The not so big house : a blueprint for the way we really live

by Susanka, Sarah.

Format: Print Book 2008
Availability: Available at 7 Libraries 8 of 9 copies
Available (8)
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CLP - Allegheny Non-Fiction Collection NA7125.S872 2008
Location  CLP - Allegheny
 
Collection  Non-Fiction Collection
 
Call Number  NA7125.S872 2008
 
 
CLP - Lawrenceville Non-Fiction Collection NA7125.S872 2008
Location  CLP - Lawrenceville
 
Collection  Non-Fiction Collection
 
Call Number  NA7125.S872 2008
 
 
CLP - Main Library Second Floor - Non-fiction NA7125.S872 2008
Location  CLP - Main Library
 
Collection  Second Floor - Non-fiction
 
Call Number  NA7125.S872 2008
 
 
CLP - Main Library Second Floor - Non-fiction NA7125.S872 2008
Location  CLP - Main Library
 
Collection  Second Floor - Non-fiction
 
Call Number  NA7125.S872 2008
 
 
Northern Tier Regional Library Nonfiction 728 SUSAN
Location  Northern Tier Regional Library
 
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Call Number  728 SUSAN
 
 
Oakmont Carnegie Library Non-Fiction 728.37 SU
Location  Oakmont Carnegie Library
 
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Sewickley Public Library Nonfiction 728.37 SUS 2008
Location  Sewickley Public Library
 
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Call Number  728.37 SUS 2008
 
 
Upper St. Clair Township Library DIY Home 728.37 SUS
Location  Upper St. Clair Township Library
 
Collection  DIY Home
 
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CLP - Squirrel Hill Non-Fiction Collection CHECKED OUT
Location  CLP - Squirrel Hill
 
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Summary

Ten years ago, Sarah Susanka started a revolution in home design with a deceptively simple message: quality should always come before quantity. Now, the book that celebrated that bold declaration is back in this special 10th anniversary edition featuring a new introduction and 16 additional pages that explore three new homes.

Nearly a quarter-million people bought this ground-breaking book when it was published in Fall 1998. Since then, the book's simple message -- that quality should come before quantity -- has started a movement in home design. Homeowners now know to expect more. And the people responsible for building our homes have also gotten the message. Architects and builders around the country report clients showing up with dog-eared copies of The Not So Big House, pages marked to a favorite section.

Why are we drawn more to smaller, more personal spaces than to larger, more expansive ones? Why do we spend more time in the kitchen than we do in the formal dining room? The Not So Big House proposes clear, workable guidelines for creating homes that serve both our spiritual needs and our material requirements, whether for a couple with no children, a family, empty nesters, or one person alone.

In 1999, Sarah Susanka was then architect and principal with Mulfinger, Susanka, Mahady & Partners, the firm selected to design the 1999 Life Dream House brought Frank Lloyd Wright's same common-sense, human-scale design principles to our generation. Consider which rooms in your house you use and enjoy most, and you have a sense of the essential principles of The Not So Big House. Whether you seek comfort and calm or activity and energy at home, The Not So Big House offers a place for every mood.

Contents
Introduction to the second edition
Introduction
Bigger isn't better
Rethinking the house
Making not so big work
Lifestyles of the not so rich and famous
Dreams, details, and dollars
The house of the future
The not so big house : 10 years on.

Published Reviews
Booklist Review: "Fifty years after Life magazine commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright to build a dream house, a similar event is taking place--this time under the tutelage of a Twin Cities' architect. Having examined our homes and found most of them wanting, she argues for a not so big house, one that is comfortable, promotes quality over quantity, and expresses the owners' whims and preferences. That goal is not an easy one to achieve, considering that many Americans have succumbed to the Versailles complex--that is, bigger is better. Nonetheless, through a combination of eloquent thought and visual examples, Susanka succeeds. Her tips include building an "away" room, a retreat from a home's hubbub. Readers will find her chapter on building from scratch particularly enlightening, as are her unfortunately too abbreviated musings on future homes. (Reviewed October 1, 1998)1561581305Barbara Jacobs"
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Additional Information
Subjects Architecture, Domestic -- Psychological aspects.
Space (Architecture)
Interior architecture -- Psychological aspects.
Publisher Newtown, CT :Taunton Press,2008
Edition Expanded ed., 10th anniversary ed., [2nd ed.].
Contributors Obolensky, Kira.
Language English
Description xi, 227 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 27 cm
Bibliography Notes Includes bibliographical references (page [221]) and index.
ISBN 9781600850479
1600850472
9781600851506
1600851509
Other Classic View