Michael Manfredi

Architect / United States / WEISS/MANFREDI Architecture/Landscape/Urbanism

Michael Manfredi’s Book List

How to compile a list of meaningful books? Where to start? The following is a very partial list of books that have been formative to me as an architect, designer, and teacher. It’s an eclectic list. These are books that I revisit often and that, in effect, continue to be my valued friends, mentors, provocateurs, and sources of inspiration.

4 books
Willy Boesiger Editor

I always return to this set of volumes with a mixture of humility and admiration. The work is still fresh and always inspiring.

Ian McHarg

McHarg introduced the importance of ecological planning—in the late 1960s a novel and little understood imperative. Given to me as a young architecture student, this book opened up a series of lateral worlds: landscape, ecology—and with that, the promise of a more synthetic approach to design.

Paolo Portoghesi

Works by Bernini, Borromini, Fontana, and da Cortona are presented against the backdrop of Rome as an emerging global city. It is a lushly illustrated and graphically compelling reminder of the fruitful interchange between great architecture and its urban setting.

Colin Rowe

I studied with Colin Rowe and always suggest that my students read this book. Together, these trans-historical essays constitute a radical argument: that we consider history imaginatively as something alive and present. I can’t think of a more eloquent reminder that architecture is first and foremost about an intellectual and cultural history.

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