Home
»
Building for People
A01=Michael Eliason
Author_Michael Eliason
Category=AMCR
Category=AMD
Category=AMVD
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Product details
- ISBN 9781642833133
- Weight: 454g
- Dimensions: 203 x 267mm
- Publication Date: 12 Dec 2024
- Publisher: Island Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days
Our Delivery Time Frames Explained
2-4 Working Days: Available in-stock
10-20 Working Days: On Backorder
Will Deliver When Available: On Pre-Order or Reprinting
We ship your order once all items have arrived at our warehouse and are processed. Need those 2-4 day shipping items sooner? Just place a separate order for them!
Picture a beautiful, green neighborhood where most of your needs could be met by walking, rolling, or accessing transit.
There is a diversity of housing types with abundant affordable and middle-income options. Schools, services, and
pedestrianized streets make the neighborhood family friendly. Tere iTo This As AAcities turn brownfields into green
fields and look to maximize public investment in transit and infrastructure , ecodistricts are the answer. Eliason shows
that this type of affordable, climate-adaptive living option is possible anywhere.
I
n Building for People, architect and ecodistrict planner Michael Eliason makes the case for low-carbon ecodistricts andpresents tools for developing these residential and mixed-use quarters or neighborhoods. Drawing from his experience
working in Europe and North America, he shows the potential for new climate-adaptive ecodistricts that directly and
equitably address our housing shortages while simultaneously planning for climate change. Eliason explains that to create highly livable places with a low carbon impact, ecodistricts must incorporate ample social housing for a good economic and social mix of residents, invest in open space, create infrastructure that can adapt to a changing climate, and offer car-free or car-light realms. He also looks at the how public health, livability, climate adaptation, and quality of life are interconnected.
Full-color photos and illustrations show what is possible in ecodistricts around the world, drawing heavily from
examples in German cities.
Building for People shows professionals involved in regulating, planning, or designing our communities that high-quality,low-carbon living is within reach.
There is a diversity of housing types with abundant affordable and middle-income options. Schools, services, and
pedestrianized streets make the neighborhood family friendly. Tere iTo This As AAcities turn brownfields into green
fields and look to maximize public investment in transit and infrastructure , ecodistricts are the answer. Eliason shows
that this type of affordable, climate-adaptive living option is possible anywhere.
I
n Building for People, architect and ecodistrict planner Michael Eliason makes the case for low-carbon ecodistricts andpresents tools for developing these residential and mixed-use quarters or neighborhoods. Drawing from his experience
working in Europe and North America, he shows the potential for new climate-adaptive ecodistricts that directly and
equitably address our housing shortages while simultaneously planning for climate change. Eliason explains that to create highly livable places with a low carbon impact, ecodistricts must incorporate ample social housing for a good economic and social mix of residents, invest in open space, create infrastructure that can adapt to a changing climate, and offer car-free or car-light realms. He also looks at the how public health, livability, climate adaptation, and quality of life are interconnected.
Full-color photos and illustrations show what is possible in ecodistricts around the world, drawing heavily from
examples in German cities.
Building for People shows professionals involved in regulating, planning, or designing our communities that high-quality,low-carbon living is within reach.
Michael Eliason is an architect and founder of Larch Lab--part architecture and urbanism studio, part "think and do" tank focusing on research and policy, decarbonized low-energy buildings, and climate adaptive urbanism. Michael is also a writer, and an award-winning architect specializing in mass timber, social housing, baugruppen (urban cohousing), and ecodistricts. His career has been dedicated to advancing innovation and broadening the discourse on sustainable development, passivhaus, non-market housing, and decarbonized construction. He serves on the board of Seattle's new Passivhaus Social Housing Developer PDA. He is a graduate of Virginia Tech and became a Passivhaus consultant in 2010. His professional experience includes work in both the Pacific Northwest, and Germany. He has been a guest critic and lecturer at several institutions and has presented internationally.
Qty:
