Judging Architectural Value: A Harvard Design Magazine Reader

Judging Architectural Value: A Harvard Design Magazine Reader

by William S. Saunders
ISBN-10:
081665011X
ISBN-13:
9780816650118
Pub. Date:
03/01/2007
Publisher:
University of Minnesota Press
ISBN-10:
081665011X
ISBN-13:
9780816650118
Pub. Date:
03/01/2007
Publisher:
University of Minnesota Press
Judging Architectural Value: A Harvard Design Magazine Reader

Judging Architectural Value: A Harvard Design Magazine Reader

by William S. Saunders

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Overview

When it comes to determining the relative quality of architecture, who is best equipped to make the distinctions? Is it the public who lives in and among the buildings? The people who commission and pay for the buildings? Art historians? Or architects themselves?

These provocative essays take up the questions of what people value in architecture and how changing values influence opinions about it. In the intriguing opening essay, Michael Benedikt makes an argument for the role of architects in the delineation of value in architecture. He discusses the differences between icon and canon, a theme threaded through many of the essays. In addition to unexpected analyses of buildings such as Eero Saarinen’s Gateway Arch in St. Louis, Paul Rudolph’s Art and Architecture Building at Yale University, and the work of Antoni Gaudí and Frank Gehry, the collection includes a clear-eyed look at the role of architecture in addressing social problems.

Ultimately, these essays assert that judging architecture requires more than a refined sensibility. Buildings also need to be evaluated by their impact on the people living within and around them.

Contributors: John Beardsley, Harvard Design School; Michael Benedikt, U of Texas, Austin; Tim Culvahouse, California College of the Arts; Lisa Finley, California College of the Arts; Kurt W. Forster, Bauhaus-Universität, Weimar, Germany; Kenneth Frampton, Columbia U; Diane Ghirardo, U of Southern California; Charles Jencks; David Leatherbarrow, U of Pennsylvania; Nancy Levinson; Hélène Lipstadt; Juhani Pallasmaa, Helsinki U of Technology;  Timothy M. Rohan, U of Massachusetts, Amherst; Roger Scruton; Daniel Willis, Pennsylvania State U.

William S. Saunders is editor of Harvard Design Magazine and assistant dean for external relations at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. He is the author of Modern Architecture: Photographs by Ezra Stoller and editor of three other Harvard Design Magazine Readers.

Michael Benedikt is Hal Box Chair in Urbanism and director of the Center for American Architecture and Design at the School of Architecture at the University of Texas at Austin.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780816650118
Publisher: University of Minnesota Press
Publication date: 03/01/2007
Series: Harvard Design Magazine , #4
Edition description: First edition
Pages: 192
Product dimensions: 5.89(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.50(d)

Table of Contents


Preface   William S. Saunders     vii
Introduction   Michael Benedikt     ix
Learning from St. Louis: The Arch, the Canon, and Bourdieu   Helene Lipstadt     1
What Goes Unnoticed: On the Canonical Quality of the PSFS Building   David Leatherbarrow     24
Canon and Anti-Canon; On the Fall and Rise of the A + A   Timothy M. Rohan     38
Canons in Cross Fire: On the Importance of Critical Modernism   Charles Jencks     52
In the Shadow of a Giant: On the Consequences of Canonization   Daniel Willis     66
Eyesore or Art? On Tyree Guyton's Heidelberg Project   John Beardsley     87
Toward an Architecture of Humility: On the Value of Experience   Juhani Pallasmaa     96
Why Are Some Buildings More Interesting Than Others?   Kurt W. Forster     104
Questions of Value: An Interview with Kenneth Frampton   William S. Saunders   Nancy Levinson     116
Most Architecture Should Be Modest: On Architecture and Aesthetic Judgment   Roger Scruton     124
From Taste to Judgment: Multiple Criteria in the Evaluation of Architecture   William S. Saunders     129
Once Again by the Pacific: Returning to Sea Ranch   TimCulvahouse   Lisa Findley     150
The Absence of Presence: The Knickerbocker Residence and the Fate of Nonelitist Architecture   Diane Ghirardo     165
Contributors     173
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