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Air-Conditioning in Modern American Architecture, 1890-1970
Contributor(s): Siry, Joseph M. (Author)
ISBN: 0271086947     ISBN-13: 9780271086941
Publisher: Penn State University Press
OUR PRICE:   $138.55  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: February 2021
Qty:
Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Architecture | Buildings - Public, Commercial & Industrial
- Architecture | History - Contemporary (1945 -)
- Architecture | History - Modern (late 19th Century To 1945)
Dewey: 697.930
LCCN: 2020034369
Physical Information: 1.4" H x 9.2" W x 10.1" (3.31 lbs) 304 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Air-Conditioning in Modern American Architecture, 1890-1970, documents how architects made environmental technologies into resources that helped shape their spatial and formal aesthetic. In doing so, it sheds important new light on the ways in which mechanical engineering has been assimilated into the culture of architecture as one facet of its broader modernist project.

Tracing the development and architectural integration of air-conditioning from its origins in the late nineteenth century to the advent of the environmental movement in the early 1970s, Joseph M. Siry shows how the incorporation of mechanical systems into modernism's discourse of functionality profoundly shaped the work of some of the movement's leading architects, such as Dankmar Adler, Louis Sullivan, Frank Lloyd Wright, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Gordon Bunshaft, and Louis Kahn. For them, the modernist ideal of functionality was incompletely realized if it did not wholly assimilate heating, cooling, ventilating, and artificial lighting. Bridging the history of technology and the history of architecture, Siry discusses air-conditioning's technical and social history and provides case studies of buildings by the master architects who brought this technology into the conceptual and formal project of modernism.

A monumental work by a renowned expert in American modernist architecture, this book asks us to see canonical modernist buildings through a mechanical engineering-oriented lens. It will be especially valuable to scholars and students of architecture, modernism, the history of technology, and American history.