Best-Selling Design Books at William Stout

These are the design books that were the best sellers at William Stout Architectural Books during March 2013.

1

Wooden Churches Add to My Reading List

Richard Davis
Matilda Moreton

These churches are the remnants of thousands that were built all over Russia from the time of Prince Vladimir, who, on his conversion to Christianity in 988, ordained  that wooden churches should be built and established where pagan idols had previously stood.

2

Minka 1955, Japanese Traditional Houses Add to My Reading List

Yukio Futagawa

This compendium of Futagawa’s images of traditional Japanese villages and homes captures not only the sequence of history but also the essence of Japanese culture at a time when much of the country remained agrarian, not yet subjected to more recent modernization.

3

Under the Edge: The Architecture of Peter Stutchbury Add to My Reading List

Ewan McEoin Editor

There is an historical interface at play in Australia between the hegemony of western culture and the many and exotic cultures of the east. This interface is particularly clear in the work of Peter Stutchbury.

4

CLOG: Brutalism Add to My Reading List

Kyle May et al., Editors

A defining architectural style of the postwar era, Brutalism arguably produced some of the world's least popular public buildings. Judging by the work of many contemporary practitioners, however, the influence of Brutalism only seems to grow.

5

Architecture in Northern Landscapes Add to My Reading List

Todd Saunders
Jonathan Bell
Ellie Stathaki

Saunders’s architecture, simple yet powerful, incorporates elements of his country's architectural identity— including the use of wood and carefully picked Modernist influences—and brings it into the 21st century with excellent execution, carefully chosen materials and a hands-on approach.

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