Harvard Design Magazine 48 Spring Summer 2021

£12.50
In stock

“A terrible mechanism [is] on the march, its gears multiplying.” So begins the 48th issue of Harvard Design Magazine, guest edited by Mark Lee, chair of the department of architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and Florencia Rodriguez, editorial director of -Ness Magazine. The issue takes as its theme the slippery and ambiguous figure of “America,” seen through the lens of the built and unbuilt environment. Americanization—once the “terrible mechanism” bent on pressing capitalist values on emerging economies everywhere—is now in retreat, eclipsed by the more urgent domestic concerns of pandemic and climate change, racial injustice and domestic radicalization. The very notion of what constitutes America is ripe for redefinition.

The America Issue of Harvard Design Magazine, featuring a new design and art direction by Alexis Mark, invites historians, architects, landscape architects, urban designers, theorists, curators, artists, and planners to reflect on the country’s past and present, and to imagine sustainable futures. Projects, taxonomies, dialogues, essays, and spatial interpretations explore possible Americas. They allow us to delve into issues relevant to small cities, towns, and rural areas—as well as major urban centers—and to study barriers and opportunities facing communities across the country.

Harvard Design Magazine 48 Spring Summer 2021 is available to buy in increments of 1

Details

EDITOR’S NOTE

The America Issue

Mark Lee & Florencia Rodriguez

COLUMNS

The New Social Housing

Marc Norman

 

America for the Americans!

Jorge Francisco Liernur

 

America: a reflection

Jeffrey Kipnis

 

American Architecture

Kersten Geers & David Van Severen

 

Paul Revere Williams: Another Take

Victor J. Jones with Photographs by Janna Ireland

ESSAYS

Plains and Pampa: Decolonizing “America”

Ana María León

 

Willi Smith, WilliWear Map Print Skirt, Summer 1986 Collection

Alexandra Cunningham Cameron

 

“Rerighting” History: The Benito Juarez Community Academy

Maite Borjabad López-Pastor

 

American Time: The Vertiginous Descent from Machu Picchu to Seaside

Sylvia Lavin

 

Bye-Bye Babylon

Charlotte von Moos

 

Considering Americanization, 1880–1960

Lisa Ubelaker Andrade

 

In Conjunction?

Sean Canty

 

Lack of Consensus: A Historian’s Take on the Territory

Edward Eigen

 

Looking Together

Michael Meredith

 

Making Do at the GSD (with Dave Hickey, Charles Jencks, and a few others)

K. Michael Hays

 

Sinmi Stool: Design with a Black Intent?

Zoë Ryan

 

The New MoMA

Pezo von Ellrichshausen

INTERVIEWS

Let’s Try to Be Relevant

Sarah Whiting & Florencia Rodriguez

 

Making Gardens, Making Books

Henry N. Cobb & Michael Van Valkenburgh with Matthew Girard & Alexander Luckmann

 

Never Let a Crisis Go to Waste

Shaun Donovan & Jerold Kayden

 

A Civil Society

Maurice Cox & Rahul Mehrotra

 

American Cool and the Dirty South

Dave Hickey, Jennifer Bonner, Max Kuo & Mack Scogin

 

At Home in America

Michèle Lamy & Mark Lee

 

Banham in America: A Transatlantic Dialogue

Ludovico Centis & Todd Gannon

 

The American Object

Jonathan Olivares & Robert Stadler

 

The Chicago Model

Rahm Emanuel & Sharon Johnston

PHOTO ESSAYS

Hobbling Away

Photographs by Marianne Mueller with an Introduction by Charles Shafaieh

 

Leaves of Grass

Adam Monohon

SPECIALS

Remembering Henry N. Cobb (1926–2020)

Michael Van Valkenburgh

 

“Race & Space”

Michelle Joan Wilkinson & Adrienne Brown

 

Notes on Jeffrey Kipnis’s America: a reflection

Michael Osman

 

“America: I’ve Given You All and Now I’m Nothing”

Mimi Zeiger & Ann Lui

 

“Chicago was Nowhere”

Paul Andersen & Sam Jacob

 

“Politics as Geography”

Neeraj Bhatia & Brendan Cormier

COLOPHON

Editorial Director

Julie Cirelli

Production Manager

Meghan Ryan Sandberg

Guest Editors
Florencia Rodriguez
Mark Lee

Graphic Design & Art Direction

Alexis Mark

Copyeditor

Rachel Holzman

Researchers

Emma Bird, Cynthia Deng, Arta Perezic

Printer

Flagship Press, North Andover, Massachusetts, USA