Joy Ride - Hardcover

Martin, David; Woodard, Stephanie

 
9781939621733: Joy Ride

Synopsis

In this book, architect David Martin reflects on and illustrates his visits to the ancient and colonial-era places of Mexico. In Baja and on the mainland, Martin immersed himself in a millennia-old culture that has transformed over the centuries yet maintained an outsized and magical exuberance. Martin is best known for designing iconic buildings that define the Los Angeles skyline, including the soaring and elegant Figueroa at Wilshire (formerly Sanwa Bank Plaza) and the tallest building west of the Mississippi, the witty and curvaceous Wilshire Grand Center. A Fellow of the American Institute of Architects, he represents the third generation of architects to join his family’s century-!old business, AC Martin. Historian Kevin Starr has lauded the firm’s “prophetic” work, as it built its own success and a new urban identity, as well as contributed to the sense of dynamic optimism suffusing the region. Today many of the firm’s works have been designated historic-cultural monuments.These include some of Los Angeles’s most significant civic and academic buildings, churches, corporate headquarters, museums, science laboratories, homes, and residential neighborhoods. Still towering over them all, visually and conceptually, is City Hall, which Martin’s grandfather collaborated on, finishing it in 1928. It’s a building “that to this day symbolizes the identity and drama of the city,” according to Starr. David Martin has produced most of his work in Southern California. No one can live in or visit Los Angeles without experiencing the myriad decisions he has made as AC Martin’s design principal―choices about the forms of the buildings as well as their size, materials, public access, interior fittings, and much more. His structures, along with the influence he and his family’s firm have had on Los Angeles’s development as a pedestrian city, define friendly sequences of plazas so filled with bright flowers and art that the buildings themselves become a form of public art. The interaction of public and private space is a theme that runs through Martin’s work, whether it is a glass fronted police station that connects visually with its community, a church suffused with a numinous glow, or a skyscraper offering majestic views. With each project, he has sought to engage and delight those who use the building―for work, living, study, or prayer. His efforts are widely recognized, and he has received numerous major architecture awards over the years.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.

About the Authors

As design principal of Los Angeles-based firm AC Martin, architect David C. Martin furthered his family’s legacy of major involvement in the civic vitality of Southern California. When David joined the firm in 1966, he ushered in the third generation of the family business. He earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree from the University of Southern California (USC) and a Master of Architecture degree from Columbia University. While at Columbia, David spent four months on a traveling fellowship researching the great urban spaces of the world. David and Christopher C. Martin, his former business partner and cousin, received the American Institute of Architects Los Angeles Chapter’s Presidential Gold Medal for their major contributions to the built environment in the City of Los Angeles.



Stephanie Woodard writes on human rights and culture, with an emphasis on Native American issues. Her work has been published in Preservation, Saveur, and In These Times magazines, as well as on Indian Country Today Media Network, billmoyers.com, NBCnews.com, and the Huffington Post, where she has a blog. In hundreds of widely cited articles, she has covered voting rights, crime, sacred sites, food, gardening, health, child welfare, economic development, and additional subjects (many of these stories are archived at stephaniewoodard.blogspot.com) For this work, she has twice been nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and has received awards and support from groups including the Fund for Investigative Journalism, the George Polk Center for Investigative Journalism, the Leonard C. Goodman Foundation, and the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Journalism.

"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.