The Best Architecture Reads this Spring: 19 New Books Selected by Metropolis Magazine


Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

Metropolis Magazine has released a curated list of 19 new books to read this spring, with topics ranging from the evolution of social housing to Stanley Kubrick‘s unfilmed masterpiece to a fascinating tome on the architecture of Zionism. Not simply volumes detailing well-tread histories, these chosen titles explore every niche category through the lens of architecture. Ever wondered how Buckminster Fuller inspired six former gang members to construct his geodesic dome? Or what metro stations in North Korea look like?


Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

The list of books range from The Ordinary: Recordings, a slim volume of conversations with Rem Koolhaas, Denise Scott Brown, Yoshiharu Tsukamoto of Atelier Bow-Wow, and Enrique Walker, to Geostories, which showcases drawings of proposals relating to humanity’s relationship with the Earth—including examples such as an atmosphere-less Earth, or supplying the Middle East with water from Antarctic icebergs.


Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

Courtesy of Metropolis Magazine

Other interesting titles include Inside North Korea by Guardian architecture writer Oliver Wainwright, which explores how the Kim dynasty has used architecture and public art to create the image of “a socialist fairyland” and Toward a Concrete Utopia, a selection of photographs and essays on Yugoslavian Brutalist architecture.

Browse the whole list of books and their descriptions over at Metropolis Magazine here.