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Explores the debates in architecture on 9/10 Stock Orchard Street in London.
Completed in 2000, 9/10 Stock Orchard Street has resisted categorization and this has continued to challenge critics and observers. With contributions from well-known writers in the field, this book responds to the debate, reflecting positively and negatively on what the buildings represent and how they have performed, ten years on. Supported by a wealth of technical drawings and photographic material, the contributions discuss theory, practice, education, material culture, narrative, sustainability and…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Explores the debates in architecture on 9/10 Stock Orchard Street in London.
Completed in 2000, 9/10 Stock Orchard Street has resisted categorization and this has continued to challenge critics and observers. With contributions from well-known writers in the field, this book responds to the debate, reflecting positively and negatively on what the buildings represent and how they have performed, ten years on. Supported by a wealth of technical drawings and photographic material, the contributions discuss theory, practice, education, material culture, narrative, sustainability and construction, presenting conclusions relevant and insightful for today's readers, both professional and academic.
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Autorenporträt
Sarah Wigglesworth heads her own practice based in London, which has won awards for projects including Mossbrook Special School Classroom of the Future (2005), Siobhan Davies Dance Studios (2006) and Cremorne Riverside Canoeing Centre (2008). Sarah is also Professor of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. In addition to authoring numerous essays, she is joint editor (with Katerina Ruedi and Duncan McCorquodale) of Desiring Practices: Architecture, Gender and the Interdisciplinary (Black Dog Press, 1996) and (with Jeremy Till) Architectural Design: The Everyday and Architecture (Academy Wiley, 1998). Sarah was awarded an MBE for services to architecture in 2003.