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Dreams and Schemes: Stories of People and Architecture

Dreams and Schemes: Stories of People and Architecture

List Price: $15.99
Your Price: $15.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: More Chicken Soup
Review: Dreams and Schemes: Stories of People in Architecture is a wonderful book that delivers a pleasant reminder that our personalities and perceptions meld with and significantly influence our professional lives. David Dibner shares his life and profession to convey his message that good architecture is responsive to the needs, and sometimes dreams, of those using it.

Unlike the vast quantity of books on architecture, there are no chapters dedicated to the scholars of architecture nor to classic architectural debates such as "form follows function" or visa-versa. Instead he uses interesting stories to provide a chronology of his life's experience as an architect to show that uniting people and the built environment is not only an art, but also a priority.

In his lessons-learned style, he offers a personal account of dealing with different situations and how his decisions ultimately influenced him personally and professionally. Who knows how his life would have turned out if he was able to take the college classes he desired and hadn't happened onto architecture; perhaps he would have become an engineer.

For those that would be interested in a "Chicken Soup for the Architect's Soul," this book is for you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chicken Soup for Architect's Soul
Review: The following review was written by Stephanie Stubbs, Managing Editor, of AIArchitect, Nov. 5, 2001 issue

Dreams and Schemes is a really nice book. And these days, many
people seem to be searching for small bits of "nice" to help stitch their lives back to a normal pattern. Its subtitle, "Stories of People and Architecture," sums up its purpose: it is a vehicle by which architect David Dibner can share his lifelong fascination with the people behind the buildings. The author has deliberately chosen to concentrate on this "softer" part of the profession; he states that he believes there exist plenty of other books that deal with architectural aesthetics and poesy. "There is a scarcity of currently available literature that emphasizes the importance of people in the balance between aesthetic and responsiveness to users' needs," he explains.

Dibner has earned a wealth of experience from which to draw
his stories. His career as an architect spans more than half a
century, and runs the gamut from private practitioner to
large-firm principal to government architect. Through this book, he has created a semi-memoir that allows him to share with us-in his easy-to-like, storytelling fashion-lessons learned and
best practices for dealing with clients, bosses, and coworkers.

Dreams and Schemes offers a palatable means by which to
study people in an architectural context, and perhaps hone the "people skills" that give a cutting edge to the most basic, traditional form of practice.

Dreams and Schemes actually comprises a collection of short stories that follow the course of the architect's career. Some are amusing (a husband and wife having a pitch-a-fit war over plans for their new
house), some are sad (projects can't always come to fruition) some even are scary (there are building officials on the take -what's a young architect to do?) Some stories even have etiquette lessons: Is it proper
(not to mention prudent) to match your new boss martini-for-martini when he takes you out celebrating? Throughout is Dibner's upbeat philosophy: ". . . what I love about architects [is] that they want people who are going to demand more of them and challenge them to do more or better."

Dreams and Schemes will delight a number of audiences: the client baffled by blueprints and the first-year student subdued by structures will gain heart in realizing that all architecture comes down to people. Practitioners can reaffirm what Dibner illustrates so well: developing a successful strategy for any built project begins by creating a relationship with the client.

And how can you not smile when the author sums up his 50-year
immersion in architecture with "For me it's been a wonderful ride." In the highest possible sense, Dibner has created a "Chicken Soup for the Architect's Soul." It's a really nice book. Read it.


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