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January.


January's issue considers the relationship between architecture and water, a vital natural resource that permeates all aspects of our existence. Throughout history, civilizations have tamed tame  
adj. tam·er, tam·est
1. Brought from wildness into a domesticated or tractable state.

2. Naturally unafraid; not timid: "The sea otter is gentle and relatively tame" 
 and exploited its life-giving force. From the enrichment of the landscape to powering industry, its presence has inspired architecture and next month's issue looks at current contemporary examples from around the world. The centrepiece is the Yokohama Port Terminal by the young Foreign Office partnership who have produced a remarkable tour-de-force of a building that combines sophisticated computer-generated form-making with a highly inventive tectonic tectonic /tec·ton·ic/ (tek-ton´ik) pertaining to construction.  sensibility.

We also look at the Imperial War Museum in Salford, by Daniel Libeskind Daniel Libeskind, (born May 12, 1946 in Łódź, Poland) is a Polish-born Jewish American architect, who has designed many prominent and celebrated buildings, including the Jewish Museum in Berlin, Germany, the Denver Art Museum in the United States, the Imperial War Museum , which forms part of an ambitious urban regeneration plan to bring new life to Salford's redundant docks. In Otranto in southern Italy, Mario Cucinella's new ferry terminal is a striking addition to the city's waterfront. In the Netherlands, a country acutely aware of the importance of controlling water, American practice Asymptote asymptote

In mathematics, a line or curve that acts as the limit of another line or curve. For example, a descending curve that approaches but does not reach the horizontal axis is said to be asymptotic to that axis, which is the asymptote of the curve.
 have completed a svelte 'hydrapier' in Haarlemmermeer, while in Amsterdam, MVRDV's floating housing suggests radical new ways of achieving urban density. Plus the usual fascinating mixture of Interior Design, Delight, Books and View. Treat yourself this Christmas -- buy this and other issues by filling in the enclosed en·close   also in·close
tr.v. en·closed, en·clos·ing, en·clos·es
1. To surround on all sides; close in.

2. To fence in so as to prevent common use: enclosed the pasture.
 subscription form or visit out website: www.arplus.com
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Publication:The Architectural Review
Date:Dec 1, 2002
Words:210
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