Construction is vital both to Gross Domestic Product and to today's politics. Prime Minister Tony Blair himself chairs a cabinet committee on the Thames Gateway development, to the east of London. Housing has proved a big factor in Chancellor Gordon Brown’s worries about the Euro. But the construction sector is one of the world’s weakest in innovation. Deputy Prime Minister John Prescott’s target of just 4000 homes to be made through prefabrication shows how building remains a 19th century affair, not a 21st century one.
Drawing on the latest technologies that have emerged both inside and outside the sector, Why is construction so backward? forms a detailed, practical alternative to the conventional wisdom in building design and urban planning. It is a powerful call for reform, and a sharp polemic against architecture as social engineering and environmentalist dogma.
Praise for Why is construction so backward?:
‘Very compelling… a significant piece of research and thought leadership. Essential.’ Colin Bartle-Tubbs, UK Operations Director, Deloitte
‘Welcome and timely… takes on an industry that has revelled in complacency for too long.’ Bernhard Blauel, Principal, Blauel Architects
‘The authors are prepared to be daring, reframe the question and posit new paradigms. Reflecting effortlessly across the literature of property, business, market research and construction, the book’s kaleidoscope of ideas, examples and images gives it a refreshing depth of insight and breadth of vision.’ John Worthington, Founder, DEGW
‘A tour de force of polemical provocation. This timely work forces one to think about construction in the broadest terms. Required reading.’ Paul Finch, Editorial Director, EMAP Construct
‘A must-read for architecture students and also important for practitioners, this is a passionate critique of the construction industry and the planning process, and brings new depth to debate about the relationship between architecture and society.’ Penny Lewis, Editor, Prospect
‘Shock therapy for construction policymakers.’ Austin Williams, Technical Editor, The Architects’ Journal
‘The introspection of architects, planners and politicians involved in urban, housing and planning issues needs a little turmoil, perhaps. The book is persuasive, at times heavily prescriptive, and certainly argumentative – but it may catalyse a wider and more informed debate on the future of UK housing policy.' Michael Hulme, Director, International Centre for the Study of Media, Technology and Culture, Henley Management College
‘The pleasure of this book is not only that it takes apart, with great gusto, the all-pervasive environmental prejudices of our time, but that it does so with such detailed scrutiny of construction and with such passion to build more and better.’ Alan Hudson, Director of Studies in Social and Political Science, Oxford University Department for Continuing Education
‘Important not just for architecture and design, but also for marketing – especially given how the corporate world uses different design elements, such as buildings, to build brands.’ Lisbeth Svengren and Mats Frick, Stockholm University School of Business, Sweden
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
JAMES WOUDHUYSEN is a Director of Audacity Limited. He has worked on innovation and new product development with some of the world’s top corporations, including AT&T, BT, Compaq, IBM, Microsoft and many more. He lectures and broadcasts worldwide, is Professor of Forecasting and Innovation at De Montfort University, Leicester, and contributes each month to IT Week.
IAN ABLEY is the Project Manager of audacity.org. He works as a site architect in London for a major commercial practice, and is involved with the co-ordination of innovative services technologies into the structure and fabric of new development.
Why are homes so expensive to buy and to maintain?
Construction has emerged as a mainstream political issue. Yet the building trade is one of the world’s weakest: it is fragmented, barely globalised and behind other sectors in introducing disruptive innovations to its basic processes. The modest worldwide scale of prefabricated building confirms how construction remains a 19th-century affair, not a 21st-century one.
Drawing on the latest technologies that have emerged both inside and outside the sector, Why is construction so backward? forms a detailed, practical alternative to the conventional wisdom in building design and urban planning. It is a powerful call for reform, and a sharp attack against architecture as social engineering and environmentalist dogma.
‘Very compelling… a significant piece of research and thought leadership. Essential.’
Colin Bartle-Tubbs, UK Operations Director, Deloitte
‘Welcome and timely… takes on an industry that has revelled in complacency for too long.’
Bernhard Blauel, Principal, Blauel Architects
‘The authors are prepared to be daring, reframe the question and posit new paradigms. Reflecting effortlessly across the literature of property, business, market research and construction, the book’s kaleidoscope of ideas, examples and images gives it a refreshing depth of insight and breadth of vision.’
John Worthington, Founder, DEGW
‘A tour de force of polemical provocation. This timely work forces one to think about construction in the broadest terms. Required reading.’
Paul Finch, Editorial Director, EMAP Construct
‘A must-read for architecture students and also important for practitioners, this is a passionate critique of the construction industry and the planning process, and brings new depth to debate about the relationship between architecture and society.’
Penny Lewis, Editor, Prospect
‘Shock therapy for construction policymakers.’
Austin Williams, Technical Editor, The Architects’ Journal
‘The introspection of architects, planners and politicians involved in urban, housing and planning issues needs a little turmoil, perhaps. The book is persuasive, at times heavily prescriptive, and certainly argumentative – but it may catalyse a wider and more informed debate on the future of UK housing policy.'
Michael Hulme, Director, International Centre for the Study of Media, Technology and Culture, Henley Management College
‘The pleasure of this book is not only that it takes apart, with great gusto, the all-pervasive environmental prejudices of our time, but that it does so with such detailed scrutiny of construction and with such passion to build more and better.’
Alan Hudson, Director of Studies in Social and Political Science, Oxford University Department for Continuing Education
‘Important not just for architecture and design, but also for marketing – especially given how the corporate world uses buildings to build brands.’
Lisbeth Svengren and Mats Frick, Stockholm University School of Business, Sweden
Why are homes so expensive to buy and to maintain?
Construction has emerged as a mainstream political issue. Yet the building trade is one of the world’s weakest: it is fragmented, barely globalised and behind other sectors in introducing disruptive innovations to its basic processes. The modest worldwide scale of prefabricated building confirms how construction remains a 19th-century affair, not a 21st-century one.
Drawing on the latest technologies that have emerged both inside and outside the sector, Why is construction so backward? forms a detailed, practical alternative to the conventional wisdom in building design and urban planning. It is a powerful call for reform, and a sharp attack against architecture as social engineering and environmentalist dogma.
‘Very compelling… a significant piece of research and thought leadership. Essential.’
Colin Bartle-Tubbs, UK Operations Director, Deloitte
‘Welcome and timely… takes on an industry that has revelled in complacency for too long.’
Bernhard Blauel, Principal, Blauel Architects
‘The authors are prepared to be daring, reframe the question and posit new paradigms. Reflecting effortlessly across the literature of property, business, market research and construction, the book’s kaleidoscope of ideas, examples and images gives it a refreshing depth of insight and breadth of vision.’
John Worthington, Founder, DEGW
‘A tour de force of polemical provocation. This timely work forces one to think about construction in the broadest terms. Required reading.’
Paul Finch, Editorial Director, EMAP Construct
‘A must-read for architecture students and also important for practitioners, this is a passionate critique of the construction industry and the planning process, and brings new depth to debate about the relationship between architecture and society.’
Penny Lewis, Editor, Prospect
‘Shock therapy for construction policymakers.’
Austin Williams, Technical Editor, The Architects’ Journal
‘The introspection of architects, planners and politicians involved in urban, housing and planning issues needs a little turmoil, perhaps. The book is persuasive, at times heavily prescriptive, and certainly argumentative – but it may catalyse a wider and more informed debate on the future of UK housing policy.'
Michael Hulme, Director, International Centre for the Study of Media, Technology and Culture, Henley Management College
‘The pleasure of this book is not only that it takes apart, with great gusto, the all-pervasive environmental prejudices of our time, but that it does so with such detailed scrutiny of construction and with such passion to build more and better.’
Alan Hudson, Director of Studies in Social and Political Science, Oxford University Department for Continuing Education
‘Important not just for architecture and design, but also for marketing – especially given how the corporate world uses buildings to build brands.’
Lisbeth Svengren and Mats Frick, Stockholm University School of Business, Sweden
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Destination, rates & speedsSeller: West Cove UK, Wellington, United Kingdom
Softcover. Condition: Good. Immediate dispatch from Somerset. Nice older book in good condition. Pages in good condition. Very small amount of notes and underlining. Softcover. English. See images for condition. About the book >.>.> Because most of human life is conducted in buildings, everyone has an opinion about the construction industry. In recent years the housing market alone has ensured that every homeowner has become a Do It Yourself expert as well as a venture capitalist, well acquainted at some level with the 'backwardness" that is the subject of this book, Nonetheless, despite this progressive consumerising of the issues discussed in the following pages, when it comes to answering the central question posed by the book's title we must rely on our expert authors. For as the reader will soon discover, it is a mistake to take the broad assumption of backwardness at face value when there are other questions as yet unasked that bear on the discourse of everyone concerned with building. Questions that give pause to the entrepreneurial developer and the construction professional at the top, even as they touch the lowliest sub-contractor and site oper-ative at the bottom. Questions so secret that. Seller Inventory # Batch-FM580-G-12315
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Soft cover. Condition: Good. No Jacket. Why is Construction So Backward? (ISBN: 0470852895 / 0-470-85289-5) James Woudhuysen; Ian Abley, Wiley-Academy, 2004, 321p, trade pb, covers bumped/scuffed, clean text, solid binding---8.00. Seller Inventory # ABE-2964506772
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