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Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design. / Farmer, Graham; Guy, Simon.
Sustainable architectures: critical explorations of green building practice in Europe and North America. ed. / Simon Guy; Steven A. Moore. Abingdon: Routledge, 2004. p. 15-30.

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Farmer, G & Guy, S 2004, Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design. in S Guy & SA Moore (eds), Sustainable architectures: critical explorations of green building practice in Europe and North America. Routledge, Abingdon, pp. 15-30. <http://www.tandf.net/books/details/9780415700450/>

APA

Farmer, G., & Guy, S. (2004). Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design. In S. Guy, & S. A. Moore (Eds.), Sustainable architectures: critical explorations of green building practice in Europe and North America (pp. 15-30). Routledge. http://www.tandf.net/books/details/9780415700450/

Vancouver

Farmer G, Guy S. Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design. In Guy S, Moore SA, editors, Sustainable architectures: critical explorations of green building practice in Europe and North America. Abingdon: Routledge. 2004. p. 15-30

Author

Farmer, Graham ; Guy, Simon. / Hybrid environments : the spaces of sustainable design. Sustainable architectures: critical explorations of green building practice in Europe and North America. editor / Simon Guy ; Steven A. Moore. Abingdon : Routledge, 2004. pp. 15-30

Bibtex

@inbook{b9429ca77b8445fe9f59be6ec9746dc7,
title = "Hybrid environments: the spaces of sustainable design",
abstract = "Farmer and Guy argue that despite the apparent consensus around key environmental issues it often seems less clear what factors might define or constitute a green building. They highlight some of the limitations of performance-based and ideological interpretations of sustainable architecture by exploring three recent building developments in the north east of England. Each of the three buildings they examine represents a situated design response to three very particular physical and development contexts. Similarly, each embodies a range of environmental innovations that make distinctive contributions to the development of more sustainable futures. Farmer and Guy suggest, that although these alternative technical strategies can be partially understood to conform to contrasting green values, they do not emerge simply from any preconceived definition of 'greenness'. Instead they are shaped through a merging of distinctive philosophies of green design, embedded in particular social and physical contexts. These diverse design strategies can therefore be understood to represent competing pathways towards sustainability. From this perspective, they argue, we can begin to view individual buildings as complex hybrids - situationally specific responses to the challenges of sustainability shaped by the widely differing motivations and competing social commitments of the actors involved in particular design and development processes.",
author = "Graham Farmer and Simon Guy",
year = "2004",
language = "English",
isbn = "9780415700450",
pages = "15--30",
editor = "Simon Guy and Moore, {Steven A.}",
booktitle = "Sustainable architectures",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Hybrid environments

T2 - the spaces of sustainable design

AU - Farmer, Graham

AU - Guy, Simon

PY - 2004

Y1 - 2004

N2 - Farmer and Guy argue that despite the apparent consensus around key environmental issues it often seems less clear what factors might define or constitute a green building. They highlight some of the limitations of performance-based and ideological interpretations of sustainable architecture by exploring three recent building developments in the north east of England. Each of the three buildings they examine represents a situated design response to three very particular physical and development contexts. Similarly, each embodies a range of environmental innovations that make distinctive contributions to the development of more sustainable futures. Farmer and Guy suggest, that although these alternative technical strategies can be partially understood to conform to contrasting green values, they do not emerge simply from any preconceived definition of 'greenness'. Instead they are shaped through a merging of distinctive philosophies of green design, embedded in particular social and physical contexts. These diverse design strategies can therefore be understood to represent competing pathways towards sustainability. From this perspective, they argue, we can begin to view individual buildings as complex hybrids - situationally specific responses to the challenges of sustainability shaped by the widely differing motivations and competing social commitments of the actors involved in particular design and development processes.

AB - Farmer and Guy argue that despite the apparent consensus around key environmental issues it often seems less clear what factors might define or constitute a green building. They highlight some of the limitations of performance-based and ideological interpretations of sustainable architecture by exploring three recent building developments in the north east of England. Each of the three buildings they examine represents a situated design response to three very particular physical and development contexts. Similarly, each embodies a range of environmental innovations that make distinctive contributions to the development of more sustainable futures. Farmer and Guy suggest, that although these alternative technical strategies can be partially understood to conform to contrasting green values, they do not emerge simply from any preconceived definition of 'greenness'. Instead they are shaped through a merging of distinctive philosophies of green design, embedded in particular social and physical contexts. These diverse design strategies can therefore be understood to represent competing pathways towards sustainability. From this perspective, they argue, we can begin to view individual buildings as complex hybrids - situationally specific responses to the challenges of sustainability shaped by the widely differing motivations and competing social commitments of the actors involved in particular design and development processes.

M3 - Chapter

SN - 9780415700450

SP - 15

EP - 30

BT - Sustainable architectures

A2 - Guy, Simon

A2 - Moore, Steven A.

PB - Routledge

CY - Abingdon

ER -