Best-Selling Design Books at Hennessey + Ingalls

These are the design books that were the best sellers at Hennessey + Ingalls Art & Architecture Bookstore in Los Angeles during March 2012.

1

Combinatory Urbanism Add to My Reading List

Thom Mayne

For the past 40 years Thom Mayne and his firm, Morphosis, have been engaged with projects that exist in the hybrid space between architecture and urban planning. Against this backdrop, Combinatory Urbanism: The Complex Behavior of Collective Form surveys 12 urban projects that range in scale from a 16-acre proposal for rebuilding the World Trade Center site after the 2001 terrorist attacks to a 52 thousand-acre redevelopment proposal for post-Katrina New Orleans.

2

Whatever You Think, Think the Opposite Add to My Reading List

Paul Arden

Logic and common sense have a habit of leading us to the same conclusions. If you are going to make your mark on the world you have to start thinking differently. To think differently you have to think illogically.Filled with fun anecdotes, quirky photos, and off-the-wall business advice, the provocative sequel to It’s Not How Good You Are, It's How Good You Want to Be reveals the surprising power of bad decisions.

3

The Death and Life of Great American Cities Add to My Reading List

Jane Jacobs

A direct and fundamentally optimistic indictment of the short-sightedness and intellectual arrogance that has characterized much of urban planning in this century, The Death and Life of Great American Cities has, since its first publication in 1961, become the standard against which all endeavors in that field are measured. In prose of outstanding immediacy, Jane Jacobs writes about what makes streets safe or unsafe; about what constitutes a neighborhood, and what function it serves within the larger organism of the city; about why some neighborhoods remain impoverished while others regenerate themselves. Compassionate, bracingly indignant, and always keenly detailed, Jane Jacobs's monumental work provides an essential framework for assessing the vitality of all cities.

4

Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things Add to My Reading List

William McDonough
Michael Braungart

“Reduce, reuse, recycle” urge environmentalists; in other words, do more with less in order to minimize damage. As William McDonough and Michael Braungart argue in their provocative, visionary book, however, this approach perpetuates a one-way, “cradle to grave” manufacturing model that dates to the Industrial Revolution and casts off as much as 90 percent of the materials it uses as waste, much of it toxic. Why not challenge the notion that human industry must inevitably damage the natural world, they ask.

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