Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies

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University of California Press, 2009 M03 5 - 238 páginas
Reyner Banham examined the built environment of Los Angeles in a way no architectural historian before him had done, looking with fresh eyes at its manifestations of popular taste and industrial ingenuity, as well as its more traditional modes of residential and commercial building. His construct of "four ecologies" examined the ways Angelenos relate to the beach, the freeways, the flatlands, and the foothills. Banham delighted in this mobile city and identified it as an exemplar of the posturban future. In a spectacular new foreword, architect and scholar Joe Day explores how the structure of Los Angeles, the concept of "ecology," and the relevance of Banham's ideas have changed over the past thirty-five years.

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Contenido

List of Illustrations
ix
Foreword to the 2009 Edition
xv
Foreword to the 2000 Edition
xxxiii
Views of Los Angeles
l
Surfurbia
19
Exotic Pioneers
39
The Transportation Palimpsest
57
Foothills
77
The Plains of Id
143
The Exiles
161
A Note on Downtown
183
Autopia
195
The Style that Nearly
205
An Ecology for Architecture
217
Acknowledgments
227
Index
235

Fantastic
93
The Art of the Enclave
119

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Acerca del autor (2009)

Reyner Banham (1922-1988) was Sheldon H. Solow Professor of the History of Architecture at the Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Joe Day leads deegan day design llc and serves on the design faculty at the Southern California Institute of Architecture.

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