3rd Edition

Twenty-Five+ Buildings Every Architect Should Understand Revised and Expanded Edition

By Simon Unwin Copyright 2024
336 Pages 890 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

336 Pages 890 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

336 Pages 890 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The underlying theme of Twenty-Five + Buildings Every Architect Should Understand is the relationship of architecture to the human being, how it frames our lives and orchestrates our experience; how it can help us make sense of the world and contribute to our sense of identity and place. Exploring these dimensions through a wide range of case studies that illustrate the rich diversity of... Read more

Casa de Chá da Boa Nova (Siza)  Mongyo-Te (Kansetsu Hashimoto)  CASA DEL OJO DE AGUA (Dewes and Puente)  NEUENDORF HOUSE (Pawson and Silvestrin)  BARCELONA PAVILION (Mies)  TRUSS WALL HOUSE (Ushida Findlay)  ENDLESS HOUSE (Kiesler)  FARNSWORTH HOUSE (Mies)  Glass House (Johnson)  Robie House 1 (Wright)  LA CONGIUNTA (Märkli)  CABANON (Le Corbusier)  Hōjōki (Kami no Chomei)  ESHERICK HOUSE (Kahn)  inc. Vanna Venturi House (Venturi)  House VI (Eisenman)  The Box (Moss)  Temple of the Four Winds (Vanbrugh)  MAISON À BORDEAUX (Koolhaas)  DANTEUM (Terragni)  Louisiana Art Museum (Bo and Wohlert)  FALLINGWATER (Wright)  VILLA SAVOYE (Le Corbusier)  House of the Silver Wedding, Pompeii  KEMPSEY GUEST STUDIO (Murcutt)  Australian aborigine place-making  Place-making on the beach  SEA RANCH (MLTW)  Place-making in the home  VILLA E.1027 (Gray)  inc. Tempe à Pailla (Gray)  Apollo Pavilion (Pasmore)  SANKT PETRI KYRKA (Lewerentz)  Chapelle Notre-Dame du Haut (Le Corbusier)  Royal Villa, Knossos  VILLA BUSK (Fehn)  VILLA MAIREA (Aalto)  Fathy House (Fathy)  THERMAL BATHS (Zumthor)  Changeability  RAMESH HOUSE (R.S. Liza)  Mud House, Kerala  BARDI HOUSE (Bardi)  Robie House 2 (Wright)  Fun Palace (Price)  VITRA FIRE STATION (Zaha Hadid)  MOHRMANN HOUSE (Scharoun)  Moll House (Scharoun)  Schminke House (Scharoun)  BIOSCLEAVE HOUSE (Gins and Arakawa)  Turn End (Aldington)

Biography

Simon Unwin is Emeritus Professor of Architecture at the University of Dundee, Scotland. He has lived in Great Britain and Australia, and taught or lectured on his work in China, Israel, India, Sweden, Turkey and the United States. Analysing Architecture’s international relevance is indicated by its translation into various languages and its adoption for architecture courses around the world. Now retired, Simon Unwin continues to teach at The Welsh School of Architecture in Cardiff, UK.

Endorsements for Twenty-Five Buildings… (2nd edition)


‘Simon Unwin’s new case studies stretch his original analytical agenda beyond its more conventional
architectural history and theory parameters: it broadens the topic to open up themes and concerns very
immediate to current architectural debate. A must-have for all teachers of architecture and their students.’
Claude Saint-Arroman, Goldsmiths University (Research), School of Architecture, University of East London, UK


‘Twenty-Five Buildings Every Architect Should Understand illuminates a different perspective on understanding and decoding the theories and philosophies of architects through their works across the globe, signifying the regional context in the design process. This book is an exemplary contribution from Simon Unwin to the academic and practical interest of architecture.’
T.L. Shaji, Professor, Department of Architecture, College of Engineering, Trivandrum, Kerala, India


‘Unwin’s writings and drawings harmonize so well, and treat their manifold subject with such surgical precision and care, that they enable the reader who has not visited (in most cases never will visit) these exemplary projects, to feel as though we have entered into them, and felt with our own bodies their widely diverse and often intimate choreographies.’
Ted Landrum, Archi-Poet, University of Manitoba, Canada


‘In Twenty-Five Buildings Every Architect Should Understand, which expands on the first edition Twenty
Buildings, Simon Unwin continues a ‘go slow’ approach to architectural analysis. Eschewing flashy photographs, Unwin uses the classic architectural tools of exquisitely drawn two-dimensional plans, sections, and elevations to analyze systematically each of the twenty-five buildings. A valuable work not only for students of architecture, but for anyone wanting to understand the process of creating spaces for
human habitation and enjoyment.’
Marie-Alice L’Heureux, Architect, Associate Professor, University of Kansas, USA