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Oh, I see! How inventive! You've actually stacked the boxes I am supposed to live in!

Welcome to the architectural blog discussing New Classicism, New Urbanism, modern and historical architects, their work and the continuum of Humanism in architecture. You may submit articles for inclusion in this website through email.

Showing posts with label Duany Plater-Zyberk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Duany Plater-Zyberk. Show all posts

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Robert Orr, FAIA to give talk in Connecticut

The Connecticut Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIA Connecticut) is planning a two-part series of seminars entitled “Sustainable Sites”. The first day, "Planning for Sustainable Sites: Conceptual, Regional, Governmental" will be concluded with a talk by renowned Urban Planner and architect, Robert Orr, FAIA of New Haven.


Robert Orr, FAIA is an award-winning architect, Smart Growth planner and one of the originators of the New Urbanism, which aims to create walkable, mixed-use, and mixed-income neighborhoods. His collaboration with Andrés Duany and Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk at Seaside, Florida in 1982 was honored by Time Magazine in 1990 as "...the most astonishing design achievement of its era and one might hope the most influential." A Founder of the Seaside Institute, a think-tank on community design, Robert also serves on the Board of the New Haven Town Green Special Services District, Liberty Community Services (providing housing for homeless with AIDS), 1000 Friends of Connecticut, the Vestry of Trinity Church on the Green and many other vision-based organizations in Florida, New York, Illinois, Massachusetts, Vermont and Connecticut. He received his MArch from Yale and his BA in History from the University of Vermont. A practitioner, professor, lecturer, and writer, Robert lives with his wife and four children in New Haven, Connecticut. He was elevated to Fellow of the AIA in 2008.

Mr Orr’s talk is titled “Smart Growth Planning: Changing the perspective from large scale auto oriented development to small scale pedestrian oriented development, and implementing Connecticut’s Plan of Conservation and Development.”

The lecture takes place on September 8, 2010 at the AIA Connecticut headquarters at 370 James Street, Suite 402, New Haven, Connecticut at the end of the day-long seminar from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm. This is the first day of a two day series. The second day-long seminar takes place on December 16, 2010.

For registration and costs please go to the AIA Connecticut website.

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Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Wednesday Book Review/Promotion

The Language of  Towns and Cities:
A Visual Dictionary

by Dhiru Thadani 


Unique in format and expansive in scope, The Language of  Towns and Cities surveys the world of urban design and planning with deep admiration and meticulousness. Architect and town planner Dhiru A. Thadani, and more than fifty expert contributors, bring a wealth of knowledge and experience to this  blend of encyclopedia, illustrated design manual, and stunning photo essay collection.

More than ever before, the quality of urban places is of critical importance to the world’s population. Over half of humanity resides in urban areas, and growth is continually increasing. Poor urban design and planning is bringing about many negative impacts, from inequitable slum conditions to social isolation to the crushing burden of excessive roadways and traffic. This book empowers citizens with the knowledge of city planning
and urban design to demand a more humane built environment for all.

Unlike the medical and legal professions, architecture and planning do not possess a common language to discuss urbanism. Words have been and continue to be misused to communicate ideas, elements, and visions of cities. The Language of Towns and Cities addresses this by visually defining terms and ideas related to the built environment, illustrating their use, application, and best practices.

The book is organized alphabetically, with each word, name, or concept described in text and images. Key personalities in the history and evolution of urban place-making are introduced in concise biographical portraits. Plans and profiles of the greatest examples of town and city design span the full sweep of  history, from antiquity to the present day.

With over 500 definitions, articles, case studies, biographies, and essays, plus thousands of exceptionally informative diagrams and sumptuous photographs, the book is a visual feast for all urbanists, from novice to expert.


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Thadani’s compendium is the equivalent of the Britannica and Webster’s, an encyclodictionary for anyone concerned with the future of the built environment
—Léon Krier

A useful reference for students of urbanism at all levels, this book proves that urban design indeed is a discipline, with its own history, body of knowledge, shared language, and the power to make the built environment beautiful.
—Elizabeth Plater-Zyberk

Dhiru Thadani, one of our profession’s most thoughtful and deeply committed teacher-practitioners, realized some time ago that our cultures’ traditional language of architecture and urbanism had been all but lost
in the building boom that followed World War II. That the “Second America” we hurriedly planned, designed, and built for ourselves was not only not practical, efficient or just, but hope-sappingly ugly; a “Second Class America” in which both town and country had been simultaneously obliterated. The placeless road to the airport had become a national setting. Modernist urbanism had been a failure at almost every level— and become arguably the West’s most toxic export.

In response to this wreckage, Thadani decided as a starter to revisit the language of towns and cities by giving us a “visual dictionary” that would help reacquaint both laymen and practitioners with rational and time-tested ways of making cities and countrysides, and relearn how to “speak” intelligibly about the central responsibility of our profession. His guidebook is a timely and engaging lesson from an important teacher.
—Jaquelin T. Robertson

Dhiru Thadani is an heir to the legacies of Camillo Sitte and Colin Rowe. Sprinkled through this lexicon of urban terms are some of the most lucid didactic representations of urban space that tradition has produced. His juxtaposition of pictorial images and abstract representation will deepen the understanding that anyone, professional or layperson, has of the man made world.
—Daniel Solomon
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804 Pages, 2,500 Sketches, Diagrams, Plans, and Photographs
Available at Amazon.com
Pre-order Price $59.85 including free shipping (List Price $95.00)
The Language Of  Towns and Cities: A Visual Dictionary
by Dhiru A. Thadani
Foreword by Léon Krier
Introduction by Andrés Duany
Robert Benson Photography
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About the Author

Dhiru A. Thadani is a practicing architect and teacher who has worked in North and South America, Europe, and Asia, in urban design, town planning, architectural design, landscape design, and construction management. Léon Krier is a renowned architect who has taught architecture and town planning at the Royal College of Art, London; Princeton University; Yale University; and the University of Virginia. Andrés Duany is one of America’s most influential architects and town planners.

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