04 April 2005 ~ 0 Comments

Architecture books

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There are many parallels between architecture (of the brick and mortar kind) and information architecture. Both are primarily design professions, and many of the constraints around problems are similar. (E.g.: managing scope, timeframes, user requirements, ergonomics, the interoperation of complex systems, etc.)

Knowing about my background in architecture, a colleague asked if I could recommend any books from this field that may be of interest to IAs. Here is a first pass at such a list, in no particular order:

Design Thinking

by Peter Rowe

Focuses on the design process.

Architecture: Form, Space, and Order

by Fracis D. K. Ching

Does for architecture what Understanding Comics did for comics.

A Pattern Language: Towns, Buildings, Construction

by Christopher Alexander

You probably know this one already.

Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture

by Robert Venturi

A “gentle manifesto for a nonstraightforward architecture”.

How Buildings Learn: What Happens After They’re Built

by Stewart Brand

I haven’t read this yet, but a lot of smart people rave about it.

If you want to get into the history of the field, you can’t read
anything better than Sir Banister Fletcher’s History of Architecture.
(If you’re into modernism, read William Curtis’ book on modern
architecture.)

You could go to your local library (or Barnes & Noble) and hang out
in the architecture section for a while, checking out some of the
monographs on famous architects. Some I like: Le Corbusier, Rem
Koolhaas, Enric Miralles, Alvar Aalto, Louis I. Kahn, Alvaro Siza, Carlo Scarpa.
Also check out the two Franks that everyone’s heard of: Frank Lloyd
Wright and Frank Gehry.

Tangentially related to architecture, but inspiring anyways: anything
by R. Buckminster Fuller. This is a good place to start.

Do you have any favorite architecture books?

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