Latin American Houses


Nineteen stunning houses by Latin America’s most innovative contemporary architects, including 2006 Pritzker Prizewinner Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Mathias Klotz, Angelo Bucci and LBC Arquitectos.


Mercedes Daguerre


Editions:

Price: USD$29.95

300 points


Overview
  • Nineteen stunning houses by Latin America’s most innovative contemporary architects, including 2006 Pritzker Prizewinner Paulo Mendes da Rocha, Mathias Klotz, Angelo Bucci and LBC Arquitectos
  • Generous landscape format and lavish photography
  • Introductory text traces the development of Latin American modernism from the early twentieth century to the present
  • Features projects across Latin America, including homes in Brazil, Chile, Argentina, Mexico, Peru and Uruguay
  • Essential for architecture and design students and excellent value for money



Specifications

About the book
Since the early twentieth century, Latin America has been home to some of the most compelling architecture--from the large-scale and otherworldly civic structures of the Brazilian Oscar Niemeyer to the more intimate work of Mexico's Luis Barragan. In her new book Latin American Houses, historian Mercedes Daguerre shows that this tradition of architectural innovation lives on in the work of such contemporary architects as 2006 Pritzker Prize-winner Paulo Mendes da Rocha (Brazil), Mathias Klotz (Chile), Angelo Bucci (Argentina), and LBC Arquitectos (Mexico), among others.

Focusing on one-family houses that have been built over the past decade, this lively new title explores the elegance and innovation with which today's Latin American architects evolve their modernist heritage. In some cases, as with Chilean Smiljan Radic Clarke's Pite House--a dramatic concrete bunker that cantilevers over a rough Pacific shoreline--the lineage is clear, as are the materials and strategies used to contend with often inhospitable locations. Others, like Mexican architect Michel Rojkind's bright red "ribbon" PR 34 House, reveal forms better known in such places as Japan. Wherever their location or material, however, the nineteen houses presented in Daguerre's new book are indication that Latin American architects are not content resting on their laurels.


 

About the author(s)
Mercedes Daguerre is an Italy-based critic and historian. She graduated in architecture from the University Institute of Architecture in Venice in 1985 and has taught and carried out research in various universities in Europe and the Americas. She is the author of many books on contemporary architecture including Twenty Houses by Twenty Architects, Latin American Houses (Pall Mall Press, 2012) and New Villas in Switzerland (2011).

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