Rural Studio at twenty : designing and building in Hale County, Alabama /
Andrew Freear and Elena Barthel, with Andrea Oppenheimer Dean ; photography by Timothy Hursley.
- First edition.
- 288 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
"For two decades the students of Auburn University's Rural Studio have designed and built remarkable houses and community buildings for impoverished residents of Alabama's Hale County, one of the poorest in the nation. Our critically acclaimed bestseller Rural Studio (2002) showed how salvaged lumber, bricks, discarded tires, hay-and-waste cardboard bales, concrete rubble, colored bottles, carpet tiles, and old license plates were transformed into inexpensive buildings that were also models of sustainable architecture. Rural Studio at Twenty chronicles the evolution of the legendary program, founded by (MacArthur Genius Grant and AIA Gold Medal winner) Samuel Mockbee, and showcases an impressive portfolio of projects. Part monograph, part handbook, and part manifesto, Rural Studio at Twenty is a must-read for any architect, community advocate, professor, or student as a model for engaging place through design"-- "This book describes the complex mix of attributes that has made the Rural Studio unique: its teaching methods, the design and construction processes of its student teams, the relationship it has forged with its West Alabama community, and much more. The book also takes a broad look at a series of critically acclaimed projects that illustrate the evolution of the Rural Studio's work and the successes and failures of its unique teaching model"--
9781616891534
2013045252
Auburn University. Department of Architecture. Rural Studio
Architecture--Study and teaching--Alabama--Hale County Vernacular architecture--Alabama--Hale County Sustainable architecture--Alabama--Hale County Low-income housing--Alabama--Hale County