Publications
The Center for Building Communities inaugural book will be published in Summer, 2008.
Our initial publication will introduce the mission of the Center for Building Communities, as illustrated by previous community design projects created by CBC faculty in collaboration with upper-level Notre Dame students.
Please review our project album for an introduction to projects that will be highlighted in the book.
Reviews
Reviews are written by Harold Henderson, the CBC’s communications consultant. Henderson has reviewed books for the American Planning Association’s magazine Planning for 20 years. From 1985 to 2007 he was a staff writer at the weekly Chicago Reader, covering many topics, including environmental and planning issues. The opinions expressed in these reviews are his and not necessarily those of the University of Notre Dame or its School of Architecture.
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Sustainable Urbanism: Urban Design with Nature
February 01, 2008
Douglas Farr, Chicago architect and a leader in codifying the new LEED standards for neighborhood development, reveals some important trade secrets of green design in Sustainable Urbanism: Urban Design with Nature (2007; John Wiley & Sons; 304 pp.; $75) and calls for a movement comparable to the 1960s moon shot, in which millions of Americans “get” the idea of sustainable design and act on it. “The entire built environment gets renewed or rebuilt every few generations, and we just need to do it differently.” {296} A keeper for reference, even if the movement doesn’t mushroom as fast as he hopes.
Sprawl: A Compact History
January 15, 2008
Robert Bruegmann went to Paris as a graduate student in the 1970s to study 18th- and 19th-century architecture. But when he flew in and out of Orly Airport, on the city’s southern edge, he saw something that blew his mind: a cityscape that looked like suburban Chicago or LA. European cities, he thought, were supposed to be pedestrian friendly, not like our monstrous agglomerations of auto-dependent sprawl.
Catastrophe: Risk and Response
January 05, 2008
We humans don’t do catastrophe well until one hits us, if then. After all, our ancestors didn’t survive by planning a century ahead; they survived by spotting predators fast and stretching one harvest until the next.
