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Big House Little City

Architectural Design Through an Urban Lens

Benedict Zucchi

$69.99

Paperback

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English
Routledge
15 September 2023

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*Shortlisted for the Architectural Book Awards 2024
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Combining architectural and urban thinking in an unusual and engaging way, this book presents an integrated approach to architectural theory and design. Leon Battista Alberti’s assertion in his famous Renaissance treatise that ‘the city is like a big house, and the house is in turn like a little city’ forms the springboard for a series of reflections on architecture’s relationship with urbanism and how their once intimate symbiosis, unravelled by International Style Modernism, can be recovered.

Explicit references to Alberti’s house-city phrase have been made by figures as diverse as the architects Louis Kahn, Aldo Van Eyck, Denys Lasdun and Niels Torp and novelist Italo Calvino. But, as the book shows, thinking of buildings as little cities provides a new lens through which to reappraise the contributions of many other architects, including Le Corbusier, Frank Lloyd Wright, Alvar Aalto, Eliel Saarinen, Bernard Rudofsky, Hans Scharoun, Leon Krier, Fumihiko Maki, Charles Correa and Team 10.

In doing so, the author identifies common themes that form an unexpected bridgehead between the urban and architectural approaches of Antiquity, the Middle Ages, Renaissance and 20th century. The book explores buildings from across the globe, including lesser-known projects, such as Wright’s unbuilt house in Italy or Saarinen’s master plan for Cranbrook Academy, as well as more recent projects by Niels Torp, Behnisch Architekten, Sou Fujimoto, Peter Barber and WOHA.

It concludes with practical case studies of residential, health, education and workplace projects from different countries, fulsomely illustrated with many drawings and photographs. These show how architectural design viewed through an urban lens provides a conceptual framework for breaking down the scale of large buildings and integrating them with their context. And crucially, these also show a very accessible way of explaining evolving designs to the intended users and eliciting their participation in the design process.

The book offers a compelling approach to the design of projects at all scales, within an ecological perspective: the sense that big and small, cities and buildings must be approached holistically if we are to reverse the degradation and depletion of our habitat, both natural and man-made.

By:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 174mm, 
Weight:   660g
ISBN:   9781032259734
ISBN 10:   1032259736
Pages:   306
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Benedict Zucchi, Principal and Head of Architecture at Building Design Partnership, studied architecture at the Universities of Cambridge and Harvard. His previous publications include the first English language monograph on Italian architect Giancarlo De Carlo. A close reading of place and use and an abiding interest in user participation have been common threads in Benedict’s projects, which range from mixed-use masterplans, schools and universities to designs for major hospitals.

Reviews for Big House Little City: Architectural Design Through an Urban Lens

This important book, an erudite sweep across western architecture and thinking through the lens of Alberti's 'house-city' speaks to the emergent concern for pro-social place-making and in doing so provides a foundation for work in social value today. Bravo for illustrating so fulsomely how history is relevant for practitioners and for celebrating practice as a form of research. Flora Samuel, Professor of Architecture, University of Cambridge Inspired by the chiastic analogy that Alberti draws between the house and the city, Zucchi traces the historical justification for Alberti's proposition and explores its implications for contemporary practice. In so doing, he makes a powerful case for an architecture - and an urbanism - that is structured, above all, by social relationships; one that is concerned, in other words, as much with the way spaces interconnect as it is with the spaces themselves. Bob Allies, Founding Partner, Allies and Morrison Big House Little City is that rare beast, a drawbridge between the scholarly world of history and theory and the gritty realities of contemporary practice. Zucchi's ability to review ideas and designs from the last five centuries through a very current lens recasts the great thinkers of architecture and urbanism as modern-day mentors, very much in dialogue with the current generation, and ready to share both wisdom and mistakes. Isabel Allen, Editor, Architecture Today


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