In Western culture, from an early age we are ingrained with the notion that weight in building construction equals strength as evinced even in children's stories such as the 'The Three Little Pigs'.
Lavishly illustrated with 150 historical and contemporary photos and drawings, Christopher Tunnard and Sutemi Horiguchi offers the first compressive study into their thinking, landscape designs, and consequent influence on landscape architectured.
Shanghai Tower tells the compelling story of the making of China's tallest building, the 632-metre-tall centrepiece of the city's Lujiazui commercial district.
Focus on the work of PWP, highlighting over 20 recent and on-going projects, and featuring previously unseen material.
With select projects from Hawaii, Mexico, and the Pacific Northwest, Time and Place explores a wide range of buildings showcasing de Reus Architects’ timeless and well-executed architecture.
A critical yet accessible examination of the current state of planning, urbanism, and civic design across America.
Mathew Tekulsky turns his lens and commentary on the greatest topic of them all, the United States of America, in his new book Americana: A Photographic Journey.
American Industry is as much a celebration as it is documentation. Through his unique vision and privileged access, photographer Kim Steele has achieved a spectacular distillation of a variety of icons of power.
The photographs pull the viewer in with their emotional content, then ask the viewer to step back for another look—to both feel and think, to understand truths beyond words.
The goal of this book is to offer readers a guide for those seeking to take fine, interpretive photographs and a joyful thought-provoking journey that the photographs in this book will inspire.
A select international group of landscape architects and historians discuss the subject of planting design through the lens of their own work, contemporary and historical.
Through the presentation of 14 projects alongside essays by leading voices in the history and preservation of New York City, DXA Ten Years explores the deep, inextricable relationship between the unique past and future potential of architecture that defines DXA’s practice.