conceptualization of the exterior form
to the construction process and key moments, this book presents
the visual story of the home’s integration into the Southern California
landscape. Tramonto embodies a truly contemporary Southern
California attitude, the essential principles of indoor/outdoor living
afforded by embracing the temperate region and the natural beauty
of the coastal landscape.

Collective Processes

Although the hierarchically organized office, with its claim to individual authorship, still dominates the architectural landscape, horizontally organized collectives with alternative approaches to planning and thinking about architecture are increasingly emerging.

Haute Couture Architecture The Art of Living Without Walls

Haute Couture Architecture: The Art of Living Without Walls by Anneke van Waesberghe is so much more than a book about tented green building architecture. The book is part design manifesto, part personal diary, and part manual for future sustainable living. One in which rampant consumerism has been replaced by a more thoughtful design from the excesses of modern times to a new state of being for living sustainably and in harmony with the rhythms of the planet. It is the tale of one woman’s odyssey living alone in the jungle finding true meaning in life and manifesting its beauty into a way of sustainable living that may set a blueprint for our future existence on Earth. The author leads readers to encounter a new paradigm by showing the luxury of simplicity and the beauty of small things.

Creatures Are Stirring

Creatures Are Stirring is an optimistic manifesto that rescripts the anthropocentric narratives of Western architecture with new myths for a playfully compassionate and co-habitable future. The book reconceptualizes buildings as our friends by amplifying architecture’s creaturely qualities—formal embellishments, fictional enhancements, and organizational strategies that suggest animal-like agency. In an unsettled world, these qualities initiate more companionable relationships between humans and the built environment, and ultimately foster greater solidarity with other human and nonhuman lifeforms. Addressing a broad audience, Creatures Are Stirring uses the apparent subjecthood of familiar objects like plush toys and sports mascots to guide readers towards a novel way of seeing, reading, and making creaturely architecture. The book combines the authors’ essays and memoirs (narrated from buildings’ points of view) with contributions from contemporary architects whose work collectively defines an architectural territory that is at once grounded in disciplinary rigor and urgent realities, and liberated to elicit fantastical futures.

Vertical Churches of the Wolrd

Photographer Richard Silver traveled to 50 countries over the last decade to assemble this book of 154 exquisite photos. Talking his way into churches and cathedrals across the world, creating a truly unique photographic format, and capturing what everyone strains their neck to glimpse, Silver has published a masterpiece of religious proportions. A foreigner and non-practicer in almost every location, Silver is able to see beyond the denomination and display the epic beauty beyond (and above) the calling.

BLANK

This book advances a much-needed and transformational agenda for making architecture today through a close reading of cross-laminated timber (CLT) and its material unit, the CLT blank. Both matter-of-fact and multivalent, economical and excessive, the blank has untapped potential for experimentation, innovation, and research in architecture at various scales. Blank brings together texts and work from a wide range of theorists and practitioners who make CLT central to their inquiry and, in turn, suggest design approaches that broaden the material’s cultural, spatial, and technological significance for architecture, education, engineering, and industry.

The United Nations and New York City

Coinciding with the 75th anniversary of the signing of the United Nations charter, this visually driven book tells the story of the special relationship between the UN and New York City through the interrelated lenses of architecture, real estate, and urban planning.

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a House

For reasons both obvious and mysterious, even as our cultural and social constructions of domesticity change, the house remains a fundamental site for advancing modern architectural theory and practice: because it accommodates a full diurnal and annual cycle of life, and because it intricately stages ritual and routine, this most private of programs has become a medium of publicity and polemic. Thirteen Ways of Looking at a House both participates in and critiques this contemporary tradition. The reader’s attention in this examination is directed not only to LEVENBETTS’ houses, but to all houses, and all parts of houses—pieces of home and rhetorics of domesticity that show up in our collective memory: from a stolen moment on a staircase in a John Cassavetes film, to the sturdy knife-edged contractor modernism of suburban late to mid-twentieth-century America. Thirteen Ways of Looking at a House is an accessible and universal book—everyone has a sense of home. The book includes thirteen texts on domestic pieces that make up the house, comparative diagrams, construction metrics and anecdotes, informal photos, and structural details all in the interest of taking the house apart in order to put it back together.

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