Description

Book Synopsis
Details the rise of modernist ideas in the architectural disciplines within the novel context of sociopolitical rather than aesthetic responsibilities. Viewing architectural practice as rooted in Progressive Era politics and the democratic process, Sachs plots how these social concepts spread via influential architecture schools.

Trade Review
Avigail Sachs has produced an essential map of the history of environmental design. This is the book on this important subject we’ve been waiting for." - Simon Sadler, University of California, Davis, author of Archigram: Architecture without Architecture

"Avigail Sachs asks at the outset of this deeply researched book: what happened to the scientific approach? More precisely, she wants to know what happened to scientific rationalism as a humanistic discourse and progressive social agenda in modern architectural and urban design. Sachs reaches back to the social-science methodologies and environmental philosophies put forward in the U.S. in the middle decades of the twentieth century, thoughtfully exploring the legacy of critical thinkers, teachers, and design professionals from Lewis Mumford, Catherine Bauer, and William Wurster to William Caudill, Christopher Alexander, and Ian McHarg, among many others." - Joan Ockman, University of Pennsylvania School of Design, author of Architecture School: Three Centuries of Educating Architects in North America

"[ Environmental Design] is a well-researched and in-depth look at the rise and influence of environmental design in the United States.... Sachs leaves us with much to consider in her pioneering work, especially the role of schools of architecture. Their leaders are profiled and a clear understanding of their influence emerges. She details significant ideas and contributors and brings to light the complex and intertwined history of an important piece of the modern movement in architecture." - author of Art Libraries Association of North America

"Avigail Sachs explores the heydey of the concept and how it foundered on the rocks of persistent social and professional divides." - author of Landscape Architecture Magazine

"Avigail Sachs's compact yet expansive Environmental Design provides a broadly based analysis of the evolving relationship between environmental design and architectural education, thinking, and design during the middle decades of the twentieth century." - author of ARRIS, Journal of SESAH

Environmental Design Architecture Politics and

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    A Paperback by Avigail Sachs

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      View other formats and editions of Environmental Design Architecture Politics and by Avigail Sachs

      Publisher: MP-VIR Uni of Virginia
      Publication Date: 9/30/2021 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780813947556, 978-0813947556
      ISBN10: 0813947553

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Details the rise of modernist ideas in the architectural disciplines within the novel context of sociopolitical rather than aesthetic responsibilities. Viewing architectural practice as rooted in Progressive Era politics and the democratic process, Sachs plots how these social concepts spread via influential architecture schools.

      Trade Review
      Avigail Sachs has produced an essential map of the history of environmental design. This is the book on this important subject we’ve been waiting for." - Simon Sadler, University of California, Davis, author of Archigram: Architecture without Architecture

      "Avigail Sachs asks at the outset of this deeply researched book: what happened to the scientific approach? More precisely, she wants to know what happened to scientific rationalism as a humanistic discourse and progressive social agenda in modern architectural and urban design. Sachs reaches back to the social-science methodologies and environmental philosophies put forward in the U.S. in the middle decades of the twentieth century, thoughtfully exploring the legacy of critical thinkers, teachers, and design professionals from Lewis Mumford, Catherine Bauer, and William Wurster to William Caudill, Christopher Alexander, and Ian McHarg, among many others." - Joan Ockman, University of Pennsylvania School of Design, author of Architecture School: Three Centuries of Educating Architects in North America

      "[ Environmental Design] is a well-researched and in-depth look at the rise and influence of environmental design in the United States.... Sachs leaves us with much to consider in her pioneering work, especially the role of schools of architecture. Their leaders are profiled and a clear understanding of their influence emerges. She details significant ideas and contributors and brings to light the complex and intertwined history of an important piece of the modern movement in architecture." - author of Art Libraries Association of North America

      "Avigail Sachs explores the heydey of the concept and how it foundered on the rocks of persistent social and professional divides." - author of Landscape Architecture Magazine

      "Avigail Sachs's compact yet expansive Environmental Design provides a broadly based analysis of the evolving relationship between environmental design and architectural education, thinking, and design during the middle decades of the twentieth century." - author of ARRIS, Journal of SESAH

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