Architects

Pages: 1 2 3 NextSORT BY: Date | Title | Author

Featured Books

  1. Book ImageLong Island Landscapes and the Women Who Designed Them

    Cynthia Zaitzevsky

    An account of eminent women landscape architects who flourished in the golden age of country estates.More

  1. Book ImageFrederick Law Olmsted: Essential Texts

    Frederick Law Olmstead, Robert Twombly

    An anthology of the key writings of the best-known and arguably most prolific landscape architect in U.S. history.More

  2. Book ImageThe Architecture of Harry Weese

    Robert Bruegmann, Kathleen Murphy Skolnik

    This study tells the story of one of America’s most gifted architects of the postwar years.More

  3. Book ImageCharles Rennie Mackintosh

    James Macaulay, Mark Fiennes

    A major architectural study of one of the pioneers of modernism.More

  4. Book ImageThe Architecture of Bart Prince: A Pragmatics of Place

    Christopher Curtis Mead

    Revised and Updated

    With a look at new buildings by Bart Prince, this book examines the work of a uniquely American contemporary architect.More

  5. Book ImagePeabody & Stearns: Country Houses and Seaside Cottages

    Annie Robinson

    A view of the resort and leisure architecture of one of the most popular and prolific firms of the Gilded Age.More

  6. Book ImageFour Florida Moderns: The Architecture of Albert E. Alfonso, René González, Chad Oppenheim, and Guy Peterson

    Saxon Henry

    A colorful survey explores the diverse styles of the arbiters of modernism in Florida.More

  7. Book ImageThe Architecture of Grosvenor Atterbury

    Peter Pennoyer, Anne Walker, Robert A M Stern

    The first close look at an innovative architect and inventor who held that traditional styles could be successfully adapted for modern times.More

  8. Book ImageFrank Lloyd Wright: Essential Texts

    Robert Twombly

    The most influential, provocative, and enduring writings of the American master are gathered in this anthology.More

  9. Book ImageEero Saarinen: Buildings from the Balthazar Korab Archive

    David G. De Long, C. Ford Peatross

    A timely portrait of the work of an architect who expanded the vocabulary of modern architecture.More

  10. Book ImageLeopold Eidlitz: Architecture and Idealism in the Gilded Age

    Kathryn E. Holliday

    The first critical examination of the work of New York architect Leopold Eidlitz, America's first Jewish architect, founding member of the American Institute of Architects, and the first American to define a modern organic architecture, this book reveals his formidable influence.
    More

  11. Book ImageJames Marston Fitch: Selected Writings on Architecture, Preservation, and the Built Environment

    Martica Sawin, Jane Jacobs

    Revered as the father of historic preservation in the United States, architect James Marston Fitch was hailed by the New York Times at the time of his death in 2000 as "an architect whose writings and teachings helped transform historic preservation from a dilettante's pastime into a vigorous, broadly based cultural movement."More

  12. Book ImageBertram Goodhue: His Life and Residential Architecture

    Romy Wyllie

    An architect of exceptional vision, whose work is still relevant today, Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue (1869-1924) died at a crucial moment, when he was severing his ties to traditionalism and establishing himself as the leader of a new architectural style.
    More

  13. Book ImageThe Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and His Office

    Ethan Anthony

    This book examines the life and works of a major architect whose buildings today surpass him in recognition.
    More

  14. Book ImageEly Jacques Kahn, Architect

    Jewel Stern, John A. Stuart

    One of the fabled "three Napoleons" of New York (with Raymond Hood and Ralph Walker) yet almost unknown today, Ely Jacques Kahn had a nearly half-century career and some three dozen of his buildings still grace the New York cityscape.
    More

  15. Book ImageThe Architecture of Warren & Wetmore

    Peter Pennoyer, Anne Walker

    During the first three decades of the twentieth century, Warren & Wetmore was one of the most successful and prolific architectural practices in America.
    More

Pages: 1 2 3 Next