What Goes Up :The Right and Wrongs To the City
What Goes Up :The Right and Wrongs To the City
hardback
Published:
17 April, 2018
Description
Alongside these essays on New York, Sorkin also brings his lifetime's experience as an architect to bear. He talks of the joy of observing a city in order to understand it. Why a young designer must learn to draw by hand rather than only use a computer. There are also personal encounters with some of the greatest names who have changed the city. Sorkin gets lost in Rio with Zaha Hadid and talks about the old Bronx with Marshall Berman.
More Details
| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 9781786635150 |
| ISBN10 | 1786635151 |
| Number Of Pages | 368 |
| Item Weight | 687 g |
| Product Dimensions | 156 x 235 x 33 mm |
| Publisher / Reseller | Verso Books |
| Format | hardback |
Media Reviews
Easily one of the best architecture critics around ... Sorkin is a flaneur with a sense of public purpose * Guardian *
America's most invigorating writer on architecture. * The Observer *
Sorkin is one of the most intelligent writers on architecture today. * Library Journal *
Sorkin is a formidable opponent of the banal, the ugly, the stupid and the vapidly posturing which, he argues, are all around us. * Publishers Weekly *
I am glad Sorkin doesn't take the subway: this is the most brilliant epitome of Manhattan ever written * Mike Davis [On Twenty Minutes in Manhattan] *
Michael Sorkin secures his claim to succeed Jane Jacobs . . . He brings to bear an eye every bit as acute, a pen nearly as trenchant, and a political understanding perhaps a little bit more sophisticated of the never-ending struggle over New York's neighbourhoods. * Times Literary Supplement [On Twenty Minutes in Manhattan] *
What Goes Up is a series of pithy and piquant essays on the twin problems facing New York and many other large cities: affordability and climate change. -- Bennett Baumer * The Indypendent *
Through masterful language and sentence crafting, he weaves together complex ideas, such as the role media and new technologies play in our digital age and their impact on privacy issues, as well as the new context this sets up for the creation of architecture and public space . The need for a critical voice has never been more important. Witness, chronicler, and analyst, Sorkin provides a framework in his writing for critical evaluation of the architectural process and works to ensure that the city remains a place for people. -- Elizabeth Donoff * Architecture Boston *
Author's Bio
Michael Sorkin is an award-winning architect and Distinguished Professor of Architecture and Director of the Graduate Program in Urban Design at the City College of New York. In 2010, he received the American Academy of Arts and Letters award in architecture. For ten years, Sorkin was architecture critic for the The Village Voice, and he has written for Architectural Record, The New York Times, The Architectural Review, Mother Jones, Vanity Fair, the Wall Street Journal, Architectural Review, and the Nation. His books include Exquisite Corpses, After the World Trade Center, Twenty Minutes in Manhattan and All Over the Map.