ABSTRACT

A cast of leading writers and practitioners tackle the ethical questions that architects are increasingly facing in their work, from practical considerations in construction to the wider social context of buildings, their appearance, use and place in the narrative of the environment. This book gives an account of these ethical questions from the perspectives of historical architectural practice, philosophy, and business, and examines the implications of such dilemmas. Taking the current discussion of ethics in architecture on to a new stage, this volume provides an accumulation of diverse opinions, focusing on architects' actions and products that materially affect the lives of people in all urbanized societies.

chapter 1|4 pages

Introduction

part 5|2 pages

Part 1 The historical perspective

chapter 2|16 pages

Practical wisdom for architects

chapter 3|12 pages

The Cambridge History Faculty Building

chapter 4|10 pages

Architecture and its ethical dilemmas

chapter 5|6 pages

Architecture, art and accountability

chapter 6|14 pages

Responsive practice

chapter 7|6 pages

On being a humble architect

part 75|2 pages

Part 3 Accountability and the architectural imagination

part 113|2 pages

Part 4 Personal and public ethos

chapter 11|8 pages

Hearth and horizon

chapter 12|10 pages

Architecture, luxury and ethics

part 133|2 pages

Part 5 Ethics and aesthetics

chapter 13|8 pages

Less aesthetics, more ethics

chapter 14|12 pages

Architecture, morality and taste

part 15|2 pages

Afterword

chapter 157|6 pages

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