Traces the evolution of midcentury houses and demonstrates how they are experienced and lived in today
Traces the evolution of midcentury houses and demonstrates how they are experienced and lived in today
This expanded and updated edition of the 2014 classic focuses on the concentration of midcentury houses in New Canaan, Connecticut, built by noted architects including Marcel Breuer, Eliot Noyes, Philip Johnson, John Black Lee, and Edward Durell Stone. This new edition addresses the issue of preservation and adaptive reuse as a sustainable architectural strategy.
A representative group of 17 houses reveals an evolving legacy, now adapting to contemporary life. Each is examined in detail, with plans, timelines, and both archival and new photography, capturing the clean, minimalist look of the initial construction and re-imagining by significant architects of our time. Today preservation and renovation of older buildings has new visibility as a sustainable approach. As the National Trust for Historic Preservation has said, The greenest building is the one that is already built.‘Through plentiful photography, a chronology of design changes, floor plans and more, the authors seek to offer a complete account of the houses’ thoughtful design and how, decades after their construction, they are adapting to contemporary life.’– Monocle
Cristina A. Ross is an architect and preservationist, based in New Canaan, and a board member of Preservation Connecticut
Lorenzo Ottaviani is the creative director of Lorenzo Ottaviani Design Jeffrey R. Matz is a practicing architect in Stamford, Connecticut Michael Biondo is an architectural photographer whose work has appeared in numerous design publications John Morris Dixon is the former editor-in-chief of Progressive Architecture and a board member of Docomomo InternationalThis item is eligible for free returns within 30 days of delivery. See our returns policy for further details.