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"The new campus was conceived to change how we work, interrelate,
and spur collaboration and innovation. All are fundamentally
important to Eaton's ability to attract the best talent, ensure we
perform at the highest levels, and further heighten our historic
capabilities to solve the world s most demanding power management
problems. Our new campus is meeting all of these lofty objectives."
- Alexander M. Cutler, Chief Executive Officer, Eaton. Eaton Center
is the expression of the values of a century-old company with deep
roots in the American Midwest. Rising above the rolling terrain of
northern Ohio that was once farmland, the building takes its place
between woods and a reflecting pond, with a bearing that recalls a
manse in the countryside. The experience of Eaton is planar: it
extends space and views, both close and distant, through the
landscape, connecting the building and its people to the place, and
the values held in common. Eaton Center is the product of a
dedicated client and design team and the values that brought them
together to create a special place to work. Authored by
architecture critic Dr Michael J. Crosbie, this highly visual book
documents that collaboration between Eaton and the design team and
the resulting dramatic transformation of the land into Eaton's new
home on the North American plain.
Relationships between architects and clients - built upon expressed
values, as well as their import into the final work of architecture
- are typically not discussed in architectural education, rarely
considered in architectural criticism or theory, and usually
missing in most writing about architecture. This monograph seeks to
highlight and address this deficiency. The book focuses on the
process that the firm uses to help their clients to define values,
and to intone them through architectural design. Exquisitely
presented throughout, this volume presents a range of built and
in-process works at a variety of scales, complexity, and locations,
with various clients. Most of these projects have not been
previously published. The projects will be documented and discussed
within the context of the value proposition and design process that
distinguish Pickard Chilton's approach to architecture.
Moshe Safdie explains that probably more than half of his lifetime
design work is unbuilt, and he considers his unbuilt work to be
some of his most significant work. In this richly illustrated book,
replete with detailed diagrams, sketches, models and studies, Moshe
Safdie explains that for those who design in order to build, not
succeeding in building is never a failure (there are many reasons
why a project might not be built) because these designs are part of
the evolution of an architect's work. This volume is a fascinating
journey through Safdie's thoughts and career, and also a historical
reference of the social and political forces at play at the time.
Not only a treatise on Safdie's unrealised concepts, this book is
also a wonderful affirmation that there is valuable heritage in the
unbuilt. Includes a number of significant projects from around the
globe, including the following: Habitat Original Proposal,
Montreal, Quebec, Canada 1964; Habitat New York II, New York, New
York, United States 1967; San Francisco State, College Student
Union, San Francisco, California, United States 1967; Pompidou
Centre, Paris, France 1971; Western Wall Precinct, Jerusalem,
Israel 1972; Supreme Court of Israel, Jerusalem, Israel 1985;
Columbus Center, New York, New York, United States 1985; Ballet
Opera House, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 1987; Museum of Contemporary
Art, Stuttgart, Germany 1990; Superconducting Super Collider
Laboratory, Waxahachie, Texas, United States 1993; Incheon Airport,
Incheon, Korea 2011; Jumeirah Gateway Mosque, Dubai, UAE 2007;
National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China 2012.
Arches to Zigzags introduces its audience (both young and old) to
the world of architecture through the alphabet. It challenges young
readers with new words and images, while adults will widen their
own knowledge of architecture. Captivating images and clever
wordplay entertain folks of all ages to explore the built
environment. The book begins its journey through architecture with
an Arch (for the letter A), then a Balcony, and next on to Column
Capitals. Along the way, readers will learn about some
less-familiar architectural examples (like Finial, for instance),
Keystone, Obelisk, and Quoin. Each letter and its corresponding
image are described with light verse, which asks the reader some
quick questions about what they see. This colourful, lively, and
entertaining book closes with some thoughts about what architecture
is, why it's important, and where you'll find examples of
architecture in the buildings you visit and use every day. There's
also information on the location and history of each of the 26
beautiful images in the book, in case you want to check them out on
your own. Created by an architect, writer, photographer, and
librarian, Arches to Zigzags connects architecture with the letters
of the alphabet, from A to Z.
This new monograph celebrates the creative accomplishments of one
of the world's most influential architects, the late Cesar Pelli.
The book surveys this extraordinary body of work in terms of the
AIA's Gold Medalist's design, architecture, and planning, tracing
Pelli's motivation as a leading designer and teacher, and the
evolution of his work over the span of half a century. More than 50
projects from around the globe - museums, theaters, offices,
laboratories, airports, cultural centers, civic works, master plans
- are presented in rich full colour with insights from Pelli that
delve into the design and construction of these landmarks from a
practice that has thrived for nearly 40 years.
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