Garden

Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin Architects

Contributions by Stephen Bates, Daniel Ganz, Martin Steinmann

29,00

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The garden, a recurring motif in the work of Zurich-based Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin Architects, features prominently in many of their architectural projects as idea, vision, or built space. Garden evokes a gallery-size garden’s intensity and constructedness: an arcane reflection by Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin Architects

Education, Landscape / Urbanism
Description
In their exhibition Garten at Architektur Galerie Berlin in fall 2016, the architects foregrounded that topos and, in collaboration with Swiss landscape designer Daniel Ganz, transformed the gallery space into a living garden. The eponymous booklet features this temporary installation and offers an insight into its making in striking photographs by Jan Bitter and Roland Bernath. Essays by Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin and Stephen Bates and a conversation with the architects by Martin Steinmann explore the meaning of the garden in a selection of their projects also from a historical and theoretical perspective.
Author

Edelaar Mosayebi Inderbitzin Architekten was founded 2005 by Ron Edelaar, born 1976, Elli Mosayebi, born 1977, and Christian Inderbitzin, born 1977, in Zurich. The firm’s broad scope of work encompasses design and realization of building projects, urban planning, exhibitions and publications. Housing is a key interest in their research, teaching, and practice.
Stephen Bates, born 1964, is a founding partner of Sergison Bates Architects in London and Zurich. He also teaches as a professor of urbanism and housing at Technical University of Munich.
Martin Steinmann, born 1942, architect, he has taught as a visiting professor at MIT, at EPFL in Lausanne, and at various schools of architecture. He has been an editor with archithese magazine 1980-86, and has published widely on modern and contemporary architecture.

Notes

23 color, 2 b/w 

72 pages, 25 illustrations
Paperback, 23x29 cm
English
Park Books, 1st edition 2017
ISBN 9783038600794