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Reviews

Short and long reviews of select books, films, and exhibitions. What to see and what to read, but certainly not what to think. That’s left up to you.


REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Florence Twu

Lessons from a pandemic in shaping social connection to place

 
 

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Angat Desai

Spatial Imagination in Search of Dignity: Review of The God of Small Things by Arundathi Roy

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Abbi Auld

Bollards or Benches: A neighbourhood dividing line

 
 

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Mar'ce Merrell

New Central Library: architecture as reconciliation

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Steven Shuttle

Escape In: Public Health, Urban Wilderness, and Tommy Thompson Park

 
 

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Shoonya Kumar

Love Labour Lost: How a Pottie Kadai reveals more about the identity of a city than large grand plans

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Neena Verma

Block 345, Lot 26: A building exhales. (No one was hurt.)

 
 

REVIEWS

Critical Review
— Deyvi Papo

Synagogue Of El Tránsito: A vague memory of the future

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Christina
Amaral-Kim

Unacknowledged Connections: Design’s role in responding to the feeling, thinking human in Welcome to Your World 

 
 

REVIEWS

Exhibition Review
— Justin Loucks

Lessons by Listening

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Alison McReynolds

How Munari sought to reconcile design and the public in a complicated world: A Review of Design as Art

 

REVIEWS

Book review
—Sergio Veyzaga

A review of The Urban Revolution and changing means of the urban realm

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Justin Loucks

An observation on how spatial ideas are translated

 

REVIEWS

Exhibition Review
— Sergio Veyzaga

Cultural Construction and Negotiations

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Alison McReynolds

A Review of Ed Ruscha: Los Angeles Apartments

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Justin Loucks

The House of Light and Entropy

 
 

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Charles C. Moorhouse

Rem Koolhaas and Prospective Preservation

REVIEWS

Book Review
— Justin Loucks

Finding our Elephant: Review of Ladders by Albert Pope exploring a theory of “blindness” in interpreting suburban form