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Space architecture / guest edited by Rachel Armstrong.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Architectural design (London, England : 1971) ; v. 70, no. 2. | Architectural design profile ; 144.Publication details: London : Architectural Design ; New York, NY : Wiley-Academy, 2000.Description: 112 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cmISBN:
  • 0471864382
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 725.0919 ARM
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Standard Loan LSAD Library Main Collection 725.0919 ARM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 39002000341884

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

This Architectural Design title poses a unique challenge to architects. It incites designers to respond to the limitless potential that outer space presents at the beginning of the third millennium. No longer man's final frontier restricted to the activities of government space agencies, the extraterrestial environment is soon to be opened up by private enterprises and individuals. Featured work, by those such as WAT&G, Shimizu Systems and the X-Prize contenders, prove that entrepreneurial companies are already producing independent pioneering designs for the first tourists. Contributing specialists from a wide range of disciplines endorse these developments: the engineer David Ashford describes the viability of developing commercial passenger planes for space tourism within decades and the economist Patrick Collins analyses the commercial rewards to be reaped from outer space. The social, legal and scientific effects of creating what could ultimately be an unlimited ecological zone beyond Earth are explored further. Just how far reaching the effects will be for the practice of architecture is suggested both by John Zukowsky's comprehensive overview of space architecture and Ted Krueger, who organised an architectural workshop with NASA. This is not, however, to overlook space's artistic impact on architectural design in the latter 20th century. Space Architecture also recognises the seductive power that high-technology space imagery has had for contemporary architects and their debt to film and TV, as well as cult figures such as David Bowie.

Includes bibliographical references.

Table of contents provided by Syndetics

  • Editorial
  • Introduction
  • Architects in Space
  • How Soon Will Space Tourism Start?
  • Space Tourism - The Key to the Coming Economic Boom
  • A New Era of Space Medicine for Space Tourism
  • Space Resort
  • Virtual Space Tourism
  • Why go into Space?
  • Questions and Answers with Buzz Aldrin
  • X-Prize
  • Moving in Several Directions at Once
  • David Bowie
  • Fashioning Space
  • Space Between
  • The Architecture of Extreme Environments
  • New Horizons
  • Quantum City
  • On the Possibility of Terraforming Mars
  • Lunar Embassy
  • Sci-Fi Modernism and Space-Age Retro
  • UR-BOOR - A Rachel Rosenthal Performance
  • Space Architecture: The Bartlett Discussion
  • Architectural Design
  • Popscene
  • The Ideas Circus - An Overview of Architectural Design 1930-1977
  • Practice Profile: Clare Design
  • Anthropomorphic Architecture
  • Highlights from Wiley-Academy
  • Book Reviews
  • Site Lines

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