Easton Architects, Punta Gorda, Florida
Easton Architects, Punta Gorda, Florida

Category: chapter 5

  • 5.10 · Amazon Distribution Networks – 
Infrastructure as Urbanism

    5.10 · Amazon Distribution Networks – Infrastructure as Urbanism

    Amazon’s fulfillment centers reveal the invisible architecture of modern America: a logistics landscape of vast warehouses, algorithmic movement, automated labor, transportation networks, and regional infrastructure reshaped around speed, scale, and consumption.

  • 5.9 · AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas – 
Architecture as Spectacle

    5.9 · AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas – Architecture as Spectacle

    AT&T Stadium transforms professional football into immersive theater: a vast civic spectacle of structure, media, crowd energy, public finance, private profit, and American ambition.

  • 5.8 · Mall of America, Minnesota – 
Consumption as Civic Space

    5.8 · Mall of America, Minnesota – Consumption as Civic Space

    The Mall of America represents the culmination of the American shopping mall: a privatized city of consumption where retail, entertainment, climate control, spectacle, and simulated civic life were gathered under one roof.

  • 5.7 · Horton Plaza, San Diego – 
The Architecture of Experience

    5.7 · Horton Plaza, San Diego – The Architecture of Experience

    Horton Plaza reshaped downtown San Diego through bold postmodern architecture, theatrical retail, and urban reinvention. Jon Jerde’s landmark proved design could revive a city—then revealed how culture can outpace even the most radical architecture.

  • 5.6 · Steamboat Springs, Colorado – 
The Economics of Scarcity and Beauty

    5.6 · Steamboat Springs, Colorado – The Economics of Scarcity and Beauty

    Steamboat Springs embodies the paradox of the modern American mountain town: a place defined by extraordinary beauty, western identity, and community memory, yet increasingly hollowed by housing scarcity, speculative capital, and exclusion through affordability. This chapter examines how geography, conservation, tourism, and governance transformed a working ranch town into a global lifestyle commodity—one where the…

  • 5.5 · Fort Collins, Colorado – Main Street and the American Imagination

    5.5 · Fort Collins, Colorado – Main Street and the American Imagination

    Did Fort Collins help inspire Disneyland’s Main Street, U.S.A.? Whether myth or truth, the comparison reveals something deeper: Fort Collins embodies the physical memory of the American town. This case study explores how preservation, pedestrian design, and civic continuity transformed a threatened frontier downtown into one of the nation’s most successful urban revitalization models—while raising…

  • 5.4 · J.C. Nichols and the Kansas City Suburb
 – The Geometry of Aspiration

    5.4 · J.C. Nichols and the Kansas City Suburb – The Geometry of Aspiration

    Kansas City’s Country Club Plaza, conceived by J.C. Nichols, reshaped American development by merging architecture, commerce, and landscape into the first automobile-oriented shopping district in the world. This chapter examines Nichols’s extraordinary design intelligence—his integration of beauty, mobility, and market value—while confronting the moral contradictions embedded in restrictive covenants and exclusionary planning. Country Club Plaza…

  • 5.3 · New Orleans, Louisiana – The Delta of Memory

    5.3 · New Orleans, Louisiana – The Delta of Memory

    New Orleans is a city built in negotiation with water, memory, and loss. Set within the unstable geography of the Mississippi delta, its architecture reflects adaptation rather than control: raised houses, layered streets, improvised repairs, and a culture that turns vulnerability into identity. More than preservation alone, the city reveals how place can endure through…

  • 5.2 · Key West, Florida – Architecture at the Edge

    5.2 · Key West, Florida – Architecture at the Edge

    Key West exists at the edge of land and consequence, where architecture is shaped less by permanence than by survival. Built on porous limestone and exposed to relentless storms, the island’s conch houses reveal a vernacular intelligence rooted in airflow, elevation, and repair. Here, resilience is not strength but adaptability, and the identity of the…

  • 5.1 · Washington, D.C. – Geometry of Power

    5.1 · Washington, D.C. – Geometry of Power

    Washington, D.C. is America’s only city conceived entirely as a symbol, planned from principle rather than necessity. Designed in 1791 by Pierre Charles L’Enfant, its geometry organizes power, memory, and public space into a legible civic order. The Capitol, the White House, and the National Mall establish a framework where government is both visible and…