Small, Medium, Large, Extra-large: Office for Metropolitan Architecture, Rem Koolhaas, and Bruce Mau, Partie 3Monacelli Press, 1995 - 1344 pages S, M, L, XL presents a selection of the remarkable visionary design work produced by the Dutch firm Office for Metropolitan Architecture (O.M.A.) and its acclaimed founder, Rem Koolhaas, in its first twenty years, along with a variety of insightful, often poetic writings. The inventive collaboration between Koolhaas and designer Bruce Mau is a graphic overture that weaves together architectural projects, photos and sketches, diary excerpts, personal travelogues, fairy tales, and fables, as well as critical essays on contemporary architecture and society. The book's title is also its framework: projects and essays are arranged according to scale. While Small and Medium address issues ranging from the domestic to the public, Large focuses on what Koolhaas calls "the architecture of Bigness." Extra-Large features projects at the urban scale, along with the important essay "What Ever Happened to Urbanism?" and other studies of the contemporary city. Running throughout the book is a "dictionary" of an adventurous new Koolhaasian language -- definitions, commentaries, and quotes from hundreds of literary, cultural, artistic, and architectural sources. |
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Page 841
... Portman started with one block , made money , and developed the next block , a cycle that then triggered Atlanta's rebirth . But the new Atlanta was a virgin rebirth : a city of clones . It was not enough for Portman to fill block after ...
... Portman started with one block , made money , and developed the next block , a cycle that then triggered Atlanta's rebirth . But the new Atlanta was a virgin rebirth : a city of clones . It was not enough for Portman to fill block after ...
Page 843
... Portman's Paradox . The rediscovery of downtown quickly degenerated into a proliferation of quasi - downtowns that together destroyed the essence of center . By the eighties , building activity had moved away from Portman's part of the ...
... Portman's Paradox . The rediscovery of downtown quickly degenerated into a proliferation of quasi - downtowns that together destroyed the essence of center . By the eighties , building activity had moved away from Portman's part of the ...
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Small, Medium, Large, Extra-large Rem Koolhaas,Bruce Mau,Office for Metropolitan Architecture Affichage d'extraits - 1997 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
Agadir Amsterdam archi architects Architecture Museum Atlanta auditorium beauty become Berlin Berlin Wall béton armé 200 Bigness Bijlmer Binnenhof Birnie block Bruce Mau building built Checkpoint Charlie columns competition completely concrete Congrexpo connected context create culture Delirious New York density Dirty Realism downtown Dutch elements elevator Elia Zenghelis empty Euralille Europe existing Expo facade floor glass grid hall Hotel imagine inside island isolant 40 Japan Japanese John Portman Koepel Kunsthal landscape look Manhattan meters metropolis modern Netherlands Netherlands Dance Theater OMA's Panopticon Paris park pavilion plaza pool prison programmatic Queensboro Bridge REALA Rem Koolhaas roof Rotterdam skyscraper slabs socle space square storage street Strip structure stuks tecture theater thing tion tower Typical Plan urban VIDE vierendeels Villette void wall Zaha Hadid zone ס ס 吹抜 寝室