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Design for Sustainability |
A Sourcebook of Integrated, Eco-logical Solutions:
"Design for Sustainability" signals the crucial paradigm shift of the 21st Century: the transition from "environmental management" to "systems design" - eco-solutions that integrate social, political, and economic factors and radically reduce resource use, while increasing health, equity and life quality.
By using radical and innovative design solutions, everyone could be living in buildings and settlements that are more like gardens than cargo containers, and that purify air and water, generate energy, treat sewage and produce food - at lower cost. This sourcebook presents inspiring and detailed examples of integrated systems design thinking by many of the foremost designers in the field. They cover applications in industrial design, materials, housing design, urban planning and transport, landscape and agriculture, and energy and resource use. They cut across traditional academic and professional boundaries to demonstrate a new transdisciplinary approach to environmental problem solving.
The volume makes a very valuable reference and teaching resource in areas from environmental sciences to design and planning. Each of the 14 topics within the field of environmental management and social change have pairs of short readings providing diverse perspectives to compare, contrast and debate. Informational boxes, sets of questions and exercises are also provided.
Janis Birkeland worked consecutively as artist, advocacy planner, architect, urban designer, city planner and attorney in San Francisco before entering academia in Australia. She has authored about 100 publications on built environment and sustainability and wrote the highly successful and widely adopted Design for Sustainability (Earthscan, 2002). She is now Professor of Architecture at Queensland University of Technology, Australia.
Contents: Introduction I Design for Sustainability II The Concepts of Growth and Waste III Industrial, Urban and Construction Ecology IV Design Within Complex Social Systems V Permaculture and Landscape Planning VI Values Embodied in, and Reinforced by Design VII Design for Community Building and Health VIII Design for Productivity, Land and Transport Efficiency IX Design for Self-Sufficiency in Energy, Materials and Waste X Low-Impact Housing Design and Materials XI Construction Management and Environmental Regulation XII Environmental Planning and Project Assessment XIII Embodied Energy and Life Quality Indicators XIV Implementing Change in a Consumer Society Glossary, Index, Biographies
"Part theoretical textbook, part manual, this sourcebook provides a valuable point of reference for all those striving to achieve a greater sustainability in their design and development work...In reflecting the complexity and inter-disciplinary skills and expertise that need to be mustered to actively address issues of sustainable design the book is packed with tables, lists of indicators, principles, checklists and references that lead the reader on through each topic. The structure of the book, true to the nature of a sourcebook, favours regular reference and referral on specific topics rather than a single 'linear' cover-to-cover read. "Design for Sustainability" should enjoy a long shelf life. It makes a valuable contribution in advancing the practice of sustainable design from a periphery activity to a core discipline."
"An inspiring, radical and detailed collection of the eco-solutions that can be applied to a range of design challenges ... an invaluable reference and teaching resource for practitioners and academics." -- Environmental Awareness
Published by Earthscan Publications Ltd. Janis Birkeland April 2002 288 pp., 8 1/4" x 10 1/4"
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| Item # |
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| VE12364 |
Design for Sustainability |
$44.95 |
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Design for Sustainability
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