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Glitter Stucco & Dumpster Diving: Reflections on Building Production in the Vernacular City

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Speeding across the California landscape, Chase pauses frequently to see what’s really there: not just what the movies have taught us to expect, but the range and variation of the built environment that occupies what he calls ‘everyday space’. A practising architect and urban planner, as well as an important architectural critic, Chase explores a myriad of locales and examines their architectural features—from the gay community space of West Hollywood, to the stucco box apartment complexes of the 1950s, to the truly weird mix of domestic arrangements in Venice Beach, to gated communities, to some of the historic houses of Hollywood and Beverly Hills and to the most recent transformations of the casino architecture in Las Vegas. At once learned, witty and ironic, Chase makes the mundane world of Southern California vistas come alive on the page.

288 pages, Hardcover

First published August 1, 2000

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John Chase

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13 reviews
February 23, 2009
A little all over the map, but the chapters I was most interested in were fantastic -- specifically the architecture of the LA's ubiquitous stucco boxes apartment buildings, and the fancification of period revivals.
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