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Built By Hand

Best of vernacular buildings around the world

Without qualification, this is the greatest account of vernacular architecture, indigenous shelter, and traditional folk-built home images ever published. And it won't likely be surpassed, since fanatical photographer Yoshio Komatsu spent 25 years travelling the globe to document the full jaw-dropping variety of shelter on earth. He's been EVERYWHERE. I can't think of a remote region of Asia, Africa, South American and Europe that he missed; most of the styles are new and stimulating to me, and I've been around. While Architecture Without Architects (see above) hints dreamily at this diversity, Built By Hand completes the thought by explicitly celebrating this abundance in vivid in-your-face technicolor. It's in a different league from all previous vernacular architecture books. This one is a stupendous 480-page cornucopic tome overflowing with 700 photographs, and thousands of details, hopes, and design ideas. Totally breathtaking, totally awesome! If this doesn't get you to grab a hammer, nothing will.

-- KK
(Recommended and suggested by Lloyd Kahn)

earthen.jpg
Moula, Cameroon. Arched earthen doorway.

cone.jpg
Sumba, Indonesia. Four main posts provide the structural support in this building, and bamboo is used for everything else. Symbolically, the tall section of the roof is for God, the middle space for man, and the ground level for animals.

built_by_hand.jpg

Built By Hand
Vernacular buildings around the world
Steen, Steen, and Komatsu
2004, 480 pages
$35
Amazon

Posted on February 5, 2004 at 9:37 AM | +del.icio.us +digg +reddit