Handbook of Urban Morphology

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Author_Karl Kropf
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ISBN13=9781118747698
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Subject=Architecture
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781118747698
  • Weight: 1293g
  • Dimensions: 218 x 285 x 21mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc
  • Publication City/Country: New York, US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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The Handbook of Urban Morphology
Karl Kropf

Urban morphology is a core discipline for both academic research and professional practice in a range of fields including urban design, architecture, planning, geography, archaeology and anthropology. It plays a central role in improving our understanding of the built environment as a diverse, complex structure that is the product of ongoing social processes and serves as our own habitat.

Conceived as a practical manual of morphological analysis, The Handbook of Urban Morphology brings together in one place the core concepts and principles of the discipline; specific, up-to-date guidance on analytical methods with clear step-by-step instructions and case studies demonstrating specific applications in research and professional practice. Illustrative material includes examples from Iran, China, Turkey, Brazil, France, Italy, the UK and the US, with case studies covering applications in theoretical morphology, environmental performance, historical characterisation, socio-cultural investigations, planning and design.

The result lays the foundation for taking forward and reconciling what might seem to be different views of urban form. It provides a common basis for seeing the built environment as a quasi-natural, emergent phenomenon, the material and medium of urban design, a repository of embodied ideas and the cultural expression of the societies that produce it.

The Author

Karl Kropf is Director of urban design consultancy Built Form Resource and Senior Lecturer at Oxford Brookes University. He has more than thirty years of experience in the fields of urban design, landscape architecture, architecture and historic conservation, working in the UK, France and the US. He combines academic research in urban morphology and practice in urban design with the aim of using insights from one to improve the other.

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