Wood: Architecture and Design
Wood: Architecture and Design favours quantity over depth, giving a brief overview of 58 structures from around the world that use wood as an integral design element.
Wood: Architecture and Design favours quantity over depth, giving a brief overview of 58 structures from around the world that use wood as an integral design element.
Wood at Home from Beta-Plus is a book centred around the visual, showing open houses from in and around Belgium that showcase the many ways in which timber can add atmosphere to a house.
There are few things more captivating than a new world being unfolded to you by an expert in their field, and Wood and Wood Joints by Klaus Zwerger is exactly that.
Coming from the highly proficient publisher of Braun in 2008, Touch Wood examines a wide spectrum of the contemporary architectural industry.
Timber in the City: Design and construction in mass timber is an architectural book that looks at not just the design of a building, but the design of a community.
Although this book does not deal with contemporary architecture or design in wood, Timber Building in Britain is both engaging and interesting. R.W. Brunskill has endeavoured to explain how timber was used in Britain from the twelfth to the nineteenth century, covering aspects from timber choice and cultivation to carpentry.
Cities in Australia are very familiar with the terrace houses that define some of their most picturesque suburbs.
Coming from just before the turn of the 21st century, The New Wood Architecture documents what is very much the beginning of the modern era in timber construction.
The Forever House is divided into sections based on the decade in which the houses were built, running from the 1950s to the 1980s.
The Scandinavian countries have a strong tradition of building in wood, one that has outlasted the modern age of steel and concrete.
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