1st Edition
Matter: Material Processes in Architectural Production
Beginning with material, this book revolves around physical material making and design decisions that emerge from material interaction.
Combining essays from both practice and academia, this book presents some of the most significant projects and thoughts on materiality from the last decade. Beautifully illustrated with a great deal of technical information throughout, it shows work, technical technique and process, and positions it within a broader theoretical intention.
By assembling a range of voices, here is a multifaceted portrait of material design today. Students and design professionals alike should find in this book an essential resource for understanding this increasingly important aspect of design.
Introduction: Foreign Matter Gail Peter Borden and Michael Meredith Part 1: Matter Conversed Stan Allen, Neil Denari, Michael Maltzan, Nader Tehrani (Office dA) Part 2: Matter Design 1. Strawberry Fields Jason Payne, Hirsuta 2. Voissoir Cloud Lisa Iwamoto and Craig Scott, IwamototScott 3. Light Frames Gail Peter Borden, Borden Partnership 4. Nebula Macula Florian Idenburg, IL-SO 5. Roof Tile Beach Oliver Hess and Jenna Didier, EMANATE Part 3: Matter Processes 6. Reciprocal Media Eric Howeler and Meejin Yoon, Howleer/Yoon 7. Open David Benjamin 8. Porous Boundaries Jason Vollen and Dale Clifford, Binary Part 4: Matter Precedent 9. Fixing the Drape: Textile Composite Walls David Hill and Laura Garofalo 10. Tumbling Units: Tectonics of Indeterminate Extension Kentaro Tsubaki 11. Monolithic Representations Andrew Atwood, ATWOOD 12. Materiality of the Infrathin Michael Carroll, atelier BUILD 13. Sheet Logics Heather Roberge Part 5: Matter Detail 14. Real Detail - Detail Reality Axel Schmitzberger 15. Detailing Articulation Phillip Anzalone + Stephanie Bayard, aa64 16. Lightness John Enright + Margaret Griffin, GEA 17. Cumulative Processes and Intimate Understandings Dwayne Oyler + Jenny Wu, Oyler/Wu 18. Built to Change Blair Satterfield and Marc Swackhamer Part 6: Matter Ecology 19. Matter is but Captured Energy Kiel Moe 20. A Brise-Soleil without a Building Hilary Sample, MOS Part 7: Mattter Pedagogy 21. Material Resistance Jeremy Ficca 22. Digital Tracery: Fabricating Traits Lawrence Blough, Graftworks 23. Towards an Ecology of Making Santiago Perez Part 8: Matter Sensations 24. Ana-Log Cabins Mireille Roddier, Keith Mitnick & Stewart Hicks, Mitnick Roddier Hicks 25. Composite Tectonics Marcelo Spina and Georgina Huljich, PATTERNS 26. Alternative Forms of Malleability Rhett Russo, OrangeHorse 27. The Art of Contemporary Tracery Tom Wiscombe, EMERGENT Part 9: Matter Surface 28. Diachronic Growth Thom Faulders, Faulders Studio 30. Bodies in Formation Andrew Kudless, Matsys
Biography
Gail Peter Borden is principal of the Borden Partnership and an Assistant Professor of Architecture at the University of Southern California. His numerous awards and publications include the Architecture League of New York Young Architects Prize; 2011 AIA Young Architect Award; an artist-in-residence at the Chinati Foundation, the Atlantic Center for the Arts, and the MacDowell Colony; a Graham Foundation Grant; and the Borchard Fellowship.
Michael Meredith is a principal in the architecture office MOS and an Associate Professor of Architecture at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design. His writing has appeared in Artforum, Perspecta, LOG, Praxis, Domus, and Harvard Design Magazine, along with many others. The work of MOS has been widely published and received numerous awards. In 2009, MOS was awarded the PS1/MoMA Summer Pavilion.
"During the past decade a shift occurred that meant that students were often building things rather than modeling them. The first generation that took on that role have set up practices that retroactively begin to re-define education. Michael Meredith and Gail Borden have assembled many of this generation's work and give coherence to this still emerging context. This is work on material qualities and at times capabilities but perhaps more accurately it reveals a still nascent but deeply important new comfort with fabrication, construction and the complexity of material as it is embedded within a range of demands from finance to structural performance."
Michael Bell, Columbia University, USA
"Matter: Material Processes in Architectural Production is likely to find its way onto many desks in architecture schools; expansive and well organized, Meredith and Borden have provided a critical structure that gives the book depth that other surveys cannot manage. The compilation of case studies includes iterations and outtakes that demonstrate the intensity of the research in material theory. But the book is not simply a glimpse at what the "next generation" has been up to. The real value of Matter—the reason why the rest of us should own a copy—is that it documents the extent which digital practice is influencing mainstream practice and maps a future in which architects regain control over the process of building."
Kevin Daly, Daly Genik Architects, USA