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Architecture's Progressive Imperative: Housing Betterment in the 19th and 20th Centuries
Lasner, Matthew Gordon
Architectural design, 2018-07, Vol.88 (4), p.14-21
Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
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Título:
Architecture's Progressive Imperative: Housing Betterment in the 19th and 20th Centuries
Autor:
Lasner, Matthew Gordon
Assuntos:
19th century
;
20th century
;
Alabama
;
Alexander Jackson Davis
;
Alice Constance Austin
;
American Institute of Architects (AIA)
;
Aranya Low Cost Housing
;
Architecture
;
Auburn University in Hale County
;
Australia
;
Balkrishna Doshi
;
Bedford Park
;
Belgium
;
Boston
;
Brooks + Scarpa
;
Bruno Taut
;
California
;
Calvert Vaux
;
Catherine Bauer
;
City & Suburban Homes Company
;
Clarence S Stein
;
Clarence Stein
;
Common Ground
;
Dattner Architects and Grimshaw
;
Davis & Joyce
;
Detroit
;
Donald P Reay
;
Dwellings
;
East Kilbride
;
Eastwood
;
Ebenezer Howard
;
Elizabeth Denby
;
England
;
Ernst May
;
Essex
;
First World War
;
Frankfurt
;
French flats
;
Friedrich Engels
;
Garden City
;
George Godwin
;
George Peabody
;
Henry Ashton
;
Henry Darbishire
;
Henry Roberts
;
Henry Wright
;
Housing
;
Howells & Stokes
;
India
;
Indore
;
Isaac Newton Phelps Stokes
;
Jackson and Associates
;
Jacob Riis
;
John FC Turner
;
Josep Lluís Sert
;
Kenneth Frampton
;
Kensal House
;
Lafayette Park
;
Leberecht Migge
;
Letchworth
;
Llano del Rio
;
Llewellyn Park
;
London
;
London County Council's Becontree Estate
;
Los Angeles
;
Magnusson Architecture and Planning (MAP)
;
Manchester Corporation's Wythenshawe satellite town
;
mansion block
;
Margarete Schütte‐Lihotsky
;
Massachusetts
;
Maxwell Fry
;
Mies van der Rohe
;
Model Houses for Families (also known as Parnell House)
;
New Jersey
;
New York
;
New York City
;
New York State Urban Development Corporation projects
;
North America
;
Octavia Hill
;
Peabody Trust
;
Peru
;
post‐Second World War
;
Prefabricated buildings
;
Prefabrication
;
Public housing
;
PYATOK architecture + urban design
;
Radburn
;
Raymond Unwin
;
Regional Planning Association of America
;
Richard Barry Parker
;
Richard Meier
;
Richard Norman Shaw
;
Roosevelt Island
;
Rosanne Haggerty
;
Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA)
;
Rural Studio programme
;
Samuel Mockbee
;
Scotland
;
Sert
;
Siedlung RÖmerstadt
;
Society for Improving the Condition of the Labouring Classes
;
Stevenage
;
Streatham Street
;
The Bronx
;
The Builder
;
Tudor Walters Committee
;
Urban areas
;
Urban environments
;
Vernon DeMars
;
Victoria Street
;
Western Europe
;
Zeilenbau
É parte de:
Architectural design, 2018-07, Vol.88 (4), p.14-21
Descrição:
History has shown that architects can act as catalysts for significant leaps forward in housing provision. Far beyond pure aesthetics and building layouts, their visions for new ways of offering affordable dwellings have driven real social change, with innovations in both the form of the domestic built environment and the methods used to construct and deliver it. Matthew Gordon Lasner, an associate professor of urban studies and planning at Hunter College, City University of New York (CUNY), tells the story – from the conception of planned garden suburbs and multi‐family city blocks, to prefabricated postwar social housing schemes and more recent resident‐architect collaborations.
Editor:
Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd
Idioma:
Inglês
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