Center for Land Use Interpretation, "Pavement Paradise," 2007
Center for Land Use Interpretation, "Up River," 2008
Barbara Gallucci, "Ranch ‘50," 2002
Open on the table is Barbara's "Ranch 50," the book spawned by her photographing dozens of originally-identically Levittown Ranch 50 homes (built 1947-1951) for "Nest" magazine.
Each home offered a built-in TV
wall, whose Admiral T.V. inevitably broke down, inspiring plentiful renovations and remodels. Amazingly, people
turned identical dens into extremely varied spaces, whose portraits are assembled in this book published by Palm Press.
The research gang known as the Center for Land Use
Interpretation has published two books that explore the
suburbs’ impact on the environment: Up River: Man-Made
Sitings of Interest on the Hudson from the Battery to Troy (2008)and Pavement Paradise: American Parking Spaces (2007).
Each home offered a built-in TV
wall, whose Admiral T.V. inevitably broke down, inspiring plentiful renovations and remodels. Amazingly, people
turned identical dens into extremely varied spaces, whose portraits are assembled in this book published by Palm Press.
The research gang known as the Center for Land Use
Interpretation has published two books that explore the
suburbs’ impact on the environment: Up River: Man-Made
Sitings of Interest on the Hudson from the Battery to Troy (2008)and Pavement Paradise: American Parking Spaces (2007).
Copyright 2017 Sue Spaid