Daniel Solomon

Daniel Solomon

Auteur : Daniel Solomon

Date de publication : 2008

Éditeur : University of Michigan, A. Alfred Taubman College of Architecture + Urban Planning

Nombre de pages : 42

Résumé du livre

In this illustrated talk (the text of the 2007 Raoul Wallenberg lecture), the author, architect and urban designer Daniel Solomon discusses the fragility of public space and the uses of architecture in relation to "community design," proposing the model of a "cosmopolis" in which the needs of society are fostered and met. Solomon has an instinctive understanding of what is at stake and what needs to be recovered in the public realm, and addresses these subjects with urgent candor. He observes that architects and urban designers very rarely stray into "community design" (a term he acknowledges as an oxymoron, since how can one possibly "design" a community?), and that while at least a discourse exists for environmental issues in cities, there is almost none for "cosmopolitan" issues, and that architecture schools need to include the conception of a cosmopolis in their pedagogy.

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