Architecture Follows Fish

An Amphibious History of the North Atlantic

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A highly original exploration of the history of architecture in relation to fish, shedding light on the connection between marine environments and terrestrial landscapes.

Architecture Follows Fish is set in the North Atlantic, and its protagonist is fish. In this book author and architect André Tavares explores the notion of fishing architecture, a concept coined to describe architectural practices that are spawned by fisheries. To encompass the scope of fishing architecture, and to establish the connections between marine ecology and architectural practice, the book oscillates between different continents, centuries, and species. Fisheries are unique, and this book sheds light on that uniqueness through an articulated narrative and a wealth of iconography.

Up until now there has been no history of architecture from the perspective of fish, although there are counterparts for meat, timber, oil, and many other industries. Tavares provides a counternarrative to the traditional history of marine environments, which tends to focus on water ecosystems, and instead forms a bridge between what happens at sea and what happens on land. The hope is that, after reading this book, readers will better understand life in the sea in relation to urban growth and terrestrial landscapes.
André Tavares is an architect, Founding Director of Dafne Editora, and a researcher in the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Porto where he leads the project Fishing Architecture. He was chief cocurator of the 2016 Lisbon Architecture Triennale, The Form of Form, and is the author of the books The Anatomy of the Architectural Book and Vitruvius Without Text.
Additional Selling Points
Prologue
1 The Cove and the Surf
2 The Whale and the Shore
3 The Harbour and the Factory
4 The Salt and the Freezer
5 The Lugger and the City
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index
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additional book photo
additional book photo
additional book photo
additional book photo

About

A highly original exploration of the history of architecture in relation to fish, shedding light on the connection between marine environments and terrestrial landscapes.

Architecture Follows Fish is set in the North Atlantic, and its protagonist is fish. In this book author and architect André Tavares explores the notion of fishing architecture, a concept coined to describe architectural practices that are spawned by fisheries. To encompass the scope of fishing architecture, and to establish the connections between marine ecology and architectural practice, the book oscillates between different continents, centuries, and species. Fisheries are unique, and this book sheds light on that uniqueness through an articulated narrative and a wealth of iconography.

Up until now there has been no history of architecture from the perspective of fish, although there are counterparts for meat, timber, oil, and many other industries. Tavares provides a counternarrative to the traditional history of marine environments, which tends to focus on water ecosystems, and instead forms a bridge between what happens at sea and what happens on land. The hope is that, after reading this book, readers will better understand life in the sea in relation to urban growth and terrestrial landscapes.

Author

André Tavares is an architect, Founding Director of Dafne Editora, and a researcher in the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Porto where he leads the project Fishing Architecture. He was chief cocurator of the 2016 Lisbon Architecture Triennale, The Form of Form, and is the author of the books The Anatomy of the Architectural Book and Vitruvius Without Text.

Table of Contents

Additional Selling Points
Prologue
1 The Cove and the Surf
2 The Whale and the Shore
3 The Harbour and the Factory
4 The Salt and the Freezer
5 The Lugger and the City
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index

Photos

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additional book photo
additional book photo
additional book photo
additional book photo