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Providing a study of Chicago's Central Area, this book aims to illuminate the ways in which the renovations have reconfigured the social as well as the physical landscape. Documenting that architecture embodies ideology and social relationships, it encourages readers to notice architecture and the ways in which it shapes their world.
This work analyzes Wright's architecture from a sociological viewpoint. It examines the interactions between people and the space they inhabit, known to Wright as "organic architecture", focusing on buildings considered important by Wright, but which have received little attention.
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