Monthly Archives: January 2010

Kettering, OH

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San Clemente, CA

San Clemente is a small hillside town in Southern California, set just off the Pacific Coast. Admittedly, it seems rather ordinary when compared to the numerous idyllic towns along Highway 1 (Carmel, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, San Diego, etc…). However it provides yet another example of the enduring value and charm of simple, vernacular [...]

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Palm Springs, CA

Palm Springs may be famous for its monotony of mid-20th century modernism, but prior to that passing fad the region was richly enhanced by Spanish architectural traditions. The style and character of Southern California’s Spanish missions were incorporated into buildings of many types throughout the region, reaching Palm Springs and beyond.

PALM SPRINGS IN PRINT

LOCATION

Palm Springs [...]

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#003 – The New Dignity: An Interview with Geoffrey Mouen (Full)

What exactly is the ‘New Dignity’? How does the ‘green’ zeitgeist fit into the practice of traditional architecture? What implications does economic recession have for architectural design?
In the New Urban Architect Podcast episode #3, architect Geoffrey Mouen expounds on these questions and more. This post contains the full interview.
The audio can also be directly accessed [...]

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#002 – The New Dignity: An Interview with Geoffrey Mouen

What exactly is the ‘New Dignity’? How does the ‘green’ zeitgeist fit into the practice of traditional architecture? What implications does economic recession have for architectural design?
In the New Urban Architect Podcast episode #2, architect Geoffrey Mouen expounds on these questions and more. This post contains an abridged version of the interview.
The audio can also [...]

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Redlands, CA

Like many towns across the country, the Redlands, California of today would be unrecognizable to a resident from 70 years ago. A good (but small) T5 urban core remains, as do several beautiful civic buildings. A few T3 and T4 residential streets remain intact, standing in stark contrast to the sprawling morass of tract homes [...]

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