Matter: Material Processes in Architectural Production
August 2011
Editor: Gail Peter Borden, Michael Meredith
Beginning with material, this book revolves around physical material making and design decisions that emerge from material interaction.
Combining essays from both practice and academia, this book presents some of the most significant projects and thoughts on materiality from the last decade. Beautifully illustrated with a great deal of technical information throughout, it shows work, technical technique and process, and positions it within a broader theoretical intention.
By assembling a range of voices, here is a multifaceted portrait of material design today. Students and design professionals alike should find in this book an essential resource for understanding this increasingly important aspect of design.
- 20/20: Editorial takes on Architectural discourse
- A Question Of Qualities: Essays In Architecture
- AA Files #57
- AA Files #58
- AA Files #59
- AA Files #60
- AA Files #61
- AA Files #62
- AA Files #63
- AA Files #64
- AA Files #65
- AA Files #66
- AA Files #67
- AA Files #68
- AA Files #69
- AA Files #70
- Adolf Loos
- Architecture After Revolution
- Autonomy and Ideology: Positioning an Avant-Garde in America
- Best of Austria Architecture 2006_07
- BIG
- Big, Hot To Cold: An Odyssey Of Architectural Adaptation
- Black + Architecture
- Cedric Price: Potteries Thinkbelt: SuperCrit #1
- Citizens of No Place: An Architectural Graphic Novel
- Content
- Deep Veils
- Detail in Contemporary Bar and Restaurant Design
- Detail in Contemporary Timber Architecture
- Details in Contemporary Residential Architecture
- Diagram Diaries
- Disegno #12
- domus 1950s
- Ehituskunst 2013: ... like dancing about architecture
- Ehituskunst 2015: What do you want, Brick?
- Elements
- Elements of Venice
- Floor Plan Manual Housing
- Geographies of Information
- Hariri & Hariri: Work in Progress
- How to Make a Japanese House
- Interactive Architecture: Adaptive World
- Inventario 03: Everything Is A Project
- Junya Ishigami: How Small? How Vast? How Architecture Grows
- Jutaku: Japanese Houses
- KM3-Excursions on Capacities
- Learning from Las Vegas
- Made in Tokyo
- Material Matters: New Materials in Design
- Material World 3: Innovative Materials for Architecture and Design
- Materials for Architectural Design
- Matter: Material Processes in Architectural Production
- Mobile Architecture
- MVRDV: Works and Projects 1991-2006
- Narrow Houses: New Directions in Efficient Design
- New Urban Housing
- OASE 90: What Is Good Architecture?
- OASE 94: O.M.A. The First Decade
- Pamphlet Architecture 24: Some Among Them Are Killers: Unmanaged Landscapes for Non-U.S. Military and Government Users
- Pamphlet Architecture 25: Gravity
- Pamphlet Architecture 27: Tooling
- Pamphlet Architecture 28: Augmented Landscapes
- Pamphlet Architecture 29: Ambiguous Spaces
- Pamphlet Architecture 30: Coupling: Strategies for Infrastructural Opportunism
- Pamphlet Architecture 31: New Haiti Villages
- Pamphlet Architecture 32: Resilience
- Pamphlet Architecture 33: Islands and Atolls
- Pamphlet Architecture 34: Fathoming the Unfathomable
- Project of Autonomy: Politics and Architecture Within and Against Capitalism
- Richard Rogers: Architecture of the Future
- Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown: Learning from Las Vegas: SuperCrit #2
- SAN ROCCO #05 SCARY ARCHITECTS
- SAN ROCCO #08 WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE PRIMITIVE HUT?
- SAN ROCCO #09 MONKS AND MONKEYS
- SAN ROCCO #10 ECOLOGY
- SAN ROCCO #11 HAPPY BIRTHDAY BRAMANTE!
- Softspace: From a Representation of Form to a Simulation of Space
- Such Places as Memory: Poems 1953-1996
- Tallinn Architecture Biennale 2013: Recycling Socialism
- The 21st Century Office
- The Metapolis Dictionary of Advanced Architecture: City, Technology and Society in the Information Age
- Transmaterial 2: A Catalog Of Materials That Redefine Our Physical Environment
- Transmaterial 3: A Catalog of Materials that Redefine our Physical Environment
- Transmaterial: A Catalog of Materials That Redefine our Physical Environment
- Yes Is More: An Archicomic on Architectural Evolution