By nature Herb Cohen was actually an observer but he became a participant in the lives of his camera's reticent subjects because, simply, he loved engaging with the people he befriended.
The projects featured in Close to Home are within a 15-mile radius of where Louisville architect Michael Koch was born, raised, and has practiced for almost forty years.
Digital Fabrications is a collection of essays and half-true stories about design software and hardware.
Egyptian Places: An Illustrated Travelogue, presents an architect's account of visits to 12 of Ancient Egypt's most spectacular sites, a journey that transports... Læs mere
In a world where change is the only constant, effected by the ever-evolving needs of users, Designing Change is a sophisticated visual essay examining and exploring the relationship between user and space, design and space.
John Marx's watercolours, first published in the Architectural Review, are a captivating example of an architect's way of thinking
For centuries artists and designers have recorded places, people, and life in travel sketchbooks. Over a period of fifty years, Laurie Olin, one of America's most distinguished... Læs mere
Erratic Boundaries is a collection of ten pen and ink drawings by architect and artist Sigrid Miller Pollin, coupled with ten ekphrastic poems by poet and economist Jane D'Arista.
A monograph on Locati Architects and Interiors, a firm dedicate to providing stellar building design, and whose motto is "Good Design Improves Lives" and this is realised in every one of their creations.
This book is a compendium of American building types and other elements, buildable in today's world, that serve walkable neighbourhoods - a resource that should prove indispensable to those interested in dense communities and cities.
This monograph explores three fields in which Poon Design have excelled: housing, schools, and restaurants.
Chronicles the development of the International Commerce Centre (ICC) and how what was originally just another office building is changing the way Hong Kong residents live, work, play and perceive West Kowloon as the new central business district.