1st Edition

Vernacular Architecture and Regional Design

By Kingston Heath Copyright 2009
    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    210 Pages
    by Routledge

    Sustainable design requires that design practitioners respond to a particular set of social, cultural and environmental conditions. 'Vernacular Architecture and Regional Design' defines a set of strategies for understanding the complexities of a regional setting. Through a series of international case studies, it examines how architects and designers have applied a variety of tactics to achieve culturally and environmentally appropriate design solutions.

    • Shows that architecture and design are inextricably linked to social and environmental processes, and are not just technical or aesthetic exercises.
    • Articulates a variety of methods to realise goals of socially responsible and environmentally responsive design.
    • Calls for a principled approach to design in an effort to preserve fragile environments and forge sustainable best practice.

    'Vernacular Architecture and Regional Design' will appeal to educators and professional practitioners in the fields of architecture, heritage conservation and urban design.

    Dr. Kingston Wm. Heath is Professor and Director of the Historic Preservation Program at the University of Oregon. Previously he was Professor of Architecture at the University of North Carolina, Charlotte where he taught seminars on vernacular architecture and regional design theory. He holds graduate degrees from the University of Chicago and Brown University. In addition to numerous articles in scholarly journals, he is the author of Patina of Place, and winner of the Abbott Lowell Cummings Award from The Vernacular Architecture Forum for excellence in a scholarly work. He has earned an international reputation in the field of vernacular architecture and has directed field schools in Italy and Croatia.

    Foreword; Preface: Regionalism Reconsidered; Section One: Exploring the Nature of Place
    1. An Interpretative Model for Assessing Regional Identity Amidst Change; 2. Architecture as Cultural Production; Section Two: From Regional Theory to a Situated Regional Response; 3. Introduction; Part One: People; 4. Howard Davis; 5. Nihal Perea; 6. Jo Noero; Part Two: Locale; 7. Teddy Cruz; 8. Darren Petrucci; Part Three: Environment; 9. Nina Maritz; 10. Carol A. Wilson; 11 Glenn Murcutt

    Biography

    WM. HEATH KINGSTON