6,000 Years of Housing
Revised and Expanded Edition
Norbert Schoenauer
Praise for 6,000 Years of Housing:
“…illustrations complement Schoenauer’s easy-to-read writing style that makes the book accessible not only to the architectural community—bothacademic and professional—but to anyone with a passion for housing form its architectural, historical, or cultural aspect. Of particular interest to preservationists is Schoenauer’s understanding of vernacular forms, materials, and building techniques and how he applied this knowledge to projects. Throughout the book, issues are exptressed clearly, and details serve a larger ocntext.”
––Elizabeth MacKenzie, MAIBC, in
APT Bulletin: The Journal of Preservation Technology
“Provides a sweeping view of the subject. It's an encyclopedic reference
that could be useful for architects, city planners, teachers and anyone who
enjoys reading about architectural history.”
—Period Homes
Overview

'[T]his fascinating survey...any designer or builder who deals with housing would find a use for this book.' Fine Homebuilding
'This is as essential reference to anyone in the field of housing, beautifully illustrated in the hand of the author.' Moshe Safdie, and Associates, Inc.
Part architecture, part history, and part anthropology, this encyclopedic book limns the story of housing around the world from the pre-urban dwellings of nomadic, semi-nomadic, and sedentary agricultural societies to the present. Ancient urban dwellings were inward-looking, ranged around a courtyard. Until fairly recently, these dwelling types survived in indigenous urban house forms in the Islamic world, India, China, and the Iberian peninsula and Latin America. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, however, outward-looking house forms replaced the ancient form in most of Europe and the New World.
In the Middle Ages houses served both as homes and as places of work, but gradually the domestic and business lives of the inhabitants became separate. In the wake of the Industrial Revolution, profound changes in the residential development of the western world occurred: housing became segregated along socioeconomic lines and dwelling types polarized, with low-density, single-family houses at one extreme, and tall, high-density, multifamily tenements and apartments at the other. Side effects of America’s automobile-intensive suburban dream housing include inefficient land use, pollution, and urban decay. 6,000 Years of Housing chronicles how this came about, and suggests solutions based on a rich variety of historical precedents.

About the Author
Norbert Schoenauer, an architect and town planner, was William C. Macdonald Emeritus Professor of Architecture at McGill University. In addition to prizes in national architectural competitions, he received the Médaille du Mérite (1995) of the Quebec Order of Architects and the 1999 Distinguished Professor Award of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.
ISBN: 0-393-73120-0
July, 2003
352 pages; 500 line drawings
Hardcover