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Fredric Snitzer Gallery THE ART SHOW 18 - Art Dealers of America Association James Wines - Exhibition of Drawings & Models for SITE Park Avenue Armory - Park Ave. & 67 th Street, New York City February 28 to March 4, 2019 Descriptions of Projects in the Exhibition For information please contact: [email protected] SITE New York • 25 Maiden Lane, New York, NY 10038 • Tel.212/ 285-0120 • Contact: [email protected] • www.SITEnewyork.com

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FredricSnitzer GalleryTHEARTSHOW18- ArtDealersofAmericaAssociationJamesWines- ExhibitionofDrawings& ModelsforSITE

ParkAvenueArmory- ParkAve.&67th Street,NewYorkCityFebruary28toMarch4,2019

DescriptionsofProjectsintheExhibition

Forinformationpleasecontact:[email protected]

SITENewYork•25MaidenLane,NewYork,NY10038• Tel.212/285-0120•Contact:[email protected] •www.SITEnewyork.com

Information  on  James  Wines,  President  of  SITE  New  YorkProfessor  of  Architecture  at  Penn  State  University

James  Wines,  winner  of  the  Smithsonian  Institution’s  2013  National  Design  Award  for  Lifetime  Achievement,  is  an  architectural  designer,  visual  artist,  and  writer.    He  is  also  a  professor  of  architecture  at  Penn  State  University,  with  a  teaching  emphasis  on  integrative  arts.    Educated  at  Syracuse  University,  he  is  the  founder   (in  1970)  of  SITE  New  York   -­‐ a  multi-­‐disciplinary  practice  that  includes  buildings,  public  spaces,  master  plans,  landscapes,  environmental  art  works,  interiors,  exhibition  designs,  video  productions,  graphics,  and  product  designs.   The  main  focus  of  his  work  is  on  aesthetic,  sociological  and  environmental  concerns   in  the  building  arts.    As  SITE’s  continuing  President  and  Creative  Director,  he  has  designed  and  built  more  than  one  hundred  and  fifty  art/architectural  projects  in  the  USA,  Italy,  France,  England,  Austria,  Canada,  Spain,  Qatar,  Turkey,  Dubai,  China,  and  Japan.    Professor  Wines  has  delivered  lectures  at  eight  hundred  colleges,  universities,  and  professional  conferences  in  fifty-­‐seven  countries  and  written  seven  books;   including  DE-­‐ARCHITECTURE  (Rizzoli  International)  1987  and  GREEN  ARCHITECTURE  (TaschenVerlag)  2000.    In  addition,  there  have  been  twenty-­‐two  monographs  and  museum  catalogues  published  on  his  drawings  and  projects  for  SITE.    Winner  of  twenty-­‐five  art  and  design  awards  -­‐including  the  1995  Chrysler  Award  for  Design  Innovation   (USA)  and  the  2011  ANCE  Award  for  an  International  Architect  (Italy),  James  Wines  was  honored   in  2002  with  a  large  retrospective  exhibition  at  the  Centre  FRAC  in  France,  jointly  sponsored  by  Centre  Pompidou   in  Paris  and  the  Museé des  Beaux  Arts  in  Orleans.    His  graphic  work  has  been  shown  in  more  than  one  hundred  and  fifty  museums  and  galleries  in  the  USA,  Europe,  and  Asia.    The  most  recent  exhibition  of  his  drawings,  bridging  from  1970  to  the  present,  was  on  view  during  the  winter  of    2013    at  the  Atrium  Gallery,  City  College  of  New  York.    Drawings  and  models  can  be  found  in  numerous  public  and  private  collections,  including  the  Museum  of  Modern  Art,  Metropolitan  Museum  of  Art,  Whitney  Museum,  Centre  Pompidou,  FRAC,  Louvre,  Victoria  and  Albert  Museum,  Australian  National  Gallery,  Tokyo  National  Gallery,  Art  Institute  of  Chicago  and  others.    Professor  Wines  lives  in  the  SoHo section  of  New  York  City,  with  his  design  studio  located  in  the  Wall  Street  area.    Among  recent  projects,  he  has  been  working  on  restaurants  in  the  USA,  a  business  club  and  Confucian  cemetery  in  Korea,  a  water  science  center  in  Saudi  Arabia  and  a  ‘Vertiscape’  tower,  composed  of  multi-­‐level  public  parks,  in  India.    He  continues  to  research  the  integrative  arts,  environmental  issues  in  architecture,  theories  of  public  space  and  writes  on  these  subjects  for  design  publications  internationally.   A  book  on  his  collected  essays  and  drawings  will  be  published  by  Deleyva Editore in  Italy,  spring  of  2017.  To  contact:    e-­‐mail    [email protected] or  [email protected] cell:    917/  754-­‐6748        NYC  office  tel;  212/  285-­‐0120

Indeterminate   Façade  Building   -­‐ BEST  Products   Co.  -­‐ SITE  New  York  – Houston,   Texas  -­‐ 1975  

SITE is  an  architecture  and  environmental  arts  organization,  founded  by  James  Wines  in  1970  for  the  design  of  buildings,  public  art  works,  parks,  gardens,  plazas,  interiors,  products  and  exhibitions.    The  philosophy  of  the  studio  is  based  on  ‘integrative  thinking’  -­‐ a  fusion  of  art,  architecture  and  context  as  key  elements  in  a  unified  vision.    In  response  to  the  current  age  of  information  and  ecology,  SITE  is  committed  to  expanding  the  interpretation  of  ‘green  design’  by  combining  energy  conservation  with  improved  architectural  communication  for  both  urban  and  suburban  situations.    To  reflect  this  objective,  the  firm’s  projects  include  a  continuing  exploration  of  social,  psychological  and  ecological  sources  of  ideas  in  the  public  domain.    Part  of  this  mission  is  a  conceptual  approach  where  buildings  and  their  surroundings  are  no  longer  designed  as  isolated  objects  sitting  in the  environment.    Instead,  they  are  interpreted  more  inclusively  as the  environment.  

BEST  Forest  Building  -­‐ BEST  Products  Co  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ commercial  architecture  -­‐ Richmond,  VA  -­‐ brick,  concrete,  ground  cover  and  existing  forest  -­‐ 1978    This  retail-­‐merchandising  center  was  designed   as  part  of  a  series  of  BEST  Products   Company  buildings,   completed  between  1972  to  1984.   In  this  case,  the  structure  preserves   and  celebrates  the  natural  context  by  creating  an  ‘inside/outside’   architectural  environment.    Located  in  a  densely  wooded   suburban  area,  the  store  is  carefully  planned  to  preserve  the  maximum  number  of  trees,  bushes,   plants  and  ground  cover  by  allowing  the  forest  to  penetrate  and  envelop  the  building.    A  glass  terrarium  wall  reveals  the  underground   geology  of  the  hillside   site.    As  an  ensemble   visual   experience,  these  features  create  the  appearance  of  architecture  in  the  process  of  being  consumed  by  ‘nature’s  revenge.’  

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BEST  Rainforest  Building  -­‐ BEST  Products  Co.  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ commercial  architecture  -­‐ Hialeah,  FL  -­‐ concrete,  glass,  water,  vegetation  and  landscape  -­‐1979      This   retail  center  is  the  sixth  in  a  series  of  special  buildings   for  the  BEST  Products  Company.    It  is  also  one  of  the  first  to  incorporate  the  natural  environment  as  an  intrinsic  element.    The  exterior  is  constructed  as  a  microcosm  of  the  surrounding   landscape  – as  a  ‘living   iconography’   – by  enclosing   the  natural  elements  behind   glass  and  a  continuous   flow  of  water  from  the  roof  level.   The  blurred   impressions   of  the  BEST  logo  and  plant  life,  as  seen  through  the  refraction  of  water,  become  an  example  of  mutable  and  evolutionary   architecture.    The  building   also  represents  an  early  use  of  vegetation  and  re-­‐cycled  water  as  cooling   elements,  which  led  to  the  SITE studio’s   increasing  commitment  to  green  design.

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BEST  Cutler  Ridge  (jigsaw  puzzle)  Building  -­‐ BEST  Products  Co.  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ commercial  architecture  -­‐ Cutler  Ridge,  FL    concrete  block.  glass  and  steel  -­‐ 1979      This  retail  merchandising   center  is  the  fifth  in  a  series  of  special  buildings   for  the  BEST  Products  Company.    The  jig-­‐saw  puzzle-­‐like  structure  is  designed  for  long-­‐distance  visibility   from  a  nearby  highway.    The  façade is  fragmented  into  four  successive   reductions   that,  from  certain  views,   collectively   overlap  in  space  to  form  the  standard  ‘big  box’  store.    By    allowing  customers  to  relate  to  these  parts  at  different  scale  references,  the  free-­‐standing  segments  also  create  the  appearance  of    ‘surrealist  architecture’  by  taking  advantage  of  the  contrasting  sun  and  shadow  in  this  region  of  Florida.        

Project   model

BEST  Terrarium  Building  -­‐ BEST  Products  Co.  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ commercial  architecture  -­‐ Daly  City,  CA  -­‐ concrete  block,  glass,  steel,  earth,  rocks  and  regional  vegetation  -­‐ 1978        This  merchandising   facility  is  part  of  a  series  of  nine  BEST  Products  stores,  completed  between  1972  to  1984.    It  is  designed  for  a  highly  visible   plateau,  surrounded  by  mountainous   landscape   in  South  San  Francisco.    The  concept  proposes   installing  a  full  façade  enclosure  in  glass  on  three  sides,   filled  with  the  volume  of  earth  excavated  during  foundation  preparations.    The  intention  is  to  transform  the  geological  strata  -­‐ plus  a  roof  supporting   a  mixture  of  earth  and  regional  vegetation  – into    a  living   and  constantly  evolving   iconography  for  the  finished  building.  .    

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Ghost  Parking  Lot  -­‐ National  Shopping  Centers  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ commercial  public  space  -­‐ Hamden,  CT  -­‐ automobiles,  concrete,  steel  and  asphalt -­‐ 1977      Twenty  automobiles   are  buried   under  an  asphalt  parking  lot  at  graduated  levels  of  exposure,   from  full  revelation  of  the  car  bodies   to  slightly  visible   contours  just  above  the  paving  surface.    Contrary  to  the  conventional   installation  of  ‘sculptural  objects’   as  decorative  accessories  to  buildings   and  plazas  in the  environment,   this  project  interprets  public  art as  the  environment.    This  collage  of  vehicles   takes  advantage  of  people’s   subliminal   response   to  the  ritual-­‐like  context  of  parked  cars  and  shopping  mall  merchandising.    Also,   unlike  public   art  conceived   from  a  private  art  perspective,  this  totally  integrative  work  cannot  be  removed  or  exhibited   apart  from  its  surroundings   without  a  total  loss  of  meaning.

Under   construction

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Frankfurt  Museum  of  Modern  Art  -­‐ Frankfurt  Municipality  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ museum  architecture  -­‐ Frankfurt,  Germany  -­‐ brick,  steel,  glass  and  concrete  -­‐1983      The  museum  concept  responds   to  a  triangular  site,  defined  by  several  partially  destroyed  buildings  from  World  War  II.    The  solution   includes   an  adaptive  re-­‐use  of  existing  fragments  and  their  integration  into  a  new  structure.    Built  mainly  of  glass  and  masonry.   as  a  rectangular  building,   it  is  defined  by  an  intrusion   of  the  triangle.    This  collision   of  formal  strategies  requires  cutting  away  a  section  of  the  east  façade,  allowing  the  floor  planes   to  break  off  in  space  and  extending  the  interior  floor  surface  into  the  street.    These  fragmented  tiers  provide   inside/outside   galleries  and  a  unique  means  of  displaying   outdoor  sculpture.  

World  War  II  architectural   fragments  in  the  site  area,  integrated   with  the  project  

Axon  diagram  of  the  concept

Ground   floor   planIntersection   of  the  steel  grid  walland  a  typical  interior   stairway

Public  Administration  Town  -­‐ City  of  Seoul,  South  Korea  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ urban  planning,  civic  architecture  and  public  space  (competition  entry)  -­‐ Nam-­‐myeon,  South  Korea  -­‐ wood,  steel,  glass,  concrete,  tile,  regional  landscape  -­‐ 2007        The  City  of  Seoul  sponsored   an  international  architectural  competition   to  design  a  master  plan  and  selected  public  buildings   for  a  new  government  center  in  Nam-­‐myeon.    With  the  intention  of  re-­‐locating  most  civic  offices  and  employees,   the  program  designated  a  town  for  five  hundred   thousand   inhabitants  – eighty-­‐eight  percent  employed   in  public   administration.    The  SITE  project  proposes   a  ‘garden  city,’  reflective  of  the  surrounding   mountainous   terrain  and  the  client’s   request  for  an  ‘iconic,   networking  and  integrative  place.’

Site  area  in  the  Jangnam Plain  -­‐ Nam-­‐myeon

Central   city  plan  -­‐ third   versionConference   Center   -­‐ Plaza  with   Sotdae towers

Site  plan  3  -­‐ inclusion   of  existing  roadways Overview  of  the  town  center   with  civic  offices,  retail,   housing,   city  park  and  plaza    

‘Inverted  mountain’   imagery  for  civic  buildings  

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Theater  of  the  New  City  -­‐ TNC  Foundation  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ theater  +  marquee  design  +  adaptive  re-­‐use  of  an  existing  building  -­‐ New  York,  NY  -­‐ theater  seats,  track  lights.  steel  and  concrete  -­‐ project  model  -­‐ 1996         The  TNC’s   three  theaters  occupy  a  former  retail  market  building   on  First  Avenue.    As  part  of  the  adaptive  re-­‐use  of  this  existing  structure,  the  façade  is  conceived   as  an  architectural  interpretation  of  Samuel  Beckett’s  recurrent  ‘absence  of  presence’  theme  in  his  plays.    Constructed   as  a  fusion ofbalcony  and  marquee,  multiple  rows  of  seats  (including   theater-­‐goers’  hats,  coats.  handbags   and  playbills)   transform  the  spatial  vacuum  of  the  missing   audience  during  intermission   into  an  iconic  part  of  the  streetscape  experience.

Theater  seats  during   intermission   – transformed   into   the  TNC  façade  marquee  

Existing  market  building

Windsor  Waterfront  Park  -­‐ City  of  Windsor  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ architecture,  public  space  and  landscape  -­‐Windsor,  Canada  steel,  concrete,  brick,  water,  glass,  landscape  -­‐ 1993        The  unifying   theme  for  this  waterfront  park  is  ‘Gateway  to  Canada.’    The  plan  accommodates  a  scientific/educational   center,  dedicated  to  the  subjects   of  environmental   responsibility,   local  history  and  the  variety  of  Canadian  landscape.    To  celebrate  national  diversity,   the  entire  length  of  the  site  is  segmented  into  a  series  of  interactive,  ribbon-­‐like,   bands  that  include  parks,  public   spaces,  horticultural  displays;   plus   buildings   for  an  aquarium,  conservatory,   ecological  study  center,  restaurant,  theater  and  general  commercial  facility.    The  hillside   topography  of  the  waterfront  is  used  to  define  the  shape  and  function  of  each  banded   section.                .    

GeojaeHotel  and  Conference  Center  -­‐ Daewoo  Shipbuilding  Corporation -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ architecture  and  landscape  design  -­‐ Okpo-­‐Dong  in  GeojaeCity,  South  Korea  -­‐ concrete,  brick,  glass,  wood,  steel,  funicular  transport  system  and  regional  landscape  -­‐ 2009      This  resort  and  business   hotel  is  located  near  the  sea  on  the  lower  elevation  of  a  heavily  wooded  mountainside  in  the  South  Gyeongsang Province.      Designed  as  a  site-­‐specific   complex,   the  shapes   of  the  buildings   and  outdoor  recreational  spaces  reflect  the  physical   technology  of  the  nearby  shipbuilding   factories  – including   piers,  cranes,  warehouses  and  cruise  liner  berths.    These  maritime  inspired   elements  are  integrated  with  the  regional  topography,  providing  a  series   of  ‘woodland   piers’  as  multi-­‐level   pedestrian  walkways  through  the  heavily   forested  terrain.      

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Daewoo  Shipyard  and  site  area Site  plan

Isuzu  Space  Station,  Children’s  Plaza  -­‐ Isuzu  Corporation  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ public  space  -­‐ Yokohama,  Japan  -­‐ concrete  paving,  automobiles  &  fiberglass  castings  of  people  -­‐ 1989      Isuzu  Motors  and  Japan  Railway  sponsored   this  children’s   plaza  in  front  of  the  Yokohama’s   Sakuragicho  Train  Station.    The  project  was  commissioned   to  celebrate  the  links   between  people,   ground  transportation  and  space  exploration.    Since  venturing  into  the  cosmos   is  closely   associated  with  an  absence  of  gravity,  the  plaza  plane  supports   an  inverted  world  of  people  and  Isuzu  vehicles.    To  achieve  this  effect,  the  lower  bodies   and  legs  of  a  large  number  of  Yokohama  residents   have  been  cast  from  life  in  fiberglass,  then  installed  in  a  reversed  position.    The  intention  is  to  create the  illusion   of  an  invisible  walking  surface,  suspended   above  the  actual  plaza  level.    In  order  to  enhance  this  surreal  dimension,   all  of  the  human  figures,   automobiles,   bicycles,   street  furniture  and  tree  roots  are  monochrome   gray  to  match  the  color  of  the  paving.

Example  of  the  in-­‐process    casting  of  people’s   legs  and  feet  into  fiberglass  

Gwa-­‐cheon  Club  -­‐ Gwa-­‐cheon Business  Salon  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ hospitality  architecture  -­‐ Seoul,  South  Korea  -­‐wood,  steel  glass,  concrete  and  regional  vegetation  -­‐2011        This  three  story  building   houses   South   Korea’s  most  prestigious   business   club.  The  structure  is  designed   as  a  series  of  five  interlocking  and  rotated  architectural  units.    Each  section  is  based  on  Buddhism’s   five  elements  of  nature -­‐ wood,   fire,  earth,  metal,  and  water  -­‐ extended  to  the  roof  garden  plan  as  well.    The  unifying  material  elements  are  flat  horizontal  wood  beams,  with  the  thin  edge  facing  outward.    All  windows   and  entryways  are  fragmented  wall  incisions.

Site  area  in  Gwa-­‐cheon district                                Building   plan  -­‐ integration   of  existing  conditions                                                                                    

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World  Ecology  Pavilion  -­‐ Expo  92  Seville  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ Exposition  architecture  -­‐ Seville,  Spain  -­‐ brick,  steel,  glass,  concrete,  earth,  rock  and  landscape  -­‐1992      The  intention  of  this  Expo  92  pavilion   is  to  celebrate  all  nations’   participation  in  the  international  environmental  initiative.    As  a  response   to  the  Expo's  theme  of  ‘discovery,’   the  building   is  designed   as  a  microcosm  of  the  typical  landscape  and  terrain  associated  with  the  seven  continents.    The  configuration  is  defined  by  a  row  of  parallel,  ribbon-­‐like,   structures  that  function  as  verdant  canopies,   enclosures   for  exhibitions,   shade   cover  for  a  plaza  and  an  acoustical  band  shell   over  an  outdoor  theater.    The  interior  exhibitions   show  various   contexts  where  visitors   can  relate  to  both  the  surface  and  interior  geology  of  the  earth.  

Shinwa  Hotel  and  Ski  Resort  -­‐ Shinwa  Corporation  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ hospitality  architecture  &  landscape  -­‐Kisokomo-­‐Kogen,  Japan  -­‐ concrete,  glass,  steel,  wood,  regional  landscape  -­‐1990      This  resort  hotel,  located  on  a  semi-­‐circular  property  in  Northern  Japan,  is  designed   as  a  site-­‐specific   ensemble   of  radiating  entertainment,  residential  and  commercial  facilities.    The  sun  ray-­‐like  configuration,  with  its  large  entry  plaza  and  variety  of  landscaped  roof  planes,   relates  directly  to  the  heavily  forested  mountains  and  surrounding   valley.    When  viewed  from  approach  roads,   the  entire  ski  resort  seems  to  have  grown  organically  out  of  its  context.  These  buildings   also  provide   summer/winter  climate  control,  as  a  benefit   of  their  earth-­‐shelter  insulation.        .    

Gwa-­‐cheon  Club  -­‐ Gwa-­‐cheon Business  Salon  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ hospitality  architecture  -­‐ Seoul,  South  Korea  -­‐wood,  steel  glass,  concrete  and  regional  vegetation  -­‐2011        This  three  story  building   houses   South   Korea’s  most  prestigious   business   club.  The  structure  is  designed   as  a  series  of  five  interlocking  and  rotated  architectural  units.    Each  section  is  based  on  Buddhism’s   five  elements  of  nature -­‐ wood,   fire,  earth,  metal,  and  water  -­‐ extended  to  the  roof  garden  plan  as  well.    The  unifying  material  elements  are  flat  horizontal  wood  beams,  with  the  thin  edge  facing  outward.    All  windows   and  entryways  are  fragmented  wall  incisions.

Site  area  in  Gwa-­‐cheon district                                Building   plan  -­‐ integration   of  existing  conditions                                                                                    

Denny’s  Flagship  Restaurant  -­‐Denny’s  Corporation  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ restaurant  architecture  -­‐ Las  Vegas,  NV  -­‐ aluminum,  steel  and  glass  -­‐ 2012      The  purpose  of  this  project  is  to  re-­‐shape  Denny’s   international  image  for  the  21st Century,  without  losing  the  recognizable  features  of  its  classic   diner  history.    To  achieve  a  special  identity  within  the  Neonopolis shopping   center,  the  restaurant  façade  is  wrapped  in  an  undulating,   egg-­‐yellow,  aluminum  sheath  – creating  both  a  unique   form  of  Las  Vegas  signage  and  a  building  within  a  building.    The  linear  elements  also  include   a  continuous   flow  of  grid-­‐like  fragmentation,  as  a  way  of  visually  celebrating  Denny’s   ‘original  social  network’  legacy  of  hospitality   in  today’s  world  of  digitally  connected  people.    

Serpentine  Pavilion  -­‐ Serpentine  Gallery  -­‐ James  Wines  &  SITE  -­‐ temporary  museum  pavilion  -­‐ London,  UK  – steel,  metal  scrim,  tile,  aluminum,  regional  vegetation  -­‐ 2016      This  concept  for  Serpentine  Pavilion  2017  treats  the  entire  structure  as  a  site-­‐specific  extension  of  its  own  context.    A ‘lifted   landscape’   emerges  out  of  the  grass-­‐covered  environment  on  the  east  lawn  and  rises   to  a  height  of  five-­‐plus  meters.      A  unifying   steel  frame  supports   a  metamorphic,  collage-­‐like  fusion  of  vegetation  covered  surfaces,  opaque   tile  and  aluminum  modules   and  perforated  metal  ceiling  panels.    To  enhance  the  project’s   evolutionary   qualities,   all  of  these  elements  gradually  mutate  into  scrim  elements  as  the  roof  plane  reaches  its  highest  point  of  transparency  against  the  sky.    

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Site  area   -­‐Serpentine  Gallery   façade,with  adjacent  expanse  of  lawn  

Lifted  landscape  with  metamorphicroof  collage  

Selection  of  monographic   books  and  museum  catalogues  on   the  work  of  SITE  -­‐ 1978  to  2008

SITE,  Identity  in  Density  -­‐ Images  -­‐ 2004         SITE  -­‐ Edilstampa -­‐ 2008  

Books  by  James  Wines                                                                             Monographs  on  SITE  -­‐ 2004  and  2008

ON  SITE  •  ON  ENERGYScribners and Sons - 1974

DE-­‐ARCHITECTURE  -­‐ Rizzoli   Intl.  -­‐ 1987

GREEN  ARCHITECTURETaschen Verlag -­‐ 2000