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- From: "\"Robert CARVAIS\"" (rcarvais AT noos.fr via athena Mailing List) <athena AT services.cnrs.fr>
- To: <athena AT services.cnrs.fr>
- Subject: [ATHENA] Industries of Architecture - Parution chez Routledge 2015
- Date: Thu, 21 Jan 2016 15:12:16 +0100
- Importance: High
Cher(e)s collègues,
Je suis heureux de vous informer de la parution d’un livre d’architecture constituant les actes du colloque « Industries of Architecture » tenu à Newcastle en novembre 2014. Cet ouvrage aborde la question de la discipline architecturale sous un angle inédit. Il saisit non pas la problématique du projet architectural mais celle de la place des « architectural humanities », c’est-à-dire des multiples façons qui participent de l’activité architecturale pratique usuelle, autrement dit des interactions concrètes du champ architectural aves les sciences humaines et sociales. En effet, comment l’architecture s’implique-t-elle dans le système de la production industrielle du bâti ? Elle l’aborde sous les angles technique et humain du chantier, de la force de travail des gens des métiers, de l’économie, du droit et de la gestion. Les nombreux exemples traités par une quarantaine d’auteurs de nationalité et de formation différentes, tantôt praticiens, tantôt théoriciens, donnent à cet ouvrage une dimension historique essentielle même s’il aborde des questions éminemment contemporaines. Vous trouverez ci-dessous des informations complémentaires sur cet ouvrage.
Bien cordialement
Robert Carvais
Industries of Architecture, Edited by Katie Lloyd Thomas, Tilo Amhoff, Nick Beech, Abingdon, New York, Routledge, 2016, 346 p. (AHRA Critiques: Critical Studies in Architectural Humanities).
For more information: https://www.routledge.com/products/9781138946828
At a time when the technologies and techniques of producing the built environment are undergoing significant change, this book makes central architecture’s relationship to industry. Contributors turn to historical and theoretical questions, as well as to key contemporary developments, taking a humanities approach to the Industries of Architecture that will be of interest to practitioners and industry professionals, as much as to academic researchers, teachers and students. How has modern architecture responded to mass production? How do we understand the necessarily social nature of production in the architectural office and on the building site? And how is architecture entwined within wider fields of production and reproduction—finance capital, the spaces of regulation, and management techniques? What are the particular effects of techniques and technologies (and above all their inter-relations) on those who labour in architecture, the buildings they produce, and the discursive frameworks we mobilise to understand them?
Table of Contents 1. Industries of Architecture Tilo Amhoff, Nick Beech and Katie Lloyd Thomas Part 1: Architecture and the Representation of Industry 2. Allan Sekula’s Architectures of Industry and Industries of Architecture Gail Day 3. Walter Gropius’ Silos and Reyner Banham’s Grain Elevators as Art-objects Catalina Mejía Moreno Part 2: Architecture Responds to Industry 4. The Collaborations of Jean Prouvé and Marcel Lods: An open or closed case? Kevin Donovan 5. The Production of the Commons: Mies van der Rohe and the art of industrial standardisation Mhairi McVicar 6. Modular Men: Architects, labour and standardisation in mid-twentieth century Britain Christine Wall 7. Post 1965 Italy: The ‘Metaprogetto sì e no’ Alicia Imperiale Part 3: The Construction Site 8.Introduction to Sérgio Ferro Felipe Contier 9. Dessin/Chantier: An Introduction Sérgio Ferro 10. Architecture as Ensemble: A matter of method João Marcos Almeida de Lopes 11. Factory Processes and Relations in Indian Temple Production Megha Chand Inglis 12. Construction Sites of Utopia Silke Kapp Part 4: The Work of Architects 13. Architectural Work: Immaterial Labour Peggy Deamer 14. Form as/and Utopia of Collective Labour: Typification and collaboration in East German industrialised construction Torsten Lange 15. Tools for Conviviality: Architects and the limits of flexibility for housing design in New Belgrade Tijana Stevanović 16. Counting Women in Architecture Karen Burns and Justine Clark Part 5: Economy 17. Building Design: A component of the building labour process Jörn Janssen 18. The Place of Architecture in the New Economy Andrew Rabeneck 19. Financial Formations Matthew Soules Part 6: Law and Regulation 20. French Architects’ Use of the Law Robert Carvais 21. The Architectural Discourse of Building Bureaucracy: Architects’ project statements in Portugal in the 1950s Ricardo Agarez 22. Regulatory Spaces, Physical and Metaphorical: On the legal and spatial occupation of fire-safety legislation Liam Ross 23. Common Projects and Privatized Potential: Projection and representation in the Rotterdam Kunsthal Stefan White Part 7: Technologies of Management 24. The Electrification of the Factory, or the Flexible Layout of Work(s) Tilo Amhoff 25. An ‘Architecture of Bureaucracy’: Technocratic planning of government architecture in Belgium in the 1930s Jens van de Maele 26. Laboratory Architecture and the Deep Membrane of Science Sandra Kaji-O’Grady and Chris L. Smith 27. Performativity and Paranoia (Or how to do the ‘Internet of Things’ with words) Claudia Dutson Part 8: Contemporary Questions 28.On Site Nick Beech, Linda Clarke, Christine Wall with Ian Fitzgerald 29.BIM: The Pain and the Gain John Gelder 30.The Sustainable Retrofit Challenge: What does it mean for architecture? Sofie Pelsmakers and David Kroll 31.Risk and Reflexivity: Architecture and the industries of risk-distribution Liam Ross 32. Unapproved Document Part O: Designing for ageing Sarah Wigglesworth
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- [ATHENA] Industries of Architecture - Parution chez Routledge 2015, "Robert CARVAIS", 01/21/2016
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