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Log 19 (Spring/Summer 2010)  

Log 19 (Spring/Summer 2010)

New York, NY, United States

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Log 49 (Summer 2020)

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Log 47: Overcoming Carbon Form (Fall 2019)

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Log 46 (Summer 2019)

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Log 45 (Winter/Spring 2019)

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Log 44 (Fall 2018)

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Log 43 (Summer 2018)

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Log 41 (Fall 2017)

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Log 40 (Spring/Summer 2017)

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Log 39 (Winter 2017)

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Log 38 (Fall 2016)

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Log 37: cataLog (Spring/Summer 2016)

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Log 36: ROBOLOG (Winter 2016)

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Log 35 (Fall 2015)

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Log 34: The Food Issue (Spring/Summer 2015)

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Log 33 (Winter 2015)

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Log 32 (Fall 2014)

Log 19 (Spring/Summer 2010)

New York, NY, United States

Type
STATUS
Built
YEAR
2010
Log 19 brims with informed debate and argument on the state of architecture today. Like the models for the invited international design competition for the Dance and Music Center in The Hague, these articles, when taken together, can be understood as a cross-section of how one makes architecture now. Is it as form? Function? Material? Cost? Context? Politics? What are the limits of representation in architecture? Log 19 takes parametrics to task, considers the consequences of climate change and environmental catastrophe, while examining the physical edges and conceptual boundaries of architecture.


Contents

Ross Adams, Approaching the End: Eden and the Catastrophe

Noam Andrews, Climate of Oppression

Aleksandr Bierig, Places of Exception

Marta Caldeira with Emma Bloomfield, Sharp Flats

Petra Ceferin, What is Architecture the Name of Today?

Frank Gehry, Two Lithographs

Thomas de Monchaux, Blue in Green: Notes On “Rising Currents”

Natanel Elfassy & François Roche, Stuttering Fall

Max Hirsh & Jonathan D. Solomon, Does Your Mall Have an Airport?

Craig Hodgetts, A Provisional Genealogy for OCTA.BOT®

Wes Jones, Architecture Games

Eric Owen Moss, Introducing Abraham

Eeva-Liisa Pelkonen, (Un)timely Saarinen

Christopher Pierce, In Praise of the Harpoon

Portfolio, This Is the Way It Could Be?

Georges Teyssot with Olivier Jacques, Inhabiting a Spline: The Making of Metropol Parasol

Thomas Weaver, Sin Sitte

Allen S. Weiss, Impossible Possibles


Plus: On “The South” ... On Frank and Yona ... On Vivarium ...



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