The Architecture of Necessity
Tags: Architecture, TYIN Architects, European Prize for Design, Design, Christian Narkiewicz - Laine
- Publisher: Metropolitan Arts Press
- ISBN: 0-935119-49-3
- Dimensions (WxH) (cm): 26.50 x 26.50
- Availability: In Stock
- 30.00€
- Ex Tax: 30.00€
The
Norwegian architecture firm, TYIN Architects won The European Prize
for Architecture for their humanitarian work designing and building
with community participation in poor and underdeveloped areas in
Africa and Asia. The firm was established in 2008 as a not-for-profit
humanitarian design organization and is connected to the Norwegian
University of Science and Technology where the two architects
graduated and still teach. The office has completed projects in the
poor and underdeveloped nations of Thailand, Burma, Haiti, Uganda,
and Sumatra, as well as designing and building in the vernacular
tradition of their native Norway. TYIN's key aspect of an
'architecture of necessity' is about decisions that have real
consequences for real people now, but also in the future, and the
involvement of local people in projects that ensure a valid
connection with culture, philosophy, and the vision of the
inhabitants. "Architecture
should be a vehicle for social change, social improvement, and real
cultural development,"
states Christian Narkiewicz-Laine, "and
not an end result of over-commercialization, over-consumption, and
self- aggrandizement, which is so overwhelmingly apparent in our
contemporary world."
He adds: "The
example of these Norwegian architects is paramount in the coming
decades for the Third World's greater success at sustainability,
urbanization, and social development, which contributes substantially
to our world's pursuit of true and lasting global peace, harmony, and
prosperity."
Soft Cover: Perfect Bound
Pages: 172
ISBN: 0-935119-49-3
Publication Date: 2014