$84.00
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Open Space presents some of the most innovate urban landscape design of recent years with accompanying texts, photos and plans. Includes such stand-out projects as the incredible rooftop garden of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California, the River Manzanares Lineal Park in Madrid, Spain and the Young Circle Arts Park in Hollywood, Florida.
Open space: urban public landscape design
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$84.00
(available to order)
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Open Space presents some of the most innovate urban landscape design of recent years with accompanying texts, photos and plans. Includes such stand-out projects as the incredible rooftop garden of the California Academy of Sciences in San Francisco, California, the River Manzanares Lineal Park in Madrid, Spain and the Young Circle Arts Park in Hollywood, Florida.
Urban Landscapes
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227 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm
Paris : Recherches, ©2008.
Architecture et construction des savoirs : quelle recherche doctorale? / sous la direction d'Eric Lengereau ; [réalisation, Bureau de la recherche architecturale, urbaine et paysagère ; entretiens, Eric Lengereau, Panos Mantziaras, Nicolas Tixier].
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227 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm
books
Paris : Recherches, ©2008.
$46.00
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Leisure has a huge impact on European landscapes. Contemporary Western life has given rise to all sorts of mobilities, flexibilities and incentives that fuel the sometimes dramatic changes in the landscape we are witnessing today. Can the relationship between leisure and landscape be a productive one and, if so, under what conditions? This complex relationship was the(...)
June 2008, Amsterdam
Greetings from Europe: landscape & leisure
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$46.00
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Leisure has a huge impact on European landscapes. Contemporary Western life has given rise to all sorts of mobilities, flexibilities and incentives that fuel the sometimes dramatic changes in the landscape we are witnessing today. Can the relationship between leisure and landscape be a productive one and, if so, under what conditions? This complex relationship was the subject of a European project, instigated by Dirk Sijmons, Dutch Government Advisor on Landscape, involving thirty universities from twenty countries. This book presents the resulting design proposals in facts, figures, essays, illustrations, bibliography, maps, and photography by Martin Parr.
Urban open spaces
$83.00
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"Urban open spaces" brings together extensive research and practical experience to prove the opportunities and benefits of open spaces to society and individuals. Including : Victoria Square in Birmingham, Redgates School Sensory Garden in Croydon and Stormont Estate Playpark in Belfast.
May 2003, London / New York
Urban open spaces
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$83.00
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"Urban open spaces" brings together extensive research and practical experience to prove the opportunities and benefits of open spaces to society and individuals. Including : Victoria Square in Birmingham, Redgates School Sensory Garden in Croydon and Stormont Estate Playpark in Belfast.
$35.00
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The Natural City explores how to integrate the natural environment into healthy urban centres from philosophical, religious, socio-political, and planning perspectives. Recognizing the need to better link the humanities with public policy, The Natural City offers unique insights for the development of an alternative vision of urban life.
October 2011
The natural city: Re-envisioning the built environment
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$35.00
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The Natural City explores how to integrate the natural environment into healthy urban centres from philosophical, religious, socio-political, and planning perspectives. Recognizing the need to better link the humanities with public policy, The Natural City offers unique insights for the development of an alternative vision of urban life.
$63.00
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Despite its importance to place-making, urban planning, and the environment, landscape design has often played an inferior role to architecture. Typically, as little as three percent of a project's construction budget is allocated to the space that surrounds a building, but that is changing. A greater desire to blend buildings into their contexts, ecological(...)
Digital landscape architecture now
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$63.00
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Despite its importance to place-making, urban planning, and the environment, landscape design has often played an inferior role to architecture. Typically, as little as three percent of a project's construction budget is allocated to the space that surrounds a building, but that is changing. A greater desire to blend buildings into their contexts, ecological considerations, legislation, and new definitions of "scaping" have opened up exciting possibilities. Coinciding with heightened social sensitivities, advances in material application, data-driven mapping techniques, and digital technologies and construction methods, landscape designers are producing a new wave of work around the world, reshaping gardens, public squares, leisure areas, and industrial parks. Among the practices included in this survey are designers who have bridged modernism with newer forms (Emergent, West 8); architects whose work fuses with the earth's contours (Zaha Hadid, MVRDV); and a generation of designers only just emerging from universities. Nadia Amoroso is Professor of Landscape Architecture at the University of Toronto and has lectured at Harvard and Cornell universities.
$67.00
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Climate change is one of the major challenges facing cities in the future. Landscape architecture is particularly in demand here because it offers solutions that are characterized by complexity and interdisciplinarity and contribute to the quality of everyday life. These range from green roofs and facades to urban gardening and the landscaping of large-scale protection(...)
Resilient city: landscape architecture for climate change
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$67.00
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Climate change is one of the major challenges facing cities in the future. Landscape architecture is particularly in demand here because it offers solutions that are characterized by complexity and interdisciplinarity and contribute to the quality of everyday life. These range from green roofs and facades to urban gardening and the landscaping of large-scale protection works. This volume presents measures and plans of eleven major cities in North and South America, from Vancouver to Rio de Janeiro, to protect their inhabitants and their habitats against future storms, floods, landslides or long periods of heat and drought. Projects in the featured cities are analyzed in their geographic and climatic context. The author also addresses the social and cultural dimensions of resilience.
$97.50
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The positive effects of urban green spaces are well-known, ranging from the promotion of health, support of biodiversity to climate regulation. However, the practical implementation of urban landscapes is less discussed. How can we make these spaces functional, economically feasible and inclusive, especially as cities become more diverse? The publication explores(...)
August 2019
Urban landscapes in high-density cities: parks, streetscapes, ecosystems
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$97.50
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The positive effects of urban green spaces are well-known, ranging from the promotion of health, support of biodiversity to climate regulation. However, the practical implementation of urban landscapes is less discussed. How can we make these spaces functional, economically feasible and inclusive, especially as cities become more diverse? The publication explores strategies to reconcile the various demands, such as food production, resilience and nature conservation. Indeed, urban landscapes have to be restorative, ecological and aesthetically pleasing at the same time. This is a particular challenge in high-density cities like Singapore, Seoul or New York where space is a scarce commodity. The continuing growth of the worldwide urban population imbues the topic with a special urgency.
books
How to turn a place around
$34.95
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The result of 25 years of experience working in communities around the States and internationally, How to Turn a Place Around is a primer for everyone from mayors to community members on evaluating and transforming public spaces into thriving centers of community activity. Sections include: Why Places are Important to Cities; What Makes a Place Great; Why Many Public(...)
How to turn a place around
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$34.95
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The result of 25 years of experience working in communities around the States and internationally, How to Turn a Place Around is a primer for everyone from mayors to community members on evaluating and transforming public spaces into thriving centers of community activity. Sections include: Why Places are Important to Cities; What Makes a Place Great; Why Many Public Spaces Fail; An Alternative Approach to Planning; The 11 Principles of Creating Great Public Spaces; and a Workbook For Evaluating Public Spaces. Through examples of peoples’ experiences in other cities, PPS demonstrates that, with an understanding of how a place works, any place can be “turned around.”
books
May 2000
$32.95
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Ce sont sans doute ses contradictions qui rendent fascinante Los Angeles, l’anti-ville qui est pourtant la deuxième ville des États-Unis. Il n’est que de voir la pléiade d’auteurs qui en ont fait la toile de fond de leur roman ou de leur film. Ses défauts majeurs - le paroxysme de l’étalement urbain, une ville-banlieue impraticable sans voiture - portent paradoxalement(...)
Portrait de ville : Los Angeles
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Ce sont sans doute ses contradictions qui rendent fascinante Los Angeles, l’anti-ville qui est pourtant la deuxième ville des États-Unis. Il n’est que de voir la pléiade d’auteurs qui en ont fait la toile de fond de leur roman ou de leur film. Ses défauts majeurs - le paroxysme de l’étalement urbain, une ville-banlieue impraticable sans voiture - portent paradoxalement une part statistique de rêve : celui de la maison individuelle ; celui aussi des strass et paillettes de l’univers hollywoodien... Quand on évoque le paysage de Los Angeles, une plaine côtière entre mer et montagnes (jusqu’à plus de 3000 m), gigantesque oasis suburbaine dans le désert californien, surgissent de multiples clichés : le soleil sur l’océan Pacifique et les grandes plages de sable fin où s’ébrouent les pulpeuses coast-guards en maillot rouge des séries américaines ; les autoroutes urbaines avec leurs échangeurs qui sillonnent les quelque 100 km d’étendue de l’agglomération ; les nappes de lotissements pavillonnaires noyés dans une végétation plus ou moins dense s’étendant à l’infini au fil de tracés viaires en damiers ; l’émergence des tours de Downtown qui, à l’échelle métropolitaine, a plutôt valeur de monument que de centre-ville, ou celle de plusieurs vagues de collines entre montagne et mer. Autre paradoxe, si l’on s’intéresse plus spécialement à l’architecture : Los Angeles est à la fois un océan de banalité - celle de l’habitation ordinaire, des centres commerciaux standards et des stations-service - et un musée d’architecture de plein air où plusieurs générations de grands architectes modernes et contemporains ont laissé leur signature, notamment pour des maisons particulières, comme Frank Lloyd Wright, Rudolf Schindler et Richard Neutra, puis Charles Eames, Pierre Koenig, John Lautner, Craig Ellwood et Cesar Pelli, ou plus récemment Charles Moore, Frank Gehry, ou Morphosis... Enfin, l’apparente tranquillité des lieux est violemment contredite à divers égards. Chacun sait que la faille de San Andrea est là et qu’un jour ou l’autre surviendra un cataclysme majeur. De plus, contrairement aux idées reçues qui veulent que les conflits sociaux s’expriment sur les lieux de travail ou dans les ghettos urbains denses, Los Angeles a connu il n’y a pas si longtemps des émeutes dans des quartiers noirs pavillonnaires qui ont révélé qu’elle était sous haute tension sociale autant que géologique. Fondée à l’heure de la colonisation espagnole (1781), elle n’est alors qu’un village agricole à main d’œuvre indienne. Après l’annexion de la Californie par les États-Unis (1848), la ville se développe sous la houlette des Anglo-américains protestants, même si d’autres communautés s’y installent : Mexicains, Chinois, Noirs, puis Japonais. La ségrégation ethnico-sociale, aussi spontanée qu’affirmée, est aussi spatiale. Bien que la communauté hispanique soit depuis longtemps la plus importante (plus de 45%, principalement dans East Los Angeles), aucun maire chicano n’avait été élu depuis 1872, lorsque La n’avait encore que 6000 habitants, contre 3,8 millions aujourd’hui et plus de 15 millions pour l’aire métropolitaine. La toute récente élection (mai 2005) du nouveau maire de la ville, Antonio Villaraigosa, est donc un événement. Ancien député du parlement californien, il est le fils d’immigrés mexicains pauvres, et il a bénéficié cette fois de l’appui de la communauté noire. Parmi les dossiers les plus chauds qu’il aura à traiter figurent les tensions raciales, la pénurie de logements, la pollution et la congestion du trafic.
Urban Theory