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Architects' Gravesites: A Serendipitous Guide

paperbackMay 5, 2017
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ISBN-13: 9780262533478 ISBN-10: 0262533472
Publisher
MIT Press
Binding
paperback
Published
May 5, 2017
Weight
0.8 lbs
Dimensions
21.60×1.30×15.90 cm

About this book

Architects' Gravesites: A Serendipitous Guide by Kuehn, Henry H.. paperback edition. ISBN: 9780262533478.

An illustrated guide to the monumental and non-monumental final resting places of famous architects from Aalto Alvar to Frank Lloyd Wright. All working architects leave behind a string of monuments to themselves in the form of buildings they have designed. But what about the final spaces that architects themselves will occupy? Are architects gravesites more monumental—more architectural—than others? This unique book provides an illustrated guide to more than 200 gravesites of famous architects, almost all of them in the United States. Led by our intrepid author, Henry Kuehn, we find that most graves of architects are not monumental but rather modest, that many architects did not design their final resting places, and that a surprising number had their ashes scattered. Architects Gravesites offers an alphabetical listing, from Alvar Aalto and Dankmar Adler (Louis Sullivans partner) to Frank Lloyd Wright and Minoru Yamasaki (designer of the Word Trade Centers twin towers). Each entry includes a brief note on the architects career and a color photograph of the site. For example, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe is buried in Chicago under a simple granite slab designed by his architect grandson; Louise Bethune, the first American woman to become a professional architect, is buried under a headstone inscribed only with her husbands name (a plaque honoring her achievements was installed later); Philip Johnsons ashes were spread in his rose garden, with no marker, across the street from his famous Glass House; and the grave of Pierre LEnfant in Arlington National Cemetery offers a breathtaking view of Washington, D.C., the city he designed. Architects Gravesites is an architectural guide like no other, revealing as much about mortality as about monumentality.