Community Architecture By Nick Wates and Charles Knevitt |
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Community
architecture has emerged as a powerful force for change in the way
people all over the world are creating their own homes, neighbourhoods
and cities.
The basic principle is simple: the built environment works better if the people who use it are directly and actively involved in its creation and management. The movement embraces planning, development, landscape, art and design as well as architecture and other forms of technical aid. It has brought together an extraordinary alliance of community groups, professionals, church leaders and politicians of all parties - and caused major ructions in the professions as a result. Charles Knevitt and Nick Wates wrote and broadcast on the development of the Community Architecture movement for over ten years before writing this book - the first on the subject. It explains how and why Community Architecture works and reveals the full story of the quiet revolution which provides hope for communities everywhere. |
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Best book of 1987 One of the 10 best books of 1993 |
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| “…indispensable
to all concerned with the disastrous state of our built environment. A
pioneering and definitive work....” Vivian Linacre, Environment Now, April 1988. “…written with such tenacity
of purpose that arguments for and against seem as irrelevant as King
Canute attempting to push back the waves.”
“…an antidote to apathy...
that can have the dangerous effect of not just making you sit back and
ponder on the ills of the world, but of stimulating you enough to want to
get stuck in to try and tackle them.” |
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“...an
invaluable experience for community workers and architects dealing with
urbanisation in Taiwan.... The best reference work available.” Ruimao Huang, Lecturer at Tankang University, China Times, 18 November 1993.
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