Fr. 235.00

Blurred Transparencies in Contemporary Glass Architecture - Material, Culture, and Technology

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

Foreword by James Carpenter
Acknowledgement
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Matter Infused with Spirit: Sanatorium Zonnestraal’s Healing Glass Transparency
Chapter 3: Mirroring Ipswich: Contextual glass transparency of the Willis Building
Chapter 4: Cracking the glass ceiling of a crystal palace: The Jacob K. Javits Convention Center
Chapter 5: Air, Light, and Liquid in Motion: The Glass Pavilion in Toledo
Chapter 6: Impermanent Monument for Intimate Machines: Apple’s Glass Cube
Chapter 7: Quasi-Transparency of Harpa Concert Hall
Notes
Index

About the author

Aki Ishida is Associate Professor of Architecture at Virginia Tech and a registered architect.

Summary

Blurred Transparencies in Contemporary Glass Architecture brings to light complex readings of transparent glass through close observations of six pivotal works of architecture. Written from the perspectives of a practitioner, the six essays challenge assumptions about fragility and visual transparency of glass.

Additional text

"This well considered volume on glass is a pleasure to read for those of us who are fascinated by material exploration and detail. Blurred Transparencies in Contemporary Glass Architecture engages both academic and practicing architects and will certainly be required reading for both. I am asking all of my studio colleagues to read it."— Julie Snow, Founding Design Principal, Snow Kreilich Architects

"Aki Ishida’s thoroughly researched and thoughtful Blurred Transparencies in Contemporary Glass Architecture reveals essential truths. It should serve as a clear demonstration of the importance of reflection and scholarship by practitioners, providing insights at the intersections of craft, technology, and history. As we struggle with the blurriness of transparency across our culture and society, such detailed and subtle insights into the physical construction of transparency provides not just these discoveries, but an essential window into the larger condition also."— Nicholas de Monchaux, Craigslist Distinguished Chair in New Media and Professor of Architecture and Urban Design, University of California, Berkeley

"Any design student, and every design instructor, should read this book. In six historically grounded case studies Aki Ishida show how a presumably familiar material—glass—can, through manufacturing advances and novel design, remain a source of innovation, surprise, and discovery." — Sandy Isenstadt, Professor of Modern Architecture, University of Delaware

"Aki Ishida's investigations recall Bauhaus pedagogy where design emerges from the artistry of studying a substantive material. She choreographs physical qualities of glass alongside experiential gestalt, environmental systems beside a social milieu. Blurred Transparencies in Contemporary Glass Architecture is an essential read for a spectrum of design enthusiasts."— Heather Woofter, Sam and Marilyn Fox Professor, Director of the College of Architecture and Graduate School of Architecture & Urban Design, Washington University in St. Louis

"Unique to Ishida’s book is its capacity to interweave architectural history, cultural interpretation, building construction analysis and the acumen that can only come from first-hand observation of the buildings studied. A practicing architect, educator and installation artist working across fields, Ishida provides a comprehensive resume of glass architecture’s development from the 19th century to the present, always set in relation to the history of its reception in the popular imagination and in scholarly studies. At the same time, she never neglects the building as physical artifact, with all its spatial, material and technical complexities. Her chosen case studies, ranging from canonical early 20th century buildings to more controversial recent projects in the US and Europe, integrate into a logical narrative all the aspects of glass architecture that a thinking architect, a critical student or a curious layperson would want to explore."— Lynnette Widder, Lecturer in the Discipline of Sustainability Management, Columbia University
"This book may be the most exciting exploration of cultural and social connotations and the architectural reading of glass as a modern building material since Paul Scheerbart’s prophetical publication Glasarchitektur of 1914. It takes us from the clear-cut modernist perception of this diaphanous material to the multi-faceted appreciation of its transparency in recent years. A revealing book for architects and anyone who has an interest in the turbulent development of contemporary architecture."— Wessel de Jonge, architect, professor of Heritage & Design, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands

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