Philip Nobel

Philip Nobel is an architect, architectural critic, and author who has written about architecture at the New York Times, Curbed, Metropolis,[1][2] Artforum, Architectural Digest and other publications.[3][4][5][6] He discussed disposable diaper design on Public Radio International.[7] He lives in Brooklyn[8] and is divorced with children.[9]

A Kirkus Reviews writeup described his book Sixteen Acres about redevelopment efforts at the World Trade Center site known as Ground Zero as "unsparingly showing New York City’s power brokers taking a nation-bending hole in the ground and mixing into it a witch’s brew of ego, politics, greed, and amnesia".[10]

Nobel has stated that protest and organizing have moved online. He stated malls are becoming a place of civic engagement and training grounds for future urbanism.[11]

Bibliography

  • Sixteen Acres : Architecture and the Outrageous Struggle for the Future of Ground Zero (2005), about the redevelopment of Ground Zero, the site of the World Trade Center[8][12]
  • New New York (2011), essay accompanying photographs by Jake Rajs.[13]
  • The Future of the Skyscraper : SOM Thinkers Series, 2015 Edition, one of several authors[14]
  • SHoP, introduction[15]
gollark: If it does actually display a warning outside of the video, I would wildly guess that it works by shipping some small part of actual malware which Defender detects inside the video, and then expecting it to scan things in the browser cache or something.
gollark: Oh. Well, I don't have Windows to test it on, due to Windows bad.
gollark: This is just a ~~picture~~ video with a notification in it.
gollark: https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/733347369847881838/879373329012764722/IMG_20210823_163514.jpg?bees
gollark: Is that a spinning rat?

References

  1. "Philip Nobel, Author at Metropolis".
  2. A Nobel Prize: Curbed Adds Not One But Two Architecture Critics | Observer
  3. "Philip Nobel". April 2, 2010.
  4. "Conversations in Context: Gregg Pasquarelli + Philip Nobel". Bustler.
  5. "The Eternal City". Bookforum.
  6. "Reviewer's Remorse, Not Philip Nobel".
  7. "Design for the real world: diapers". Public Radio International.
  8. "Philip Nobel | Authors | Macmillan". US Macmillan.
  9. "Majikthise : World's Worst Person: Philip Nobel". majikthise.typepad.com.
  10. "SIXTEEN ACRES by Philip Nobel | Kirkus Reviews" via www.kirkusreviews.com.
  11. Kolb, David (January 1, 2008). Sprawling Places. University of Georgia Press. p. 156 via Internet Archive. philip nobel.
  12. "Perusall". app.perusall.com.
  13. Rajs, Jake; Nobel, Philip (May 5, 2011). "NEW NEW YORK". New York, New York : THE MONCELLI PRESS via Trove.
  14. Nobel, Philip; Vanderbilt, Tom; Yglesias, Matthew; Lind, Diana; Self, Will; Badger, Emily; Despommier, Dickson D.; Govan, Michael (May 5, 2015). The Future of the Skyscraper. Metropolis Books. ISBN 9781938922787 via Google Books.
  15. "Philip Nobel". thamesandhudson.com.
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