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Good Building Book: Principles of Efficient, Functional and Sustainable Design [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x210x22 mm, kaal: 940 g, Full colour photographs and diagrams
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1399417134
  • ISBN-13: 9781399417136
  • Pehme köide
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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 288 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 234x210x22 mm, kaal: 940 g, Full colour photographs and diagrams
  • Ilmumisaeg: 29-Jan-2026
  • Kirjastus: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • ISBN-10: 1399417134
  • ISBN-13: 9781399417136
The Good Building Book reimagines design and construction for optimal performance and value while minimising environmental impacts.

'Mandatory reading for everyone in our design practice.' CHARLIE LUXTON
'A deeply fascinating book.' MARK BRINKLEY

Drawing from extensive experience, award-winning architect Jon Broome and design engineer Nick Grant celebrate undervalued ideas that have stood the test of time.

The Good Building Book provides provocative and empowering insights, along with critical analysis, to help rethink design and construction.

- Guides readers through project development, from single home to larger projects.
- Examines performance standards and navigates commercial aspects such as budgets, contracts, and consultants.
- Explores strategic design and principles of good details for building elements, weaving together aesthetics, performance, and value in context.
- Offers practical principles and design strategies relevant for a rapidly changing world.
- Features more than 150 photos and a further 90 diagrams.

Whether you're a designer or contractor, building user or client, student or teacher, this solution-focused book provides a new way of thinking about how we shape the built environment for a sustainable future.

Arvustused

An expansive and insightful read. Years of experience pulls together the interconnected threads of design and building with rare clarity. Mandatory reading for everyone in our design practice building is too important to leave to the experts. This book gives insight to allow everyone to engage in changing what and how we build, for the better. * Charlie Luxton, architectural designer and television presenter * Every now and then, a book comes along that makes you wish it had been on your reading list from day one. This is one of those books. Clear-eyed, practical, and deeply rooted in experience, its an essential read for anyone who wants to make a meaningful contribution to the built environment. Whether youre just starting out or looking to reset your approach, this book will challenge and inspire you to do better, for people, for buildings, and for the planet. * Sarah Lewis, architect and research & policy director at the UK Passivhaus Trust * Nick showed me a whole new way of thinking about buildings and the efficiencies we could engineer into them. Spending time with him is an education this book is the next best thing to knowing the bloke himself. * Guy Martin, presenter of Guy Martin Building Britain * A deeply fascinating book. The two authors have been grappling with the question of what makes a good building all their working lives. Here they make a deep dive into what theyve learned along the way. Whether you are a self builder or a major developer, prepare to have your pre-conceptions turned upside down and to emerge a great deal wiser. * Mark Brinkley, author of The Housebuilder's Bible * Lucid insights into making buildings (particularly dwellings) and places nicer, simpler, more sustainable, and more cost-effective to build and to run. Hard-earned wisdom and iconoclasm from the deep experience of the authors and their colleagues. A must-read for anyone wondering how to do better. * Bill Bordass, research and policy adviser at the Usable Buildings Trust UK * Jon and Nick get to the essence of what makes buildings genuinely good. The findings may surprise you. * Juraj Mikurcik, architect and self-builder * Finally, feels like a lifetime in the making which I guess in some ways it is. Written by people who truly understand how to deliver great buildings in theory and practice. Having worked with both Jon and Nick over decades now, Im glad they were able to inform my journey from self-builder to commercial developer of passive house projects. I hope this is distributed widely amongst architects, builders and developers everywhere! * Tahir Sharif, developer * An ambitious exploration into what defines a good building, offering a comprehensive and thoughtfully researched perspective. The Good Building Book offers valuable lessons and fresh perspectives on creating sustainable, thoughtful, and well-constructed spaces. It is a timely contribution to the architecture and construction industries, and a resource that should have been accessible years ago. * Heinz Richardson, architect at buro nineteen and former Director of Jestico and Whiles * This book brings together the lifetimes work in environmentally responsible design of two of the UKs pioneers in the field. Part polemic, part manifesto and mainly a clear roadmap, it is an invaluable resource for anyone committed to designing in a socially and environmentally conscious manner. * Jeremy Till, Professor of Architecture at Central St Martins and former Pro Vice Chancellor of University of the Arts London *

Muu info

The Good Building Book reimagines design and construction for optimal performance and value while minimising environmental impacts.
Introduction

1.0 Design


1.1 What is a good building?

An introduction to the key principles of good buildings
1.2 Beauty, utility and economy in action

Archives and museums provide useful insight
1.3 Buildings as sculpture

When form overrides function to produce bad buildings
1.4 Eco-bling innovation and aspiration

Aspiration and innovation can bring questionable results
1.5 Problem-solving designs

The features of a good building design process
1.6 The search for quality

What the designer must bring to the process the need for care
1.7 A modern vernacular

Four principles coming together to shape a process for designing and
producing good buildings
1.8 The modern vernacular in action

Applying the four principles in action in the field of housing design
1.9 Self-build

Lessons from an approach to housing more akin to the idea of a modern
vernacular
1.10 Sustainable neighbourhoods

How the principles we have learnt from housing can inform good places, towns
and cities

2.0 Reducing energy

2.1 Comfort and sufficiency

Both important considerations, but what kind of comfort and how much space
do we need?
2.2 Closing the performance gap

Why many buildings do not achieve their planned minimum-emission performance
2.3 Form factor, massing and shape

How size and shape are often fixed before detailed cost, energy or structural
analysis are performed
2.4 Environmental modelling and targets

Numbers and targets are crucial to an understanding of how to improve the
performance of buildings
2.5 Passive solar design

Shifting the focus from passive solar gains to glazing design to serve the
comfort and of occupants
2.6 Why Passivhaus?

The benefits, limitations and myths surrounding the use of this highly
effective building standard
2.7 Buildings must breathe

Draught-free construction and the resulting need for moisture and odour
control are essential

3.0 Low environmental impact construction

3.1 Heavyweight or lightweight?

Advantages and disadvantages of both approaches and some myths explored
3.2 Upfront carbon emissions

How to reduce emissions arising from the act of construction, alongside other
environmental impacts
3.3 The more details, the more devils

Principles for detailing to create robust buildings that achieve design,
performance and sustainability aims
3.4 Elements of good building

Approaches to the design of foundations, raised ground-floor construction,
non-loadbearing walls, flat roof construction and windows
3.5 Services

Efficient building services should be integrated into the design from an
early stage

4.0 The business of building


4.1 Land

Focusing on the issue of land ownership and value, huge influencers on what
is built
4.2 Design education and post-occupancy evaluation
How to acquire the skills, knowledge and values designers need; learning what
works and what doesnt
4.3 Cost and value

Why do costs vary? Who benefits from value? How to reduce uncertainty and
control costs
4.4 Value engineering in design

Understanding how buildings perform and learning from experience
4.5 Appointing a design team and contractors

A constructive approach to finding the right team and managing costs, quality
and time
4.6 Risk management and regulation

Risks that cannot be avoided and how to mitigate them, and the uses and
limitations of regulation

Afterword

Notes on the authors

Chapter notes

Photo credits

Acknowledgements

Index
Jon Broome trained as an architect but is now a designer, enabler and self-builder. Previously Director of Architype, he now lives in London, where he runs his own consultancy specialising in sustainable construction.

Nick Grant is a freelance energy consultant and principal of Elemental Solutions. One of the UK pioneers of Passivhaus Standard, he is an active contributor to discussions on sustainable design as well as a practical engineer and self builder.