Six architecture and design books to read this fall

Climate change, as seen by Design Earth, Formafantasma, and Barnabas Calder. The biographies of the urbanist Andrew Haswell Green and the car designer Fabio Filippini. And the Milanese houses of Alvar Aaltissimo.

Almost without realizing it, three of the six books we’ve chosen as worth reading this fall talk, each in their own way, about climate change, ecology and sustainability. An unconscious choice, perhaps, because more and more often these topics are presented with unexpected techniques or points of view, or are inserted between the folds of other themes, even very different from each other.

Let’s consider, for example, the extraordinary book The Planet after geoengineering by Design Earth. It shows what happens when two artists deal with a subject as complex as geoengineering. Through five polished graphic novels, Rania Ghosn and El Hadi Jazairy present as many geohistories and possible futures. The British historian Barnabas Calder also has an eccentric approach to the subject - in the literal sense of “far from the center” - with his monumental essay (576 pages) Architecture from Prehistory to Climate Emergency, which traces 15,000 years of the history of architecture, considered more as a bulimic consumer of energy than anything else. As designers, Simone Farresin and Andrea Trimarchi ask, “How can we make more informed choices when we decide to select one wood-based material over another?” Cambio, that means “change”, is their answer: a research and a project that never stops being enriched by welcoming new contributions.

We then picked three biographies that show how multifaceted and surprising this genre is. The most classic is that of writer Jonathan Lee, who reconstructs the semi-unknown life of the father of “Greater New York” Andrew Haswell Green, mixing fantasy and historical research. To Green we owe - to say the least - Central Park and the New York Public Library. Then there is the career of one of the most important car designers in the world (an architect by training), Fabio Filippini, told in collaboration with Gabriele Ferraresi and illustrated by himself. 

Finally, the collection of Case milanesissime by Alvar Aaltissimo: in Italian, “alto” means tall, and you say “altissimo” of a really tall person, but you can also use it to refer to God: The book, with refined drawings and the pop satire that has made its author famous on social media, tells a lot about himself and his generation. 

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