Ulteriori informazioni
Zusatztext "In a culture of images! visual narratives are as important as arguments. Architects think with their eyes! and the authors of Energy Accounts are phenomenally qualified to present academic research and professional experiences on energy and climate with graphic eloquence. The contemporary dilemmas faced by buildings! cities and regions are comprehensively covered! and the book offers a pixellated portrait of the field which should influence both design and policy." - Luis Fernández-Galiano! Int FRIBA! is a Professor of Architecture! Universidad Politécnica de Madrid"The book offers an abundance of forward-thinking scholarship on many important issues. From big data to architecture to economics! there is a lot going on here of contemporary relevance to disciplines across the sciences and humanities. The overarching topics! energy and climate! are timely! as are the multitude of interdisciplinary perspectives offered by the dozens of authors who contributed to the 32 essays. Key to the project are the visual aids: diagrams! graphs! charts! maps! photographs! figures! and data visualizations are interspersed throughout the essays. The images are not peripheral to the discussion: the authors use visual representations to tell their respective stories about energy and climate ... Both implicitly and explicitly! the volume makes a strong and convincing case for the value of visualizations in scholarly works. Highly recommended." - P. Gamsby! Memorial University! Choice Magazine! July 2017 Informationen zum Autor Dan Willis is a practicing architect and Professor of Architecture at Penn State University. His research and writing focus on the intersection of architecture and technology. He is the author of The Emerald City and Other Essays on the Architectural Imagination , and co-editor and contributor to Architecture and Energy: Performance and Style. William W. Braham is a Professor of Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. His recent publications include Architecture and Systems Ecology: Thermodynamic Principles for Environmental Building Design, in three parts (2015) and as co-editor of Architecture and Energy: Performance and Style (2013). Katsuhiko Muramoto is an Associate Professor of Architecture at Penn State University. His research focuses on cross-cultural issues between the West and Japan, twentieth-century Japanese architecture, theory of new media and digital mediation, cyber-enabled participatory collaboration, mobile augmented reality, and theories of architectural representation. Daniel A. Barber is an Assistant Professor of Architecture at Penn Design. He is an architectural historian with a research interest in the relationship between the design fields and the emergence of global environmental culture across the twentieth century. He is a leading voice in the field’s increasing interest in environmental concerns on both historical and theoretical terms. Klappentext Energy Accounts explores the visualization of data pertaining to climate, region, energy use, architecture, and urban design. Zusammenfassung Energy Accounts explores the visualization of data pertaining to climate, region, energy use, architecture, and urban design. Inhaltsverzeichnis Notes on Contributors. Foreword. Preface: The Hockey Stick and the Climate Wars Michael Mann Introduction: Energy Accounts Part 1: Accounting for Energy 1. Roadmap 2050 OMA/European Climate Commission 2. Implementing a New Energy Regime in Housing David E. Nye 3. Thermodynamic Materialism Iñaki Abalos and Renata Sentkiewicz 4. Designing Better Energy Metrics for Consumers Richard P. Larrick, Jack B. Soll, and Ralph L. Keeney 5. Visualizing Change Reinhold Martin 6. Cooking the Books (On a Solar-Powered Stove)...