Results for 'vern'

78 results
  1. The Wooden Architecture of Northern Europe
    1. John B. Hilling

    The Wooden Architecture of Northern Europe

    From the Viking Era to the 20th Century

    John B. Hilling is a retired architect and town planner, most recently working for Cadw: Welsh Historic Monuments. He has written several books on the historic architecture of Wales. He has a passionate interest in the historic architecture of Fennoscandia, which he has been researching and visiting for several decades.

    € 69,50
  2. Veners and Plywood
    1. E Vernon Knight
    2. Meinrad Wulpi

    Veners and Plywood

    € 44,50
  3. Veners and Plywood
    1. E Vernon Knight
    2. Meinrad Wulpi

    Veners and Plywood

    € 32,95
  4. Material, Making and Place 2027
    1. Donn Holohan
    2. Elspeth Lee

    Material, Making and Place 2027

    A playbook for resource-conscious architecture

    A clear, accessible book on the future of architecture, exploring handmade, local and sustainable design, with leading designers rethinking materials, technology and place.

    € 62,50
  5. Scattered Steel
    1. Samuel Holleran
    2. Max Holleran

    Scattered Steel

    The Afterlife of the World Trade Center

    Samuel Holleran is a researcher, writer, and public artist who has worked with design firms, universities, and nonprofits in North America, Australia, and Europe.Max Holleran is Senior Lecturer of Social Policy at University of Melbourne and author of Yes to The City.

    € 28,95
  6. Comamala Ismail

    Comamala Ismail

    De aedibus

    The diverse portfolio of the practice led by Diego Comamala and Toufiq Ismail-Meyer, which was founded in 2013 and is based in Delémont and Biel, ranges from private to public buildings. Text in English and German.

    € 50,50
  7. Historic Real Estate
    1. Whitney Martinko

    Historic Real Estate

    Market Morality and the Politics of Preservation in the Early United States

    "The integration of the histories of preservation and capitalism in this book is innovative and analytically nuanced. The volume is handsomely produced, with a readable format, useful illustrations, and an attractive plate section. The overall physical quality of the volume reinforces its substantial contribution to the role of preservation in shaping early national America. Historic Real Estate is a fine book, and it should stand as a valuable new addition to the edifice of scholarship on architecture, economy, and society in the nineteenth-century United States." (Journal of Early American History) "Martinko presents the many aspects of considering the historic built environment between the late eighteenth and the mid-nineteenth centuries in such a clear, thoughtful, and often engaging way that it can be easy for readers to lose sight of what a formidable endeavor this study represents. Some of the work discussed is well known to specialists in the history of preservation, but much of it lies in previously unexplored territory, and even finding the material was no mean feat. The result is not only a very rich investigation but also a framework for understanding how Americans have considered their physical heritage." (The Journal of Southern History) " The origins of American historic preservation have traditionally been told as the story of voluntary organizations like the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association (MVLA)...More recently historians have interrogated the cultural and social dimensions of those efforts, linking them to partisan politics and contests over the meaning of democracy. Whitney Martinko extends this revisionist narrative, beginning more than a half-century before the MVLA to situate early preservation and its verbal and visual rhetoric within contemporary debates over the morality of capitalism and the emergent real-estate market...Historic Real Estate places early American historic preservation into dialogue with the new cultural history of capitalism...Martinko is keenly sensitive to different sorts of politics that intersected in debates over the built environment, and that continue to underpin questions of preservation and memory to this day. " (Journal of the Early Republic) " Martinko addresses our lack of historical consciousness about preservation debates in her richly illustrated and argued book. She dissects a series of preservation campaigns from the early national period until the CivilWar to reveal the political and economic significance of their discourse and sites...We easily think of preservation as a force of good, and Martinko's study of early nineteenthcentury campaigns helps us to understand why. " (Winterthur Portfolio) "The title of Whitney Martinko's book, Historic Real Estate, is deceptively modest...Martinko's gaze encompasses nothing less than the shaping of American institutions of civil society and political economy...This is a cultural history, not a legal, political, or economic one; it makes a case for the salience of culture and capitalism in shaping one another." (Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians) " Using an impressive variety of visual, textual, and linguistic sources, [Martinko] reframes common understandings of early American preservation around concepts of virtue and economic morality in the public and private sectors, contending that preservation is a central part of the history of urbanism and capitalism in the United States. In doing so, Martinko joins a small but growing number of preservation scholars whose research challenges long-held beliefs about preservation's early predilection for aestheticism and nation-building...Martinko's calls for connection—for communication and recognition of each other across space and time—provide a much needed push to incorporate a more humanistic, unifying, and integrative approach to society's treatment of the historic built environment. " (The Public Historian) "With skill and great insight, Whitney Martinko reveals the centrality of the architectural past to the nation's capitalist future. By steering the forces of creative destruction away from select structures, nineteenth-century Americans ultimately made it easier to shroud real estate development in the mantle of a public-spirited idealism that persists to the present day. The strength of Martinko's analysis is matched only by the production value of this lavishly illustrated volume." (Seth Rockman, Brown University)

    € 37,50
  8. Il Convento Della Verna
    1. Stefano Bertocci
    2. Anna Guarducci

    Il Convento Della Verna

    Storia, Architettura E Arte Francescana
    € 104,50
  9. Learning from the Local
    1. Piers Taylor

    Learning from the Local

    Designing responsively for people, climate and culture

    An exploration of context specific, locally sourced and sustainable architecture.

    € 62,50
  10. The Vernacular of Money
    1. Luca Jellinek

    The Vernacular of Money

    Classical Architecture in the City of London

    This book is dedicated to the sumptuous classical buildings of the City of London - a comprehensive exploration of 65 of its most important historic buildings, with a wealth of photographs and in-depth entries dedicated to each building.

    € 26,50
  11. Osterreichische Zeitschrift Fur Kunst Und Denkmalpflege LXXVIII, Heft 4
    1. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press

    Osterreichische Zeitschrift Fur Kunst Und Denkmalpflege LXXVIII, Heft 4

    Vernakulare Architektur. Dialekte Der Bauernhaus-Landschaft in Osterreich
    € 18,50