The Most Beautiful House in the World

The Most Beautiful House in the World

by Witold Rybczynski

Narrated by Wanda McCaddon

Unabridged — 5 hours, 24 minutes

The Most Beautiful House in the World

The Most Beautiful House in the World

by Witold Rybczynski

Narrated by Wanda McCaddon

Unabridged — 5 hours, 24 minutes

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Overview

Witold Rybczynski takes us on an extraordinary odyssey as he tells the story of designing and building his own house. His project began as a workshed, but through a series of “happy accidents,” the structure gradually evolved into a full-fledged house.

In tracing this evolution, he touches on matters both theoretical and practical, writing on such diverse topics as the ritualistic origins of the elements of classical architecture and the connections between dress and habitation. He discusses feng-shui and considers the theories of such architects as Palladio, Le Corbusier, and Frank Lloyd Wright.

An eloquent examination of the links between being and building, The Most Beautiful House in the World offers insights into the joys of “installing ourselves in a place, of establishing a spot where it would be safe to dream.”


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

As a young architect, Rybczynski felt trapped inside a paper world of blueprints and cardboard models and itched for the nitty-gritty experience of building with his own hands. He soon devised a plan of escape. It was modest enough--to design and build a boatshed--but it was the beginning of a creative journey that questioned the nature of architecture and the architect's role: What makes a cathedral but not, say, a boatshed architecture? When should an architect design iconoclastic solutions to old problems, when to apply traditional principles? As Rybczynski writes of how his concept of a shed evolved into a full-fledged house, he discusses his wide-ranging research, meditates on the varied sources of his inspiration and on the ``game'' of architecture. He also incorporates the kind of historical tidbit that keeps the reader turning pages--the ritualistic origins of the elements of classical architecture; the not-quite-tongue-in-cheek parallels between architecture and gastronomy; the distinguished structural descendants of the humble barn. Written with the easy-going charm that marked his Home: A Short History of an Idea , this delightful ramble through the creative process will beguile architecture buffs and general readers alike. Illustrated. (May)

Library Journal

Young architect decides to build boat, needs boat house to work in, ends up years later with country place and no boat, and meditates thereon. An extended reflection on the meaning of a house to its inhabitants, this personalized extension of the author's earlier Home ( LJ 9/1/86) does reveal some of what an architect does, albeit when the same person is architect, client, and builder, and it is simply written. More revealing, more detailed, more particular, and preferred is Tracy Kidder's House ( LJ 8/85).-- Jack Perry Brown, Ryerson & Burnham Lib., Art Inst. of Chicago

From the Publisher

"amusing and original" - The New York Times

"A winning book, a pleasure to read…a revelation about what architects actually do and how they go about doing it."Los Angeles Times


"...this delightful ramble through the creative process will beguile architecture buffs and general readers alike." - Publishers Weekly


"Gracefully written, endearingly self-deprecating in tone: a work that will be returned to (and quoted) again and again by its eager readers." —Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

BN ID: 2940169840179
Publisher: Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Publication date: 08/06/2012
Edition description: Unabridged
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