Humanize, Thomas Heatherwick
Humanize, Thomas Heatherwick
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Humanize
A Maker's Guide to Designing Our Cities

Author: Thomas Heatherwick

Narrator: Thomas Heatherwick

Unabridged: 5 hr 28 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/07/2023

Categories: Nonfiction, Architecture, Art


Synopsis

From one of the world’s most innovative designers comes a fiercely passionate manifesto—on why so many places have become miserable and boring and how we can make them better for everyone—that will change how you see the world around you.

We are living through a global catastrophe. Buildings affect how we feel, moment by moment, day by day. They have the power to lift us up and make us feel awestruck, playful, safe, and inspired, just as they can make us feel alienated and sad. But many of the places where we live, work, learn, and heal have become monotonous and disposable. We’re surrounded by cheap, boring buildings that make people stressed, sick, and unhappy. In short, much of our world has been crafted in a way that is hostile to human experience.

Now, drawing on his experience of the last thirty years in making bold, beautiful objects and buildings, Thomas Heatherwick offers both an informed critique of the inhumanity in most of today’s contemporary building design, and a rousing call for action. Looking through Heatherwick’s eyes, we see familiar landmarks and cityscapes around the world, from London, Paris, Barcelona, Singapore, New York, Vancouver, and beyond, both old and new, famous and obscure, to learn how places can either sap the life out of us—or nourish our senses and our psyche. The time has come, he says, to put emotion back at the heart of the design process, and the reasons to do so could not be more urgent. Design is not superficial: it has an impact upon economics, climate change, our mental and physical wellbeing—even the peace and cohesion of our societies.

As citizens and users, we need a world full of architectural diversity that delights and unites us. And as makers and designers, we can help create a world where cities reconnect with their essential mission: to provide human spaces where people mix, meet, inspire each other, and live out their full potential.

Elegantly crafted by Heatherwick’s own studio, Humanize is an urgent call-to-arms for making our world a better place for everyone to live, and provides the vision and tools for us to make it a reality.

About Thomas Heatherwick

Thomas Heatherwick is one of the world’s most renowned designers, whose varied work over three decades is characterized by its originality, inventiveness, and humanity. Led by human experience rather than any fixed dogma, Heatherwick Studio creates emotionally compelling places and objects with a small climate shadow. Heatherwick’s team is currently working on over thirty projects in ten countries, including Azabudai Hills, a 8.1-hectare mixed-use development in the center of Tokyo, the new headquarters for Google in London, and Airo, an electric car that cleans the air as it drives. The studio has also recently completed Bay View, Google’s first ground-up campus; Little Island, a park and performance space on the Hudson River in New York City; and Coal Drops Yard, a major new retail district in King’s Cross, London.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Rob on January 16, 2024

4/5 Tricky to rate. A very simple argument, made simply and repeated again and again over 400 pages. Most modern buildings are boring and we need more interesting ones. I knew this book would get pelters after reading the first few pages. It’s shouty and attacks current practitioners. And yes, it’s ver......more

Goodreads review by Alex on May 15, 2024

Humanise is a book with a simple message - we need to make buildings less boring for the sake of mental wellbeing, for the environment, and to foster creativity. This is repeated throughout the book, but it manages to avoid monotony through its interesting visual examples and graphic design. That......more

Goodreads review by Yagiz Irfan on November 19, 2024

It’s unbelievable after you see the fact that, they only teach value calculations of the buildings as the parameter of money. In architecture school we don’t even study about profits and losses of the buildings we design. But professors still asks stupid questions like if the building itself will pr......more

Goodreads review by Logan on August 29, 2024

This would be one of the first books I'd hand someone interested in why design in public places and architecture matters. It's incredibly accessible (there are a lot of fun pictures and graphics) and very well-reasoned. My main complaint is that the author overlooks the role slaves and underpaid wor......more