Triple Mint

Books - Richard Meier Volume 4

Weststreetsmall_1 We inaugurate our books feature by taking note of the latest volume in the Rizzoli series chronicling the work of architect Richard Meier.  The books are lavish affairs, designed by Massimo Vignelli, with hardcovers bound in full cloth and wrapped in double-fold dust jackets.  Volume 4 includes much detail on the three West Village towers designed by Meier--the two on Perry Street and the third now almost finished at 165 Charles Street.  The stunning visualizations of 165 Charles in this book were done for the developer by the talented team at dbox.  Although the third tower is the largest of the three, to us it appears lighter and more transparent than the first two.  While the silhouette and curtain wall are more successful in the third tower, the effect of a third sibling has made the whole affair less unique.  As one architect friend of ours remarked, "two was an interesting dialogue, three is a crowd."  Still, don't blame these buildings for crowding the Far West Village--after all, there are relatively few units in these structures (some have been converted to duplexes, one even a triplex.)  No, the real culprit for the newly busy street-life along West Street is the wildly popular Hudson River Park. 

This book documents Meier's work since the previous volume was published in 1999.  Among the buildings, private homes, houses of worship, and museums chronicled from around the globe is one other Meier project on the island of Manhattan: Jean-Georges Vongerichten's Restaurant 66.

 

  • Richard Meier Architect, Volume 4 (Rizzoli)

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Books - Morris Lapidus

Lapidus3

While there's more new development going on in Miami right now than anyone can reasonably keep track of, it's worth taking a moment to recall the work of the late Morris Lapidus who transformed the look of the city in the '50's with what he liked to call an "architecture of joy."  A new slim little volume on Lapidus from the folks at Assouline seems destined to become the perfect gift-shop purchase in the lobbies of hip hotels up and down the beach.  For design freaks this volume might as well go right next to the Gideon Bible in their room's night-table drawer.  Most of the vintage photographs come directly from the Lapidus archives.  Author Deborah Desilets fills in the detail on his career, which included designs for the Fontainebleau and Eden Roc hotels, as well as the Lincoln Road mall on Miami Beach, and for New Yorkers of a certain age, Bond department store and the Summit hotel. 

  • Morris Lapidus (Assouline)

Posted by Triple Mint in Books, Miami | Permalink | TrackBack (0)




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