9/10 Stock Orchard Street, colloquially known as the Straw House, is a house and an office designed by two architects for their own use. Completed in 2000, the buildings were experimental in design, execution and inhabitation, and have resisted categorization, challenged received wisdom and provoked debate, especially among architectural critics.
With access to all the material records of the project, this book responds to that debate by presenting multi-faceted narratives from a wide range of writers that have been invited to reflect both positively and negatively on what the buildings represent and how they have performed. Using the buildings as the central case study, it situates them in a broader cultural context, revealing the breadth of conversations and issues engaged by architecture.
Highly illustrated with original material, including the authors' own drawings and with specially-commissioned photographs, this book discusses theory, practice, ethics, material culture, the media, narrative, feminism, sustainability and construction, offering illuminating and sometimes surprising conclusions relevant to lay, professional and academic readers.
While offering a wide ranging set of approaches and critiques of its subject, this book provides a unique insight into a building's conception, construction and reception, and in turn facilitates the engagement with the issues facing architectural practice today.
About the Author: Sarah Wigglesworth heads her own practice based in London, which has won awards for projects including Mossbrook Special School Classroom of the Future (2005), Siobhan Davies Dance Studios (2006) and Cremorne Riverside Canoeing Centre (2008). Sarah is also Professor of Architecture at the University of Sheffield. In addition to authoring numerous essays, she is joint editor (with Katerina Ruedi and Duncan McCorquodale) of Desiring Practices: Architecture, Gender and the Interdisciplinary (Black Dog Press, 1996) and (with Jeremy Till) Architectural Design: The Everyday and Architecture (Academy Wiley, 1998). Sarah was awarded an MBE for services to architecture in 2003.