Rural Studio: Samuel Mockbee and an Architecture of Decency
Couldn't load pickup availability
About this book
For almost ten years Samuel Mockbee a recent MacArthur Grant recipient and his architecture students at Auburn University have been designing and building striking houses and community buildings for impoverished residents of Alabamas Hale County. Using salvaged lumber and bricks discarded tires hay and waste cardboard bales concrete rubble colored bottles and old license plates they create inexpensive buildings that bear the trademark of Mockbees work which he describes as "contemporary modernism grounded in Southern culture."In a time of unexampled prosperity when architectural attention focuses on big glossy urban projects the Rural Studio provides an alternative of substance. In addition to being a social welfare venture the Rural Studio--"Taliesin South" as Mockbee calls it--is also an educational experiment and a prod to the architectural profession to act on its best instincts. In giving students hands-on experience in designing and building something real it extends their education beyond paper architecture. And in scavenging and reusing a variety of unusual materials it is a model of sustainable architecture. The work of Rural Studio has struck such a chord-both architecturally and socially--that it has been featured on Oprah Nightline and CBS News as well as in Time and People magazines.The Studio has completed more than a dozen projects including the Bryant "Hay Bale" House Harris "Butterfly" House Yancey Chapel Akron Chapel Childrens Center H.E.R.O. Playground Lewis House Super Sheds and Pods Spencer House addition Farmers Market Masons Bend Community Center Goat House and Shannon-Dutley House. These buildings along with the incredible story of the Rural Studio the people who live there and Mockbee and his student architects are detailed in this colorful book the first on the subject."I tell my students its got to be warm dry and noble"--Samuel Mockbee
