9781836391838
What building today tells us about tomorrow’s Earth—and our place on it.
Geology is the architecture of our planet, and what we build has always been dependent on what the earth has already made. Yet in recent decades, we, rather than the planet, have produced the geology of the future: Millions of tons of concrete, plastic, brick, metal, and other fabricated materials are quickly piling up to eventually become new strata. Can we recover a more equitable relationship with the earth? Providing a provocative and original take on the relationship between ecology and architecture, this book asks what architects do with, and what they might learn from, what the earth creates. From caves and crystals to volcanoes and earthquakes, The Matter of Architecture delves deep to mine a different way of building.
Geology is the architecture of our planet, and what we build has always been dependent on what the earth has already made. Yet in recent decades, we, rather than the planet, have produced the geology of the future: Millions of tons of concrete, plastic, brick, metal, and other fabricated materials are quickly piling up to eventually become new strata. Can we recover a more equitable relationship with the earth? Providing a provocative and original take on the relationship between ecology and architecture, this book asks what architects do with, and what they might learn from, what the earth creates. From caves and crystals to volcanoes and earthquakes, The Matter of Architecture delves deep to mine a different way of building.
288 pages | 10 color plates, 88 halftones | 6.14 x 9.21 | © 2026
Architecture: Architecture--Criticism

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