Print Email Facebook Twitter Architecture in Everyday Life Title Architecture in Everyday Life Author Agarez, R. Mota, N. Faculty Architecture and The Built Environment Department Architecture Date 2015-12-31 Abstract For most architects, architecture is not only art, craft, passion and engagement; it is their ‘bread-and-butter’, too, and has been so since long. Architecture, consciously or unconsciously, is also the ‘bread-and-butter’ of communities across the world: successfully or unsuccessfully it is part of the daily lives of ordinary women and men. Yet practitioners, theoreticians and historians of architecture often disregard the more quotidian side of the discipline, a neglect that is inversely proportional to its importance in the production of the built environment. John Summerson’s writings – particularly his wartime ‘Bread & Butter and Architecture’ essay, a call to arms for effective salaried architects – are the motto and the guiding thread for our exploration of the position of everyday practices in twentieth-century architecture. In this introduction we look at the ‘bread-and-butter’ side of the architecture profession and at how it has modulated throughout time, highlighting the ways in which the exceptional set of articles that make up this issue of Footprint substantially extend the scope and reach of our ‘bread-and-butter’ activities. To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:2bacd53d-2626-43ae-80b8-4df188b8882e DOI https://doi.org/10.7480/footprint.9.2.1090 Publisher TU Delft, Stichting Footprint ISSN 1875-1490 Source Footprint: Delft Architecture Theory Journal, (17), 2015 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights (c) 2015 Agarez, R.Mota, N. Files PDF Architecture_in_Everyday_Life.pdf 166.29 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:2bacd53d-2626-43ae-80b8-4df188b8882e/datastream/OBJ/view