GA HOUSES [Unbroken Run of the First 125 Issues]
Consecutive run of the first 125 issues (1976-2012) of this long-running glossy, indispensable, and high-concept magazine documenting contemporary residential architectural for design professionals.
Consecutive run of the first 125 issues (1976-2012) of this long-running glossy, indispensable, and high-concept magazine documenting contemporary residential architectural for design professionals.
Early printing of this lavishly-illustrated assessment of American architect David Adler's elegant buildings, which incorporate a number of historic styles.
First printing of this attractive volume that explores 17 homes designed by "one of America's premier 'great house' architects" (jacket), whose classical style emulates European stately homes – with a catalogue raisonné.
Plans, drawings, models, and photographs for five of Ames's residential projects, warmly inscribed to a fellow architect.
Inscribed copy of the catalogue to an exhibition of the architect's paintings, with a handwritten note to another architect laid in.
First edition in English of this attractive volume on the work of acclaimed Modern architect Marcel Breuer, who helped shape the tastes of postwar America.
Signed first edition of this lavish two-volume set tracing the work of the influential Beaux-Arts architectural firm responsible for such landmarks as the New York Public Library and the Manhattan Bridge.
First printing of this beautifully-illustrated overview of the Baltimore work of Modernist architect Alexander Smith Cochran, the designer of some of America's first publicly-funded housing projects.
First printing of this attractive edition of the work of the New York architect whose style defies categorization — inscribed by De Vido to architecture writer and editor Susan Zevon.
First printing of this assessment of the works of the Delano & Aldrich architectural firm, responsible for such projects as the Walters Art Gallery and the La Guardia airport.
Inscribed first printing of this gallery of the controversial Brutalist architect's early residential work, richly illustrated with detailed analysis.
First printing, signed by both the author and photographer, of this monograph on the Georgia architect.
First printing of this reflection on the work of an architect who died before his time, who nonetheless had an important impact on mid-century modern California residential style.
First printing of this architectural monograph featuring 28 of Ehrlich's residential, civic, and commercial projects, illustrated with photographs, plans, and sketches.
First printing of this lavishly-illustrated book on the buildings and biography of Irving J. Gill, important and influential Modernist architect.
Inscribed first printing of this illustrated reflection on the work of early-20th century modernist architect Irving Gill, influential yet rarely written on.
First printing of this attractive collection of images of and writing about the various structures and designs of Buckminster Fuller, the forward-thinking architect most famous for his geodesic domes.
First printing of this heavily-illustrated work that illuminates modernist architect firm Gwathmey Siegel's elevation of the apartment to an art form.
Signed revised and expanded edition of this work that showcases 30 buildings by the architectural firm Hariri and Hariri, whose dynamic style blurs the lines between architecture and sculpture.
Signed printing of this heavily-illustrated work that highlights the residential buildings of Iranian-American architect duo Gisue and Mojgan Hariri, with letter from Paul Goldberger.
First printing, inscribed by both subjects, of this monograph on the work of prominent Washington D.C.-based architect firm Hartman-Cox, who have designed and restored important museum and library spaces, including for the National Archives and the Folger Library.
Signed review copy of this comprehensive history of the ubiquitous Baltimore residential structure by two Maryland architects.
First printing of this scarce work on the taste makers of California Modernism, lavishly illustrated.
First printing signed and inscribed by both authors of this monograph on James Deering's Gilded Age Miami estate designed by architect F. Burrall Hoffman, a masterwork of Mediterranean style.
Inscribed first printing of this reflection on the skyscraper work of Raymond Hood, "the brilliant bad boy of architecture" (jacket), written by a younger architect who worked with him.