$24.00
(available to order)
Summary:
This volume endeavors to identify, classify and distinguish those qualities that characterize effective or inspired residential architecture from the nonfunctional--or those houses that simply exhibit bad taste or judgment. Berlin- based architect Oda Pälmke lends perspective with concrete, nondogmatic commentary.
Typen: good, bad and ugly houses
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Price:
$24.00
(available to order)
Summary:
This volume endeavors to identify, classify and distinguish those qualities that characterize effective or inspired residential architecture from the nonfunctional--or those houses that simply exhibit bad taste or judgment. Berlin- based architect Oda Pälmke lends perspective with concrete, nondogmatic commentary.
Residential Architecture
Haus ideal: the making of
$25.00
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Summary:
Haus Ideal, by German architect Oda Pälmke, serves as an instruction manual for nonlinear processes of generating new solutions to architectural problems and discovering ideal architectural forms. Images of architectural models demonstrate different stages of these unconventional design processes.
Haus ideal: the making of
Actions:
Price:
$25.00
(available to order)
Summary:
Haus Ideal, by German architect Oda Pälmke, serves as an instruction manual for nonlinear processes of generating new solutions to architectural problems and discovering ideal architectural forms. Images of architectural models demonstrate different stages of these unconventional design processes.
Architectural Theory
Oda Pälmke: Facades
$19.95
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Summary:
In this volume, the German architect Oda Pälmke demonstrates that the most expressive sides of houses are not always those that were originally designed as façades. Pälmke has established herself as a connoisseur of the overlooked and the ordinary in architecture, as her previous volume, Quite Good Houses, demonstrates. Here, she asks the viewer to imagine seemingly(...)
Oda Pälmke: Facades
Actions:
Price:
$19.95
(available to order)
Summary:
In this volume, the German architect Oda Pälmke demonstrates that the most expressive sides of houses are not always those that were originally designed as façades. Pälmke has established herself as a connoisseur of the overlooked and the ordinary in architecture, as her previous volume, Quite Good Houses, demonstrates. Here, she asks the viewer to imagine seemingly unspectacular side walls and temporary modifications as the faces of buildings, locating a wealth of possibilities in the marginal and the incomplete.
Architectural Theory