The Uses of Decoration: Essays in the Architectural Everyday

by Malcolm Miles

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Book cover for The Uses of Decoration

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The Uses of Decoration essays in the architectural everyday The book draws together material from several countries and areas of practice - from the affluent as well as the non-affluent worlds, and from art as well as architecture - which it links by a common framework of critical reflection and theory. Some of the cases considered, such as hajj painting in Egypt, have received little attention, while others, such as the mud-brick architecture of Hassan Fathy, are better known although still subject to little critical debate. Others still, such as the Nine Mile Run Greenway project in Pittsburgh, are set in post-industrial cities, the conditions and dynamics of which require new emphases and directions in critical discussion. Running through the book is a concern for the everyday, for the seemingly small and insignificant ways in which people occupy the built environment, which constitute what Henri Lefebvre calls representational spaces; from awareness of this dimension of urban space (and the failures consequent on ignorance of it in some kinds of modern architecture and planning), the book moves to the question of sustainability.
As is demonstrated through their efforts to construct informal settlements, people possess an ability to organise their lives through the production of space; therefore, the book argues, the expertise of dwellers on dwelling is of as much importance in shaping the futures of cities as that of designers on design.
  • ISBN10 0471489638
  • ISBN13 9780471489634
  • Publish Date 21 March 2000
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 28 September 2006
  • Publish Country GB
  • Publisher John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • Imprint Wiley-Academy
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 264
  • Language English