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The Architecture of Disability: Buildings, Cities, and Landscapes beyond Access

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A radical critique of architecture that places disability at the heart of the built environment

Disability critiques of architecture usually emphasize the need for modification and increased access, but The Architecture of Disability calls for a radical reorientation of this perspective by situating experiences of impairment as a new foundation for the built environment. With its provocative proposal for “the construction of disability,” this book fundamentally reconsiders how we conceive of and experience disability in our world.

Stressing the connection between architectural form and the capacities of the human body, David Gissen demonstrates how disability haunts the history and practice of architecture. Examining various historic sites, landscape designs, and urban spaces, he deconstructs the prevailing functionalist approach to accommodating disabled people in architecture and instead asserts that physical capacity is essential to the conception of all designed space.

By recontextualizing the history of architecture through the discourse of disability, The Architecture of Disability presents a unique challenge to current modes of architectural practice, theory, and education. Envisioning an architectural design that fully integrates disabled persons into its production, it advocates for looking beyond traditional notions of accessibility and shows how certain incapacities can offer us the means to positively reimagine the roots of architecture.

ISBN-13: 9781517912505

Media Type: Paperback

Publisher: University of Minnesota Press

Publication Date: 01-24-2023

Pages: 224

Product Dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.50(d)

A disabled designer and historian of architecture, David Gissen is professor of architecture and urban history at Parsons School of Design at the New School.

Table of Contents

Introduction: From Accessible Design to an Architecture of Disability vii

1 Impaired Monuments: Architecture, History, and the Preservation of Disability 1

2 Of a Weaker Nature: Wilderness, Urban Landscapes, and Biocapacity 25

3 The Urbanization of Disability 45

4 A Form of Impairment: Empathy and Disfigurement in Architectural Aesthetics 73

5 Disabling Environments: Human Physiology and Its Architectural Conditions 95

6 The Construction of Disability: Another Architectural Theory of Tectonics 115

Coda: The Practice of Disability 139

Acknowledgments 143

Notes 147

Index 183