Best Books on the Visual Arts

Questions, Call (310) 458-9074 10am-8pm PST
Skip Navigation Links
Club Culture

Club Culture


List Price: $60.00 Our Price: $49.95 You Save: $10.05 (17%)

  • Format: Trade Paperback
  • 128 pages
  • Publisher: Academy Press
  • Published: January 2004
  • ISBN-10: 0470862157
  • ISBN-13: 9780470862155

Buy this item

Step 1:

Condition Store Qty Price
Used - Very Good Hennessey + Ingalls Santa Monica 1 $49.95
Used - Good Hennessey + Ingalls Santa Monica 0 $49.95
Used - Very Good Hennessey + Ingalls Santa Monica 4 $49.95

Step 2:

Step 3:

Condition

Please select an item/condition from the box above and to the right.

Description
Clubs by their definition offer exclusivity. They are not global - they are placed. They are not open - they are closed. They do not offer everything - they specialise. In becoming a member, you also become special. The image of a club is as important as the spatial layout itself; and it is the job of the architect or designer to reflect an exclusive image in the physical spaces of the club. 'Club Culture features: 'the new club class offered by airlines and the transit its members enjoy through exclusive spaces before and after boardingthe new members clubs of London and other major cities that have replaced the traditional 'gentleman'sthe impressive technology and design behind the new breed of specialist sports clubs such as Ove Arup's design for the International Tennis Centre in Sydneythe slick contemporary architecture of golf clubs tailored to the business executive such as the Yangsan Adonis Golf Club in South Korea ..'.like jewel boxes on a green velvet blanket...'the funky underground clubs that serve the city's nocturnal clubbersand the ultimate in exclusivity that floats on the worlds waters, the new ship tailored only to those dripping in cash This is an interesting take on Club Culture that has not before been published and will be interesting, provocative and visual. Clubs by their definition offer 'exclusivity': to be a member of a club you have to meet the selected criteria, whatever that might be. The image of a club becomes the key to how its members identify with it - be it the relaxed wholesome logos of health clubs; or the sleek aerodynamic images found in business-class airline lounges. This issue of AD sets out to examine how architects and interior designers effectively use the physical spaces of clubs to enforce images of exclusivity and collective belonging. Traditional gentlemen's clubs are looked at alongside a new generation of sports, media, commercial and night clubs that are springing up across the world. It also features interviews with Nigel Coates and David Adjaye.
Reviews