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|a dc
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|a Douglas, C
|e author
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|a Banks, S
|e contributor
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|a Caradus, S
|e contributor
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|a Chui, SCK
|e contributor
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|a Müller, K
|e contributor
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|a Otley, S
|e contributor
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|a Quartermaine, R
|e contributor
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|a Stock, N
|e contributor
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|a Collectivity
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|b School of Architecture and Planning, University of Auckland,
|c 2011-10-13T02:21:14Z.
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|a Modos(06. Collection), pp.18 - 19
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|a 1176-4244
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|a A reading of a text by John Donne provides the grounds for a consideration of several senses of the word 'matter': physical matter (something is matter); significance or importance (something matters); and a state of affairs (something is a matter that concerns us). Architecture, I suggest, is a practice of mattering. The importance of 'material thoughts' in the practice of the studio is asserted to be central to collectivity and collaboration.
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|a OpenAccess
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|a English
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|a Architecture
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|a Design process
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|a Matter
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|a Journal Article
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|z Get fulltext
|u http://hdl.handle.net/10292/2360
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