Paradise planned : the garden suburb and the modern city / Robert A.M. Stern, David Fishman, and Jacob Tilove.
By: Stern, Robert A. M.
Contributor(s): Fishman, David | Tilove, Jacob.
Publisher: New York : The Monacelli Press, 2013Description: 1072 pages : color illustrations ; 32 cm.ISBN: 9781580933261 (hardback).Subject(s): Garden suburbs -- History | Landscape architecture | Landscape gardening | ARCHITECTURE / History / General | ARCHITECTURE / Urban & Land Use PlanningGenre/Form: Print books.Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reference | Reference | Ref. SB473 .S74 2013 (Browse shelf) | Not For Loan | AU0000000003161 |
Browsing Alfaisal University Shelves , Shelving location: Reference , Collection code: Reference Close shelf browser
Ref.R858 .H355 2013 Health information management technology : an applied approach / | Ref. R860 .C56 2014 Clinical laboratory management / | Ref. SB472 .A15 2010 1000 x landscape architecture / | Ref. SB473 .S74 2013 Paradise planned : the garden suburb and the modern city / | Ref TA168 .C635 2015 Contemporary issues in systems science and engineering / | Ref. TA658 .U53 2007 Structural design : a practical guide for architects / | Ref. TH151 .T55 2005 Time-saver standards for architectural design : technical data for professional practice / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 962-1047) and index.
Origins -- The Garden Suburb in America 1850/1940 -- The Garden City in Europe and America 1869/1940 -- The Resort Garden Suburb in America 1866/1930 -- The Garden Suburb in England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland 1900/1940 -- The Garden Suburb in Europe -- The Globalization of the Garden Suburb -- Industrialization in Europe and America -- The Fall and Rise of the Garden Suburb.
"From the same team that produced the monumental five-volume architectural history of New York comes the definitive work on the development of the garden suburb, a phenomenon that first emerged in England in the 1830s and still dominates residential architecture today"--