The City Assembled: The Elements of Urban Form Through History
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.88 (674 Votes) |
Asin | : | 0500281726 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 320 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2013-09-30 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
. Spiro Kostof (1936-1991) was Professor of Architectural History at the University of California at Berkley, and also taught at Yale, Columbia, MIT, and Rice universities
Wow! When I ordered this book I'd already knew that it's good, but it surprised me! It is different of the other books about urbanism history. Kostof have always a special point of view in his works. Here he shows the history of the city from a different angle, someway from the inside to outside. It don't analise the city from. Good book. Very interesting Good book. Very interesting. I only leave four and five star reviews for products I would purchase again and recommend to friends and family. Please comment with any questions.. A City Assembled LanceG The book was in perfect condition as described. The book is insightful and very useful to the research I am composing for an essay. Great seller and very prompt with shipping details and availability. Recommended seller all the way.
A fitting testament to the wide-ranging intellect of Professor Kostof, The City Assembled is at once an exercise in architectural and social history, a case study for the present, and a pointer for the future. Over 300 drawings, prints, paintings, and photographs help to tell the story, illustrating both patterns and uses, from the colonnaded streets of ancient Palmyra to gentrified London squares. 346 illustrations, 40 in color.. He discusses "urban process": the effect on cities of natural disasters like the Great Fire of London and the Lisbon earthquake, war, and comprehensive redevelopment, compared with traditional patterns of growth and change. Kostof follows the evolution of city components to
Here he considers the parts that make up the city through time--walls, urban divisions, public places, the street, and the urban process. From Library Journal This final book by noted architectural historian Kostof, who died in 1991, is a companion to The City Shaped ( LJ 10/1/91; LJ's Best Books of 1991, LJ 1/92, p. Still, the author is an astute observer, and his remarks are frequently illuminating for specialists and novices alike. The book is wide-ranging in time and space and presents the fruits of a lifetime of looking, but it is fragmented, appearing to be almost an assembly of notes for a more considered work or for The City Shaped. . 56)