Through a case study of the professionally made architectural model in Britain between the late 1960s and the early1990s, this article draws from archaeologist Ian Hodder’s concept of entanglement and argues that the relationship between the architect, the architectural model, and the modelmaker exists as an entangled web of shifting distributions of power governed by asymmetric tensions and mutual dependencies. In tracing the changing relationship dynamics that led to a dramatic broadening of the model’s visual styles to incorporate both realism and creative abstraction during this period, this article describes the professionally made architectural model as the locus of an intricate web of interconnected dependencies in which the model, t...
This paper reports the findings of a study which examined architect-client relationships on house pr...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Jamieson, C., & Roberts-H...
commercial organizations in which architects work and, crucially, in which they learn. The Royal Ins...
This thesis presents an historical account of the development of the professionally-made architectur...
The architect has a uniquely paradox role, as he is bound by the rational, material world - without ...
A fundamental shift in employment patterns among architects in North America during the 1960s and 19...
In the 1960s, with western narratives of technical progress at their height, Robert Matthew, then pr...
This article argues that, in early modern architecture in Britain, the role of making has been subor...
Architectural modelmakers have long carried out their work hidden behind the scenes of architectural...
One way to treat the broad range of types and examples of the architectural model is to classify its...
This article investigates the theoretical legacy of the notion of model in architectural and urban d...
Seen through the distilling lens of the architectural model, Architecture’s Model Environments is a ...
This paper investigates a heritage assemblage in which the most prominent elements are an old brick ...
Architects primarily work at a digital desktop, alienated from the spatial byproducts of their colla...
This paper proposes reflection on the model’s place in the definition of the architect’s thought. Ar...
This paper reports the findings of a study which examined architect-client relationships on house pr...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Jamieson, C., & Roberts-H...
commercial organizations in which architects work and, crucially, in which they learn. The Royal Ins...
This thesis presents an historical account of the development of the professionally-made architectur...
The architect has a uniquely paradox role, as he is bound by the rational, material world - without ...
A fundamental shift in employment patterns among architects in North America during the 1960s and 19...
In the 1960s, with western narratives of technical progress at their height, Robert Matthew, then pr...
This article argues that, in early modern architecture in Britain, the role of making has been subor...
Architectural modelmakers have long carried out their work hidden behind the scenes of architectural...
One way to treat the broad range of types and examples of the architectural model is to classify its...
This article investigates the theoretical legacy of the notion of model in architectural and urban d...
Seen through the distilling lens of the architectural model, Architecture’s Model Environments is a ...
This paper investigates a heritage assemblage in which the most prominent elements are an old brick ...
Architects primarily work at a digital desktop, alienated from the spatial byproducts of their colla...
This paper proposes reflection on the model’s place in the definition of the architect’s thought. Ar...
This paper reports the findings of a study which examined architect-client relationships on house pr...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Jamieson, C., & Roberts-H...
commercial organizations in which architects work and, crucially, in which they learn. The Royal Ins...