Architecture in the Age of Ecological Emergency

John Hill
10. October 2022
Photo: Screenshot

Following his years as curator of contemporary architecture at MoMA and those as founding director of MAAT in Portugal, Gadanho spent one year at Harvard University as a Loeb fellow. Gadanho wrote Climax Change! after his year at Harvard, a year when he noticed that schools were not preparing students to be ready for tackling the climate emergency in their work after graduation. Yet students were asking for such preparation, and Gadanho's book offers ten essays by which students and practitioners can see how the climate emergency may impact architecture — and how architecture should change so it can make positive contributions to the environment.

See also: Climax Change! was one of the fifteen books in our roundup of summer reads back in July.
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