Course Research Guide

48-200: Architecture Design Studio: Composition

Project 2: Observation / Structure
Project 3: Building Analysis (house or museum)
Project 4: Single-Artist Annex


Site / Landscape / Schenley Park

Reference Resources


Buildings and Architects


Research Tips

  • Know what you are looking for. Many architects, buildings, and locations are known by multiple names. Terms like house / residence / villa / casa may be used inconsistantly. Be certain that you are spelling your search terms correctly in the most-appropriate language. Try name variations.

  • Choose your search terms carefully, and try different combinations. Search using the most distinctive words and leave out common words. Try connecting words with <and>.

  • Expand your search strategy. For example, try searching by the name of a building. Then try searching for broader or related topics such as the name of the architect, the building's city or country, its building type, its time period, etc. For additional insight research a building's client, its setting, its materials, etc. This information will help you to better understand a building within its context.

  • Look for clues to additional sources. As you find and use each source, look for additional keywords that you might not have thought of, examine lists of projects and back-of-the-book indexes, and look for citations in bibliographies and footnotes. Carefully record all of your sources (see Citations).

  • Use Library Catalogs to look for books. See especially Cameo. Note that not many buildings have entire books written about them, and a library catalog may or may not mention a building if it is part of a book with a broader topic.

  • Use Article Databases to look for articles. Articles often provide the best information about individual buildings. See especially the Avery Index to Architectural Periodicals.

  • Use Reference Resources to look for basic information about prominent architects and buildings . See especially Encyclopedias and Collections.

  • Many architects and buildings are readily searchable on the free Web. Note, however, that information on the Web can be limited and unreliable, and must be evaluated carefully. Many web sites are compiled by students or fans, and architects' own sites are self-promotional. You may have to look elsewhere for in-depth information, critical evaluation, and specific drawings and images.

  • Drawings and other images may be found in all of the sources mentioned above. Try also books and databases that specialize in Drawings and Images of Buildings.

Houses


Research Tips

  • Use Cameo to look for books using the following search terms and the Subject search button:
    • house
    • houses
    • domestic architecture
  • Browse books with call numbers 728, especially 728.37, in the STACKS-4 and OVRSZQ-4 locations.

Reference Resources

  • Davies, Colin. Key Houses of the Twentieth Century: Plans, Sections and Elevations. New York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2006.
    HUNT FA-REF-4 NA7126 .D38 2006
    MUS-OFC-4 NA7126 .D38 2006 DISC

    Plans, section, and elevation drawings of key twentieth-century houses. Book is accompanied by a CD-ROM with the drawings as .eps and .dxf files.

  • Dunster, David. Key Buildings of the Twentieth Century. 2 vols. New York: Rizzoli, 1985; London: Butterworth Architecture, 1990.
    HUNT FA-REF-4 NA680 .D86 1985
    Documents major 20th-century buildings in plans drawn to the same scale (1:250). The two volumes are: Houses, 1900-1944, and Houses, 1945-1989.

  • Houses
    Key books about
    houses and house design.

Museums


Research Tips

  • Use Cameo to look for books using the following search terms and the Subject search button:
    • museums
    • museum architecture
  • Browse books with call numbers 727.6 and 727.7 in the STACKS-4 and OVRSZQ-4 locations.

Reference Resources

  • Naredi-Rainer, Paul v. Museum Buildings: A Design Manual. Basel; Boston: Birkhäuser, 2004.
    HUNT FA-REF-4
    NA6690 .N37 2004

  • Rosenblatt, Arthur. Building Type Basics for Museums. New York: J. Wiley, 2001.
    HUNT FA-REF-4 NA6690 .R67 2001

Contemporary Artists


Research Tips

Research Specialist
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Martin Aurand
Architecture Librarian and Archivist
Hunt Library 410
(412) 268-8165
ma1f@andrew.cmu.edu


Feel free to contact me with questions or make an appointment for a research consultation.

   COURSE RESOURCES
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Design and Composition
Key books about the design and composition of buildings.

Drawing and Representation
Key books about the representation of design projects.

Sketchbooks
A selection of sketchbooks by noted architects, designers, and artists.

    FEATURE
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   LINKS
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University Libraries Home Page

Architecture Research Guide

48-200: Architecture Design Studio: Composition


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  June 16, 2008 -- http://www.library.cmu.edu/Research/Arts/Architecture/48-200.html
  Martin Aurand, Architecture Librarian; Liaison Librarian to the School of Architecture; Archivist, Architecture Archives., ma1f@andrew.cmu.edu
  © 2008 Carnegie Mellon Libraries