OUR STORE IS CLOSED ON ANZAC DAY: THURSDAY 25 APRIL

Close Notification

Your cart does not contain any items

Architectural Details 2003

Detail Magazine

$368

Hardback

Not in-store but you can order this
How long will it take?

QTY:

English
Routledge
27 October 2017
"This is a compilation of the full year's information, including: the ""Discussion"" section, where well-known architects and critics as well as specialist authors and architectural historians articulate their views; the ""Documentation"" section containing an analysis of selected projects, in which buildings from around the world are covered in depth; and the ""Technology"" section where the specific theme of each issue of the magazine is treated in greater depth. Along with these are illustrations of the high standards that Detail is known for, where all plan drawings are true to scale and have been approved by the architects, planners and engineers responsible for the original design. This annual sourcebook is a beautiful record, not only of the year's Detail publication, but of some of the best, and most innovative contemporary architecture."

By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 297mm,  Width: 210mm, 
Weight:   453g
ISBN:   9781138470521
ISBN 10:   113847052X
Pages:   176
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Part 1 discussion; Chapter 1 Schools Are a Hobbyhorse of Mine – an Interview with Herman Hertzberger; Chapter 2 The Pioneering Age of Concrete Blocks – Frank Lloyd Wright’s Textile-Block Houses, Edward R. Ford; Chapter 3 Concrete – a Yearning for the Monolithic, Frank Kaltenbach; Chapter 4 Between Fashionable Packaging and Responsive Skin: Trends in Modern Facade Design, Christian Schittich; Chapter 5 Industrial Building, Klaus-Dieter Weilß; Part 2 documentation; Chapter 6 Media Library in Vénissieux; Chapter 7 Museum in Kalkriese, Annette Gigon, Mike Guyer; Chapter 8 Secondary School in Vienna; Chapter 9 Museum of Soviet Special Camp in Sachsenhausen, Schneider Schumacher; Chapter 10 Laboratory Building in Utrecht; Chapter 11 Primary School in Au; Chapter 12 Restaurant in Brighton; Chapter 13 Wine Tavern in Fellbach, Christine Remensperger; Chapter 14 Pedestrian Bridge in Boudry, Delefortrie SA Geninasca; Chapter 15 Hotel in Groningen; Chapter 16 House in Dortmund; Chapter 17 Store and Studio in Hagi; Chapter 18 Housing Development in Dornbirn, B& E Baumschlager-Eberle; Chapter 19 University for Applied Design in Wiesbaden, Mahler Günster; Chapter 20 Laban Centre in London; Chapter 21 Weekend House in Australia, Sean Godsell; Chapter 22 Administration Building in Reutlingen, Allmann Sattler; Chapter 23 Production Building for Large-Scale Printing Technology in Grosshöflein; Chapter 24 Extension of the Albertina in Vienna, Erich G. Steinmayr, Friedrich H. Mascher; Chapter 25 Studio Extension in Olot, Jordi Hidalgo, Daniela Hartmann; Chapter 26 House in Mont-Malmédy; Chapter 27 Representation of the States of Brandenburg and MecklenburgWest Pomerania in Berlin; Chapter 28 School Building in Zurich, Patrick Gmür; Chapter 29 Housing and Commercial Block in Zurich, Marcel Meili, Markus Peter, Astrid Staufer, Thomas Hasler; Part 3 technology; Chapter 30 High-Performance Concretes, Wolfgang Brameshuber; Chapter 31 Metal Facade Finishes, Stefan Schäfer; Chapter 32 Metal Mesh Facades, Stefan Schäfer; Chapter 33 Stone Surface Dressing, Theodor Hugues, Ludwig Steiger, Johann Weber; Chapter 34 From the Molecule to the Finished Building, Jean-Luc Sandoz, Jan-Erik Schmitt;

Christian Schittich

Reviews for Architectural Details 2003

“Twenty-four case-studies and more than 100 photographs are included...it should prove to be a key source for leading contemporary design.” — Building Design “Most appropriate for general readers are the discussion articles and the building projects in the documentation section. There is excellent photography throughout.” — E-Streams “The focus, as the name suggests, is on the construction details of the projects, which are illuminated through a brief text and an extensive use of sections and plans. In an age when technical innovation is increasingly driving built form, this very specifically focused perspective is intriguing.” — Azure, September 2004


See Also