Description
The Mies Crown Hall Americas Prize (MCHAP), directed by Dirk Denison from within the Illinois Institute of Technology (IIT), promotes an academic award that is given to the best architecture built in the American continent during a specific period.
"MCHAP The Americas 2, Territory & Expeditions," is inspired on the discussions held during the second cycle of the prize, which took place in 2016. Based on the selection of the finalist projects--Weekend House by SPBR, New Campus for the UTEC by Grafton Architects, Pachacamac Museum by Llosa Cortegana Architects, Tower 41 by Alberto Kalach, Star Apartmens by Michael Maltzan Architecture, and Grace Farms by SANAA--, the jury conversations and "discoveries" were very much conditioned by the ideas of nature and its intimate relation to architecture and landscape.
This book is part a reader, part a catalogue, part a visual essay/research on these matters. The texts and projects are in themselves contributions to the field as they show new understandings about the relationship between architecture and its environment as well as singularities and genealogies of the most prominent architectures of the Americas.
With Contributions of Stan Allen, Wiel Arets, Pedro Aparicio & Juliana RamĂrez, Barry Bergdoll, Ila Berman, Sol Camacho, Canary Project, Beatriz Colomina, Juan Pablo CorvalĂĄn, Jean Pierre Crousse, Dirk Denison, Uriel FoguĂ©, Mariano Gomez Luque & Daniel Ibañez, Rodrigo Kommers Wender, Sanford Kwinter, Ciro Najle & LluĂs Ortega, Isabella Moretti, Jean-Luc Nancy, Todd Palmer, Paul Preissner, Enrique RamĂrez, Ana Raskovsky, Patricio del Real, Graciela Silvestri, Jeannette Sordi, Magdalena Tagliabue, Mason White (texts). Canary Project, Pablo Gerson, Miguel de GuzmĂĄn, David Sisso (photos).
Author: Florencia Rodriguez
Publisher: Actar
Published: 05/31/2022
Pages: 296
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 1.65lbs
Size: 9.60h x 6.80w x 1.10d
ISBN13: 9781638400141
ISBN10: 1638400148
BISAC Categories:
- Architecture | Annuals
- Architecture | Buildings | General
- Architecture | Criticism