300 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

300 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

304 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Bringing together leading international practitioners and theorists in the field, ranging from the 1960s pioneers of participation to some of the major contemporary figures in the field, Architecture and Participation opens up the social and political aspects of our built environment, and the way that the eventual users may shape it. Divided into three sections, looking at the politics,... Read more

Introduction Peter Blundell Jones, Doina Petrescu, Jeremy Till  Part 1: Politics of Participation  1. Architecture's Public Giancarlo De Carlo  2. The Negotiation of Hope Jeremy Till  3. Losing Control, Keeping Desire Doina Petrescu  4. Mass Housing Cannot be Sustained Jon Broome  5. Reinventing Public Participation: Planning in the Age of Consensus Tim Richardson and Stephen Connelly  6. How Inhabitants Can Become Collective Developers Anne Querrien  7. City/Democracy: Retrieving Citizenship Theresa Hoskins  Part 2: Histories of Participation  8. Sixty-Eight and After Peter Blundell Jones  9. Fragments of Participation in Architecture 1963-2002 Eilfried Huth  10. Notes on Participation Peter Sulzer  11. Kemal Özcül: Eco Prize 2034 Peter Hübner  12. Özcül Postcript: The Gelsenkirchen School as Built Peter Blundell Jones  Part 3: Practices of Participation  13. Animal Town Planning and Homeopathic Architecture Lucien Kroll  14.  'What if?' A Narrative Process Prue Chiles  15. Politics Beyond the White Cube Marion von Osten 16. How Do You Do 'What You Do' ? MUF and Katherine Vaughan Williams  17. Urban Catalysis and Other Games Stalker  18. Points, Spirals and Prototypes Raoul Bunschoten/CHORA  19. Your Place, or Mine? FLUID

Biography

Peter Blundell Jones is Professor of Architecture at the University of Sheffield and a frequent contributor to The Architectural Review. Doina Petrescu is lecturer in architecture at the University of Sheffield and member of Atelier d'Architecture Autogérée in Paris. She has written, lectured and practiced individually and collectively on issues of gender, technology, (geo)politics and poetics of space. Jeremy Till is Professor of Architecture and Head of the School of Architecture, University of Sheffield. He is also a Director of Sarah Wigglesworth Architects, an award winning practice. With degrees in both philosophy and architecture, his writings interrogate the relationship of theory to practice.

'[This book] is both stimulating and timely ... I commend [it] because of its ever-greater relevance.' - Robin Nicholson