Description

Book Synopsis
This groundbreaking edition of AD brings together a range of global expertise on social value, exploring its potential for demonstrating the positive impact of both architecture and architects on homes and communities in terms of social justice, sustainability and wellbeing. There has been a recent groundswell of interest in the mapping and measuring of social value caused by developments in legislation and planning, as well as a revival of interest in the ethical dimensions of architectural practice. Not only do architects promote wellbeing through the development of carefully conceived and appropriate designs, they can also add social value through the processes of consultation, visioning, briefing, co-design, co-creation, user manuals, soft landings (helping people to make the most of their buildings in use) and post-occupancy evaluation. These are, however, poorly recognised aspects of an architect's role. We live in an audit culture where organisational performance is measured against predetermined targets. Unfortunately, the focus of architectural practice is generally on the financial cost of what it does in the short term rather than its long-term social value, arguably its market niche. This AD posits that the mapping and measuring of social value provides a real opportunity for the architectural profession to make its key contribution heard. Contributors: Nabeela Ahmed and Ayona Datta, Nicola Bacon andPaul Goodship, Irena Bauman, Cristina Garduno Freeman, Mat Hinds, Anthony Hoete, Karen Kubey, Mhairi McVicar, Aoibheann Ní Mhearáin andTara Kennedy, Jenni Montgomery, Edward Ng and Li Wan, Doina Petrescu, and Peter Andreas Sattrup Featured architects: Atelier d'Architecture Autogérée (AAA), Barton Willmore, Bauman Lyons Architects, Jateen Ladd, John McLaughlin Architects, and Taylor and Hinds Architects

Table of Contents


1 Measuring Architecture's Social Value in the United States

2 Design for Impact: Measuring Architecture's Social Value in the United States

3 Documenting Value Creation: A Business Opportunity for Architects, Their Clients and Society

4 Resilience Value in the Face of Climate Change

5 New Infrastructure for Communities Who Want to Build

6 ‘Engender the Confidence to Demand Better’: The Value of Architects in Community Asset Transfers

7 Mapping Eco-social Assets

8 Changing Patterns of Resilience: Exploring the Local

9 Greenkeeper: Establishing the Full Value of Green

10 High Science and Low Technology for Sustainable Rural Development

11 Architecture from the Ground Up: Designing and Delivering Social Value in Southern India

12 In the Eye of the Beholder

13 Reframing Social Value in 20th-Century Conservation

14 Mapping Gendered Infrastructures: Critical Reflections on Violence Against Women in India

15 The House as Ancestor: A Tale of Maori Social Value

16 Walk With Us: The Architecture of Reconciliation

17 From Another Perspective – Against a Convenient Mediocrity

Social Value in Architecture

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    A Paperback / softback by Flora Samuel, Eli Hatleskog

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      View other formats and editions of Social Value in Architecture by Flora Samuel

      Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
      Publication Date: 16/07/2020
      ISBN13: 9781119576440, 978-1119576440
      ISBN10: 111957644X
      Also in:
      Architecture

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This groundbreaking edition of AD brings together a range of global expertise on social value, exploring its potential for demonstrating the positive impact of both architecture and architects on homes and communities in terms of social justice, sustainability and wellbeing. There has been a recent groundswell of interest in the mapping and measuring of social value caused by developments in legislation and planning, as well as a revival of interest in the ethical dimensions of architectural practice. Not only do architects promote wellbeing through the development of carefully conceived and appropriate designs, they can also add social value through the processes of consultation, visioning, briefing, co-design, co-creation, user manuals, soft landings (helping people to make the most of their buildings in use) and post-occupancy evaluation. These are, however, poorly recognised aspects of an architect's role. We live in an audit culture where organisational performance is measured against predetermined targets. Unfortunately, the focus of architectural practice is generally on the financial cost of what it does in the short term rather than its long-term social value, arguably its market niche. This AD posits that the mapping and measuring of social value provides a real opportunity for the architectural profession to make its key contribution heard. Contributors: Nabeela Ahmed and Ayona Datta, Nicola Bacon andPaul Goodship, Irena Bauman, Cristina Garduno Freeman, Mat Hinds, Anthony Hoete, Karen Kubey, Mhairi McVicar, Aoibheann Ní Mhearáin andTara Kennedy, Jenni Montgomery, Edward Ng and Li Wan, Doina Petrescu, and Peter Andreas Sattrup Featured architects: Atelier d'Architecture Autogérée (AAA), Barton Willmore, Bauman Lyons Architects, Jateen Ladd, John McLaughlin Architects, and Taylor and Hinds Architects

      Table of Contents


      1 Measuring Architecture's Social Value in the United States

      2 Design for Impact: Measuring Architecture's Social Value in the United States

      3 Documenting Value Creation: A Business Opportunity for Architects, Their Clients and Society

      4 Resilience Value in the Face of Climate Change

      5 New Infrastructure for Communities Who Want to Build

      6 ‘Engender the Confidence to Demand Better’: The Value of Architects in Community Asset Transfers

      7 Mapping Eco-social Assets

      8 Changing Patterns of Resilience: Exploring the Local

      9 Greenkeeper: Establishing the Full Value of Green

      10 High Science and Low Technology for Sustainable Rural Development

      11 Architecture from the Ground Up: Designing and Delivering Social Value in Southern India

      12 In the Eye of the Beholder

      13 Reframing Social Value in 20th-Century Conservation

      14 Mapping Gendered Infrastructures: Critical Reflections on Violence Against Women in India

      15 The House as Ancestor: A Tale of Maori Social Value

      16 Walk With Us: The Architecture of Reconciliation

      17 From Another Perspective – Against a Convenient Mediocrity

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