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Atlas response.


SIR: I read with interest your review of The Phaidon Atlas Atlas, in Greek mythology
Atlas (ăt`ləs), in Greek mythology, a Titan; son of Iapetus and Clymene and the brother of Prometheus.
 of Contemporary World Architecture (AR August), having spent two years on the book as project editor. I would like to take this opportunity to address a number of issues.

I especially want to comment on the issue of the 'elusive editors'. While the extensive list of names in the end matter credits those who made a 'one-off' contribution to the book, from writers and nominators, to students who helped with scanning, a separate list crediting those who worked full-time on the project for two years was inexplicably in·ex·pli·ca·ble  
adj.
Difficult or impossible to explain or account for.



in·expli·ca·bil
 excluded from the final proofs. The individuals concerned include project editor (myself), assistant editor (Rosie Fairhead), editorial researcher (Catherine Langford), production supervisor (Paul Hammond Paul Hammond is a retire U.S.-English soccer goalkeeper.

On January 13, 1971, Hammond signed as an apprentice with English First Division club Crystal Palace. He remained on the Palace youth team until first team keeper, John Jackson was injured in 1972.
) and two picture researchers (Helen Stallion stallion

1. an entire male horse aged 4 years and over.

2. in UK, applied to a male donkey (jack).


stallion ring
see stallion ring.

teaser stallion
stallion used to detect those mares which are in estrus.
 and Claire Gouldstone). While the making of The Atlas was a team effort, the elimination of these credits from the book, I feel, needs to be addressed. I take the opportunity to do so here.

On the question of geography, this was used as a tool to divide the world into six continents--in the same way and order as a conventional atlas. The 'sometimes bizarre' groupings you mention come about for cartographic car·tog·ra·phy  
n.
The art or technique of making maps or charts.



[French cartographie : carte, map (from Old French, from Latin charta, carta, paper made from papyrus
 reasons. For example, the UK does not fit easily onto one page (except at an unacceptably small scale), and so was divided into north and south. It so happens that the land mass of Ireland appears, to scale, on the same map as 'UK South'. The number of projects presented for Ireland, unlike Japan, for instance, did not warrant a separate map of its own. Hence the cartography-related groupings.

Many of the comments you make elsewhere in the review relate to the presentation of the projects images, drawings, allocation The apportionment or designation of an item for a specific purpose or to a particular place.

In the law of trusts, the allocation of cash dividends earned by a stock that makes up the principal of a trust for a beneficiary usually means that the dividends will be treated as
 of space and so on. Decisions made regarding these were heavily impacted upon by the seemingly seem·ing  
adj.
Apparent; ostensible.

n.
Outward appearance; semblance.



seeming·ly adv.
 never-ending process of requesting, receiving and processing over 10 000 images, supplied by architects and photographers

worldwide. Despite requests for images and drawings in standard format, material arrived in every format and medium imaginable i·mag·i·na·ble  
adj.
Conceivable in the imagination: imaginable exploits.



i·mag
. While it would have been desirable to commission new drawings (floor plans with scale and north points for example), this was simply not possible.

The other constraint Constraint

A restriction on the natural degrees of freedom of a system. If n and m are the numbers of the natural and actual degrees of freedom, the difference n - m is the number of constraints.
 that had a significant impact on the project was the quality of images supplied. While many architects are familiar with the importance of supplying high quality, original material for publication, many are most definitely not. Some were of such poor quality that they could not be used at all.

Where necessary, we did contact architects to request better quality images to present their work to the best possible advantage. In some cases, a re-supply was not possible and decisions about how to use the images we had inevitably had an impact on how much space was allocated to each project.

If I have any regrets, it is that the book does not have more work produced 1998-2003. We reviewed over 4000 projects for possible inclusion. Perhaps, as you suggest, a website would be the most appropriate forum. But to achieve this, the random, subjective nature of a group editorial panel would need to be eliminated in favour of an inclusive, objective and non-judgmental position.

And finally, I would like to end this letter with one final acknowledgement. During the many hours, days, weeks and months that went into researching. The Atlas, The Architectural Review The Architectural Review is a monthly international architectural magazine published in London since 1896. Articles cover the built environment which includes landscape, building design, interior design and urbanism as well as theory of these subjects.  was without a doubt one of the most indispensable resources.

Yours etc

VIRGINIA MCLEOD

London N4, UK
COPYRIGHT 2004 EMAP Architecture
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Letters
Author:McLeod, Virginia
Publication:The Architectural Review
Article Type:Letter to the Editor
Date:Sep 1, 2004
Words:577
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