Landscapes of Housing
Design and Planning in the History of Environmental Thought
Herausgeber: Haffner, Jeanne
Landscapes of Housing
Design and Planning in the History of Environmental Thought
Herausgeber: Haffner, Jeanne
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Landscapes of Housing examines current trends of environmental remediation in the built environment from a historical perspective, arguing for a more considered environmental vision that includes the organic, social, and cultural dimensions of landscape.
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Landscapes of Housing examines current trends of environmental remediation in the built environment from a historical perspective, arguing for a more considered environmental vision that includes the organic, social, and cultural dimensions of landscape.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 626g
- ISBN-13: 9781138504394
- ISBN-10: 1138504394
- Artikelnr.: 62231876
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
- Seitenzahl: 300
- Erscheinungstermin: 30. September 2021
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 19mm
- Gewicht: 626g
- ISBN-13: 9781138504394
- ISBN-10: 1138504394
- Artikelnr.: 62231876
Jeanne Haffner is Director and Chief Curator of the Jones Beach Energy & Nature Center. She is the author of The View from Above: The Science of Social Space (2013) and has written for Arch+, BBC Radio 3, The Guardian, Urban Omnibus, Landscape Architecture Magazine, The Hudson River Valley Review, and other publications. She was the inaugural postdoctoral fellow in urban landscape studies at Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection (Harvard) and has held visiting positions at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design, the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology, the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, and the Center for Metropolitan Studies at the Technical University in Berlin. She has taught at Harvard and Brown Universities and holds a Certificate in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) from the Harvard University Center for Geographic Analysis.
Introduction: Housing and/as Landscape (Jeanne Haffner); Part I: Shaping
Society; 1. "This Scene Is Itself Living": Human Geography and the
Ecologies of Dwelling, 1870-1970 (Peter Ekman); 2. The Chicago Alternative:
Vernacular Forms for the Garden City (Daniel Bluestone); 3. From Ecology to
Pathology: The Landscapes of Midcentury Public Housing and the Shifting
Grounds of Environment and Health (Sara Jensen Carr); 4. From Garden
Settlement to Cooperative Economy: Housing, Labor, and Socialization Theory
in Vienna and Berlin, 1920-1925 (Sophie Hochhäusl); 5. Environmental
Speculations: Landscape Suburbanism between Housing and Planning,
1920s-1940s (Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago); Part II: Shaping Individuals; 6.
"Not Just Barberry:" A Political Ecology of the Swedish "Concrete Suburbs,"
1960-1981 (Jennifer Mack); 7. Expanding Danish Welfare Landscapes: Steen
Eiler Rasmussen and Tingbjerg Housing Estate (Ellen Braae and Henriette
Steiner); 8. Letting the Dust Settle: The Landscapes of Open Space in the
Model Housing Developments QT8, Milan, and Hansaviertel, West-Berlin (
Sonja Dümpelmann); 9. French Housing and the Environment, 1945-1975: From
Public Health to Private Space (Nicole C. Rudolph); Part III: Shaping the
Environment; 10. Reciprocal Interaction: Architecture and Landscape in the
Early Work of Ian McHarg (Kathleen John-Alder); 11. Roberto Burle Marx and
the Modern Gardens of Brazilian Social Housing (Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
); 12. Supermeasurement for Superarchitecture: Rethinking Landscape,
Building Technology, and Dwelling for the Twenty-first Century (Terri
Peters)
Society; 1. "This Scene Is Itself Living": Human Geography and the
Ecologies of Dwelling, 1870-1970 (Peter Ekman); 2. The Chicago Alternative:
Vernacular Forms for the Garden City (Daniel Bluestone); 3. From Ecology to
Pathology: The Landscapes of Midcentury Public Housing and the Shifting
Grounds of Environment and Health (Sara Jensen Carr); 4. From Garden
Settlement to Cooperative Economy: Housing, Labor, and Socialization Theory
in Vienna and Berlin, 1920-1925 (Sophie Hochhäusl); 5. Environmental
Speculations: Landscape Suburbanism between Housing and Planning,
1920s-1940s (Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago); Part II: Shaping Individuals; 6.
"Not Just Barberry:" A Political Ecology of the Swedish "Concrete Suburbs,"
1960-1981 (Jennifer Mack); 7. Expanding Danish Welfare Landscapes: Steen
Eiler Rasmussen and Tingbjerg Housing Estate (Ellen Braae and Henriette
Steiner); 8. Letting the Dust Settle: The Landscapes of Open Space in the
Model Housing Developments QT8, Milan, and Hansaviertel, West-Berlin (
Sonja Dümpelmann); 9. French Housing and the Environment, 1945-1975: From
Public Health to Private Space (Nicole C. Rudolph); Part III: Shaping the
Environment; 10. Reciprocal Interaction: Architecture and Landscape in the
Early Work of Ian McHarg (Kathleen John-Alder); 11. Roberto Burle Marx and
the Modern Gardens of Brazilian Social Housing (Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
); 12. Supermeasurement for Superarchitecture: Rethinking Landscape,
Building Technology, and Dwelling for the Twenty-first Century (Terri
Peters)
Introduction: Housing and/as Landscape (Jeanne Haffner); Part I: Shaping
Society; 1. "This Scene Is Itself Living": Human Geography and the
Ecologies of Dwelling, 1870-1970 (Peter Ekman); 2. The Chicago Alternative:
Vernacular Forms for the Garden City (Daniel Bluestone); 3. From Ecology to
Pathology: The Landscapes of Midcentury Public Housing and the Shifting
Grounds of Environment and Health (Sara Jensen Carr); 4. From Garden
Settlement to Cooperative Economy: Housing, Labor, and Socialization Theory
in Vienna and Berlin, 1920-1925 (Sophie Hochhäusl); 5. Environmental
Speculations: Landscape Suburbanism between Housing and Planning,
1920s-1940s (Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago); Part II: Shaping Individuals; 6.
"Not Just Barberry:" A Political Ecology of the Swedish "Concrete Suburbs,"
1960-1981 (Jennifer Mack); 7. Expanding Danish Welfare Landscapes: Steen
Eiler Rasmussen and Tingbjerg Housing Estate (Ellen Braae and Henriette
Steiner); 8. Letting the Dust Settle: The Landscapes of Open Space in the
Model Housing Developments QT8, Milan, and Hansaviertel, West-Berlin (
Sonja Dümpelmann); 9. French Housing and the Environment, 1945-1975: From
Public Health to Private Space (Nicole C. Rudolph); Part III: Shaping the
Environment; 10. Reciprocal Interaction: Architecture and Landscape in the
Early Work of Ian McHarg (Kathleen John-Alder); 11. Roberto Burle Marx and
the Modern Gardens of Brazilian Social Housing (Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
); 12. Supermeasurement for Superarchitecture: Rethinking Landscape,
Building Technology, and Dwelling for the Twenty-first Century (Terri
Peters)
Society; 1. "This Scene Is Itself Living": Human Geography and the
Ecologies of Dwelling, 1870-1970 (Peter Ekman); 2. The Chicago Alternative:
Vernacular Forms for the Garden City (Daniel Bluestone); 3. From Ecology to
Pathology: The Landscapes of Midcentury Public Housing and the Shifting
Grounds of Environment and Health (Sara Jensen Carr); 4. From Garden
Settlement to Cooperative Economy: Housing, Labor, and Socialization Theory
in Vienna and Berlin, 1920-1925 (Sophie Hochhäusl); 5. Environmental
Speculations: Landscape Suburbanism between Housing and Planning,
1920s-1940s (Álvaro Sevilla-Buitrago); Part II: Shaping Individuals; 6.
"Not Just Barberry:" A Political Ecology of the Swedish "Concrete Suburbs,"
1960-1981 (Jennifer Mack); 7. Expanding Danish Welfare Landscapes: Steen
Eiler Rasmussen and Tingbjerg Housing Estate (Ellen Braae and Henriette
Steiner); 8. Letting the Dust Settle: The Landscapes of Open Space in the
Model Housing Developments QT8, Milan, and Hansaviertel, West-Berlin (
Sonja Dümpelmann); 9. French Housing and the Environment, 1945-1975: From
Public Health to Private Space (Nicole C. Rudolph); Part III: Shaping the
Environment; 10. Reciprocal Interaction: Architecture and Landscape in the
Early Work of Ian McHarg (Kathleen John-Alder); 11. Roberto Burle Marx and
the Modern Gardens of Brazilian Social Housing (Catherine Seavitt Nordenson
); 12. Supermeasurement for Superarchitecture: Rethinking Landscape,
Building Technology, and Dwelling for the Twenty-first Century (Terri
Peters)