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The greatest humanitarian challenge we face today is that of providing shelter. Currently
one in seven people lives in a slum or refugee camp, and more than
three billion people—nearly half the world's population—do not have
access to clean water or adequate sanitation. The physical design of
our homes, neighborhoods, and communities shapes every aspect of our
lives. Yet too often architects are desperately needed in the places
where they can least be afforded.
Edited by
Architecture for Humanity, Design Like You Give a Damn is a compendium
of innovative projects from around the world that demonstrate the power
of design to improve lives. The first book to bring the best of
humanitarian architecture and design to the printed page, Design Like
You Give a Damn offers a history of the movement toward socially
conscious design and showcases more than 80 contemporary solutions to
such urgent needs as basic shelter, health care, education, and access
to clean water, energy, and sanitation. Featured projects include some
sponsored by Architecture for Humanity as well as many others
undertaken independently, often against great odds.
Design
Like You Give a Damn is an indispensable resource for designers and
humanitarian organizations charged with rebuilding after disaster and
engaged in the search for sustainable development. It is also a call to
action to anyone committed to building a better world.
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Read an excerpt
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Orders shipped to the U.S., Canada and Mexico:
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All other international Orders:
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Acumen Fund
Logan Allen
César Añorve
Arup Associates
Stephan Augustin
Barefoot Architects
Peter Brewin and William Crawford
Bustan
Cal-Earth
Center for Community Research and Design
Center for Urban Pedagogy
CHF International
Chinese University of Hong Kong
Common Ground Community
Design Corps
Detroit Collaborative Design Center
East Coast Architects
ELEMENTAL Housing Initiative
Ferrara Design
FTL Design Engineering Studio
Future Systems
Deborah Gans and Matt Jelacic
Grant Gibbs
Vinay Gupta
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Habitat for Humanity Northern Ireland
Harvard Graduate School of Design
Health Habitat
Heavy Trash
Hierve-Diseñeria
Hole-in-the-Wall Schools
Hollmén Reuter Sandman Architects
William Hsu
I-Beam Design
Icosa Village
Intermediate Technology Development Group
Jorge Mario Jáuregui Architects
Justiceville, USA
Diébédo Francis Kéré
KickStart
LA Architects
LILA Design
Lotus Energy
Mad Housers
Montana State University
Native American Photovoltaics
Oxfam
Sergio Palleroni
Potters for Peace
Project Locus
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Michael Rakowitz
RBGC Architecture, Research & Urbanism
Red Feather Development Group
Relief International
Roundabout Outdoor
Rural Studio
Rafi Segal and Eyal Weizman
SENSEable City Laboratory
Shelter Architecture
Shelter For Life
shelterproject
Shelter Systems
Shigeru Ban Architects
Shrinking Cities
Sphere Project
Strong Angel
Süd-Chemie
Swee Hong Ng
Technical University, Vienna
TechnoCraft
theskyisbeautiful architecture
UNHCR
World Conservation Union
World Shelters |
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Founded
in 1999 by Cameron Sinclair and Kate Stohr, Architecture for Humanity
is a grassroots nonprofit organization that seeks architectural
solutions to humanitarian crises. Through design-build programs,
competitions, educational forums, and partnerships with community
development and relief organizations, Architecture for Humanity creates
opportunities for architects and designers from around the world to
assist communities in need. Where resources and expertise are scarce,
innovative, sustainable, and collaborative design can make a difference.

FRONT
COVER: left, Rufisque Women’s Centre, Rufisque, Senegal, Hollmén Reuter
Sandman Architects, photograph courtesy Hollmén Reuter Sandman
Architects; right, Baninajar Refugee Camp, Khuzestan, Iran, shelters
built with Super Adobe system created by Nader Khalili, photograph
courtesy UNDP. |
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Published by Metropolis Books.
Available in bookstores and via online retailers in May 2006.
Design Like You Give a Damn
ISBN 1-933045-25-6
U.S. $35.00
Flexibound
8 x 8 in. | 336 pages |
350 illustrations | 300 in color
May 2006
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Recommended by Newsweek, June 26 2006
'Design Like You Give A Damn screams its message in its title. Good design is not a luxury, but a necessity.'
Alice Wyllie – The Scotsman, July 15 2006
'A welcome manifesto for the kind of problem-solving design approach
that conscientious students and practitioners ought to be aspiring to'
RIBA Journal
‘Arresting… provides an intriguing compendium of designers’ solutions
to producing housing structure for displaced and disadvantaged
populations’
The Observer, June 17 2006
'From the title to the very last word, the book is a rallying cry for
rethinking humanitarian assistance and pursuing innovative solutions to
contemporary housing crises. Design Like You Give A Damn reads like an
encyclopedia of the best humanitarian architecture projects ever
created'
Inhabitat, July 6 2006
'Bursting with intriguing and often beautiful examples of how designers
and architects around the world have created innovative housing for
those most in need of it. You can't read it without feeling inspired…
both by the individuals concerned, and by the power of design to make a
difference.'
Chris Anderson, TEDblog July 13 2006
'Design like you give a Damn is truly an important work – its lesson is
that architecture and design are not about being on the cover of last
week's New York Times Magazine but about making a difference in
people's lives.'
Lloyd Adler, Treehugger July 6 2006
'If you care about the future we're building, you ought to own a copy of Design Like You Give a Damn'
Alex Steffen, World Changing
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One Comment
very cool book, thanks for the post, I got the icosa village guy coming up in 2 weeks to try out a new shelter design