Description
Exploring the origins and history of professional architectural practice.
About the Author
George Barnett Johnston is Professor of Architecture at Georgia Institute of Technology and principal of Johnston+Dumais [architects].
Reviews
Johnston's study of architectural practice stands apart from other histories of the profession because it emphasizes the business of architecture as a determinant of the profession ... The strength of Johnston's study is in how it frames architectural practice as a series of relationships that support and challenge one another. * Arris *
Through a scholarly yet imaginative weaving of architectural practice's history inn the United States at a critical junction in time, Assembling the Architect sets original grounds for a broader theory of the profession, where socio-technical reflection becomes a true compass for informed action. * Paolo Tombesi, the University of Melbourne, Australia *
For all those who wish the profession of architecture was highly valued by and broadly accessible to a wide range of publics, Johnston reminds us that these goals are not new and have been poorly served by the well-meaning attempts to protect the integrity of the profession in the past. By tracing the evolution of the instruments of services, model law and ethical debates of the past, we see how architects have protected increasingly limited zones of influence. Seeking more equitable, integrated and data-enabled future practices, we would do well to heed the lessons of the past. * Renee Cheng, University of Washington, USA *
Johnston's detailed and colourful vignettes are a rigorous work of reconstruction ... The ease with which the text glides from one protagonist to another provides a rewarding reading experience ... His book provides a portal into the world of American architects a century ago. * Architectural Histories *
Book Information
ISBN 9781350126862
Author George Barnett Johnston
Format Paperback
Page Count 320
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 706g