Product Details
ABC of Architecture

ABC of Architecture
By James F. O'Gorman

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Product Description

ABC of Architecture is an accessible, nontechnical introduction to architectural structure, history, and criticism. Author James F. O'Gormon moves seamlessly from a discussion of the most basic inspiration for architecture (the need for shelter from the elements), to an exploration of space, system, and material, and, finally, to an examination of the language and history of architecture. He shows the nonspecialist how to read a design in plans, sections, and elevations, and how architects, like other artists, make creative use of space and light.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #392124 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-10
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 144 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
James F. O'Gorman's A B C of Architecture is a concise, illuminating introduction to the complex subject of architecture. O'Gorman himself calls this slim volume a "modest grammar" on the subject, but it's much more than that. In elegant prose O'Gorman teaches architectural theory as he teaches history. If you've ever wondered about arches, domes, or the importance of concrete, A B C Architecture will likely have the answers you're looking for. For those unfamiliar with architecture, O'Gorman includes a glossary of terms and suggestions for dictionaries.

From Library Journal
This volume represents a significant departure in terms of its intended readership, scope of subject, and depth of analysis for O'Gorman (art, Wellesley Coll.), who has written eloquently and with considerable originality on late 19th-century American architecture. Here he provides a brief primer on architectural awareness for the beginning student or lay reader. The text, which addresses the reader directly, closely approximates the tone of an undergraduate lecture. Structured around three central chapters, each corresponding to one of Vitruvius's defining elements (firmness, commodity, and delight), the lucid explanations focus on plan, structure, and style, respectively. The illustrations are the chief liability: heavy-lined drawings provide less than adequate visual descriptions of buildings rich in texture, shadow, and color. Moreover, lacking figure numbers and descriptive captions, they are much less useful than they might otherwise be. As an introduction to the topic, this volume does not eclipse Steen Eiler Rasmussen's timeless and original Experiencing Architecture (1962), but it may do well in larger public libraries.?Paul Glassman, Pratt Inst. Lib., Brooklyn
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
James F. O'Gorman's 127-page A B C of Architecture, a model of brevity and clarity, may be the best-written work on the subject in English for lay people. -- The New York Times Book Review, D.J.R. Bruckner


Customer Reviews

Excellent Introduction to Architecture5
My college freshman daughter told me she was thinking about majoring in environmental design. Knowing nothing about environmental design, I decided I needed to know more. Architecture is a part of environmental design, and I feel fortunate to have found this book. It is a fast read at about 120 pages, and it is focused on the three principles of an ancient Roman architect named Vitruvius: Utilitas, Firmitas, and Venustas in Latin, or function, structure, and beauty. The book devotes a chapter to each of these principles, and has additional chapters on architecture as communication and the vocabulary of architecture. The book also stresses the importance of history on architecture. The book has numerous drawings that help illustrate the points in the text. After reading this book I feel like I have a high-level picture of what architects have to consider in their profession.

Light and convenient, attractive and well made5
This pleasant little book can be a valuable tool in the education of any amateur interested in architecture. It's of such a convenient size that you can take it with you, on long or short trips, and learn its concepts: ashlar, battered, common bond, dado, exoskeleton, firmitas, groin vault, and so on and so forth, through voussoir and wind bracing and many others.

It's a coherent story of architecture, not a glossary or dictionary, but the fresh, new words accumulate.

Short and, mostly, sweet.4
This is a very informative, short book. While he doesn't ignore periods entirely, O'Gormans approach is to concentrate on key architectural principles, primarily structural, and use buildings, or even simplified sketches, to illustrate them. The book would have been even better if the glossary at the end were expanded, and used some sketches: words are frequently far less useful than pictures in explaining a term. Also, I found O'Gormans introduction a bit forced and wordy. Conversely, the last few pages of the book, in which he hurriedly covers such topics as the importance of history and association in interpreting architectural work, were fascinating, but rushed.