A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
10.1002/ad.132.abs
In an age when culture has become a lifestyle accoutrement, Jamie Horwitz contemplates both the potency and highly transmittable nature of culture. She puts her ideas to the test by looking at the newly completed facilities of some of the greatest places of cultural acquisition in the us ‐ institutes of learning. How might it be possible for university campuses to foster architectural expression that engenders global social exchange while avoiding all the pitfalls of anonymity most commonly associated with the airport lounge? Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
10.1002/ad.132.abs
In an age when culture has become a lifestyle accoutrement, Jamie Horwitz contemplates both the potency and highly transmittable nature of culture. She puts her ideas to the test by looking at the newly completed facilities of some of the greatest places of cultural acquisition in the us ‐ institutes of learning. How might it be possible for university campuses to foster architectural expression that engenders global social exchange while avoiding all the pitfalls of anonymity most commonly associated with the airport lounge? Copyright © 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Fabricating Pluralism
Horwitz, Jamie (author)
Architectural Design ; 75 ; 24-31
2005-09-01
8 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
British Library Online Contents | 2005
|Transdisciplinarity or “engaged pluralism”?
Taylor & Francis Verlag | 2015
|Oxford University Press | 1982
|INTRODUCTION: CITY, PLURALISM, AND TOLERATION
Online Contents | 2014
|