Search

Categories

    • categories-img Jacket, Women
    • categories-img Woolend Jacket
    • categories-img Western denim
    • categories-img Mini Dresss
    • categories-img Jacket, Women
    • categories-img Woolend Jacket
    • categories-img Western denim
    • categories-img Mini Dresss
    • categories-img Jacket, Women
    • categories-img Woolend Jacket
    • categories-img Western denim
    • categories-img Mini Dresss
    • categories-img Jacket, Women
    • categories-img Woolend Jacket
    • categories-img Western denim
    • categories-img Mini Dresss
    • categories-img Jacket, Women
    • categories-img Woolend Jacket
    • categories-img Western denim
    • categories-img Mini Dresss

Filter By Price

$
-
$

Dietary Needs

Top Rated Product

product-img product-img

Modern Chair

$165.00
product-img product-img

Plastic Chair

$165.00
product-img product-img

Design Rooms

$165.00

Brands

  • Wooden
  • Chair
  • Modern
  • Fabric
  • Shoulder
  • Winter
  • Accessories
  • Dress

Welcome and thank you for visiting us. For any query call us on 0799 626 359 or Email [email protected]

Offcanvas Menu Open

Shopping Cart

Africa largest book store

Sub Total:

Search for any Title

The City as a Technical Being : On the Mode of Existence of Architecture

By: (Author) Peter Trummer

Werezi Extended Catalogue
Delivery in 20 days

Ksh 5,500.00

Format: Paperback / Softback

ISBN-10: 1957183551

ISBN-13: 9781957183558

Publisher: Oro Editions

Imprint: Oro Editions

Country of Manufacture: CN

Country of Publication: GB

Publication Date: Feb 20th, 2024

Print length: 307 Pages

Weight: 970 grams

Dimensions (height x width x thickness): 16.00 x 23.90 x 3.50 cms

Product Classification: Theory of architecture

Choose your Location

Shipping & Delivery

Door Delivery

Delivery fee

Delivery in 20 days

  • Description

  • Reviews

The city is the largest human artifact. It is made by us, yet simultaneously it makes us, as well as all other nonhuman entities. The particular discourse to which this book on the city contributes is the discipline of architecture. It explores a simple question: How does the city effect the mode of existence of its buildings?
The city is the largest human artifact. It is made by us, yet simultaneously it makes us, as well as all other nonhuman entities.

The particular discourse to which this book on the city contributes is the discipline of architecture. It explores a simple question: How does the city effect the mode of existence of its buildings? The tradition within architectural history that identifies the city as the origin of our buildings poses a challenged to us, as architects, to theorize about the city’s form and use in order to rationalize our own actions. In opposition to other disciplinary approaches to the city and its architecture, however, the book argues not for type (Rossi, Ungers) as the deepest aspect of the architecture of the city. Neither will it be the function (Venturi & Scott Brown, Koolhaas) of the city to explain its material organization, nor is matter considered (Jacobs, Banham) to be deeper than the real city.

Instead, this books argues that the mode of existence of architecture is inherent to the city itself, which originates its architecture as part of its being as a technical object. The concept of the technical being that is used to define a new ontology of the architecture of the city is taken from Gilbert Simondon’s theory of mechanology. In this book I re-originate Simondon’s approach into the discipline of architecture, thus presenting the city not simply as a milieu in which its buildings emerge, but as a technical object with the capacity to converge its elements and individuate new ones—that is, architecture. 

Get The City as a Technical Being by at the best price and quality guranteed only at Werezi Africa largest book ecommerce store. The book was published by Oro Editions and it has pages. Enjoy Shopping Best Offers & Deals on books Online from Werezi - Receive at your doorstep - Fast Delivery - Secure mode of Payment

Customer Reviews

Based on 0 reviews

Mind, Body, & Spirit