Bibliothèque BAIU

Bibliothèque BAIU Page officielle de la bibliothèque d'art, d'architecture, d'ingénierie architecturale, d'urbanisme

La Bibliothèque d'architecture, d'ingénierie architecturale, d'urbanisme (BAIU) est un lieu :
- d’information dans les domaines liés à l'architecture & l'art, l'ingénierie architecturale, l'urbanisme;
- de formation, d’initiation à la recherche;
- d’étude et de recherche;
- de conservation et de consultation;
- d’accès aux ressources électroniques. La BAIU est un service de proximité :
- pour les

étudiants, enseignants, chercheurs de la faculté LOCI de Bruxelles, Louvain-la-Neuve et Tournai;
- pour les étudiants, enseignants, chercheurs du supérieur artistique, de l'ESA Saint-Luc (Ecole supérieure des Arts), de l'erg (école de recherche graphique - Ecole supérieure des Arts), des Ateliers Saint-Luc (Ecole de Promotion Sociale qui a également repris la formation en urbanisme organisée jusqu'alors par l'ISURU - Institut Supérieur d'Urbanisme et de Rénovation Urbaine) et du secondaire Saint-Luc, de l'ISURU).

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3834231The construction industry operates withi...
10/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3834231

The construction industry operates within a linear economy of make, use, dispose. Buildings are stripped out and torn down with astonishing regularity while new buildings are constructed from hard-won virgin materials. But raw materials are becoming scarce, and the demands for them are exploiting fragile ecosystems, even as the global demand for resources continues to rise. Policy makers and organisations are beginning to look for a more regenerative, circular economy model. The construction industry demands over half the world’s extracted materials and generates around a third of the total waste generated in the EU, making it a prime candidate for applying the circular economy. Yet there has been little focus on how construction industry professionals and their clients can contribute towards the movement. Drawing on illustrative methods and examples, Building Revolutions explains how the principles of a circular economy can be applied to the built environment where resources are kept in use and their value retained.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3835903The conservation of our Modern architect...
09/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3835903

The conservation of our Modern architectural heritage is a subject of vehement debate. When do buildings become old or significant enough to warrant special heritage status and protection? Should Modern listed buildings be treated differently from those of earlier periods? And what does all this mean for building users and owners, who might be better served if their buildings were less authentic, but more comfortable and usable? Presenting a clear line of sight through these complex questions, this book explores the conservation, regeneration and adaptive re-use of Modern architecture. It provides a general grounding in the field, its recent history and current development, including chapters on authenticity, charters, listing and protection. Case studies drawing on the author's extensive practical experience offer valuable lessons learnt in the conservation of Modern heritage buildings. Looking beyond the specialist field of elite' heritage, Revaluing Modern Architecture also considers the changing culture of conservation for sub-iconic' buildings in relation to de-carbonisation and the climate emergency. It suggests how revaluing the vast legacy of modern architecture can help to promote a more sustainable future. Features leading conservation projects, such as the celebrated Penguin Pool at London Zoo, Finsbury Health Centre by Lubetkin & Tecton and Wells Coates' Isokon (Lawn Road) Flats, as well as previously unpublished projects. Analyses key Modern conservation controversies of recent years Illustrated with over 160 photos and drawings. An essential primer for architectural students and practitioners, academics, those employed in conservation and planning, property owners, developers, surveyors and building managers.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3834266An examination of new urban approaches b...
08/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3834266

An examination of new urban approaches both in theory and in practice. Taking a critical look at how new urbanism has lived up to its ideals, the author asks whether new urban approaches offer a viable path to creating good communities. With examples drawn principally from North America, Europe and Japan, Planning the Good Community explores new urban approaches in a wide range of settings. It compares the movement for urban renaissance in Europe with the New Urbanism of the United States and Canada, and asks whether the concerns that drive today’s planning theory – issues like power, democracy, spatial patterns and globalisation- receive adequate attention in new urban approaches. The issue of aesthetics is also raised, as the author questions whether communities must be more than just attractive in order to be good. With the benefit of twenty years’ hindsight and a world-wide perspective, this book offers the reader unparalleled insight as well as a rigorous and considered critical analysis.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842871Applied Urban Design combines 'why' we d...
07/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842871

Applied Urban Design combines 'why' we design and 'who' we design for, with 'how' we design, by providing the reader with a comprehensive and accessible bespoke framework for both understanding and practicing urban design in a contextually responsive manner from appraisal to design delivery. The framework is presented across four distinct steps, covering analysis at strategic and local scales; the urban design program; design development; and technical design. The authors unpack the functional blueprints, liveable qualities, contextual dynamics, and technical components of quality urban design, identifying the role of urban designers in shaping spaces and places across differing local contexts through a responsive and multiscalar approach. International best practice examples and two original ‘live’ case studies in Aalborg, Denmark and Manchester, UK demonstrate the application of the framework across differing scales and contexts – each supported by authors own images and graphics that illustrate the broad range of urban design visualisation techniques and methods. Visually compelling and insightful, Applied Urban Design is for all who seek to understand, demand, and create people-centred, high-quality, contextually responsive places and spaces.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842888This book provides an analysis of nature...
06/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842888

This book provides an analysis of nature satisfaction, nature relatedness, and the motivations for using urban green spaces. It explores the use of spaces such as parks, waterfronts, wooded areas, and fields among different life course phases and socio-economic classes. Through a detailed analysis of primary data from two major German cities, Cologne and Hamburg, the book examines the availability, use, and satisfaction with urban green spaces and provides insights into the predictors of nature satisfaction in an urban context. The book also combines the subjective assessments of the respondents with objective data. It considers the varying reliance on urban green spaces due to the availability of private green spaces and individual nature relatedness. It provides insights on the needs of different population groups in cities, providing a scientific basis for improving or implementing green space planning approaches. This book will be of interest to researchers in sociology, urban studies, public health, environmental studies, and human geography.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842898This book provides an overview of the ci...
05/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842898

This book provides an overview of the circular economy in the built environment, presenting a fusion of insights from esteemed researchers and seasoned practitioners. The chapters cover pivotal themes, including the transformative concept of buildings as material banks, innovative design approaches, and the potential of digitalization for a circular built environment. Beyond these foundational themes, the book critically addresses the integration of low-tech solutions and some principles of sobriety in the built environment. It also takes an informed look at the role of standardization, providing nuanced insights into its driving influence on circular practices and the associated challenges and opportunities. The book adopts a trans-scalar perspective by traversing the entire spectrum of building phases from initial programming to the recovery phase, as well as from the scale of materials to the scale of buildings, offering a profound examination of the intricate dynamics involved in the offer/demand for recovered materials. This book highlights the paramount need to harmonize research with practical applications. By spotlighting effective circular practices and elucidating the challenges faced by practitioners, it identifies fertile grounds for further research. Moreover, the book extends its reach by offering practical ideas on how practitioners can seamlessly adopt a circular approach in both thought and realization. Circular Economy for the Built Environment: Research and Practice is a must-read book for students, researchers, academics, and practitioners in the fields of architecture, planning, engineering, construction, and real estate. This book provides a compelling narrative that bridges the theoretical and practical realms of the circular economy in the built environment.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842907Originally published in 1962, this book ...
04/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842907

Originally published in 1962, this book traces the main influences behind modern design in domestic architecture. It does so against the context of the effect each new dwelling has on its environment and the effect its design has on those in the surrounding (and often older, historic) housing stock. Diverse influences such as the bye-law street and Le Corbusier’s Ville Radieuse are discussed, while the ideas bearing on the individual private house range from those of the early nineteenth century villa builders to Frank Lloyd Wright’s prairie houses and the work of Mies van der Rohe. The book closes with a detailed discussion of the problems and possibilities of domestic design in house-building in the late 20th Century.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842922Children and young people are often disc...
03/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842922

Children and young people are often discussed as if they are homogenous groups. The reality is, of course, very different, with an enormous variation within each of these groups and in any domain of experience pertaining to childhood or adolescence. Driven by personal, sociocultural, geographic, or economic circumstances, many children and young people worldwide are experiencing a totally different reality to those who fit with more mainstream patterns of childhood. This has substantial implications for their sociophysical environmental experience and our understanding of their physical environmental needs. The aim of this book is to draw attention to these alternate realities for a number of these groups of children and young people, highlighting the unique and different considerations associated with their particular circumstances in each instance, and identifying the repercussions for their physical environmental needs. Ultimately, this book creates an evidence-based discussion which can be used by designers, planners and policy makers, and those delivering services and programs to children and young people as a basis to make informed decisions on how to work with the groups of children and young people in our book for better environmental provision.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842929Originally published in 1993, as part of...
02/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842929

Originally published in 1993, as part of the Ethnoscapes: Current Challenges in the Environmental Social Sciences series, reissued now with a new series introduction, Housing: Design, Research and Education, demonstrated some of the diversity and richness of the research being undertaken in housing at time, which took as its starting point peoples’ notion of home and the way in which a sense of home is captured distilled and expressed through various facets of design, and conversely the urgent need for architects and planners to take seriously the everyday scale and scope of peoples’ home experience. The breadth of subject background and cultural location from which these chapters are drawn provides stimulating reading at the same time as presenting a challenging choice of perspectives.

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842933In Building Materials, Health and Indoor...
01/06/2026

À lire en ligne via RERO : https://ils.bib.uclouvain.be/global/documents/3842933

In Building Materials, Health and Indoor Air Quality: Volume 2 Tom Woolley uses new research to continue to advocate for limiting the use of hazardous materials in construction and raise awareness of the links between pollutants found in building materials, poor indoor air quality and health problems. Chapters in this volume reinforce previous arguments and present new ones covering: Further evidence of the health impacts of hazardous emissions from materials Hazardous materials to be avoided and why Fire and smoke toxicity - the Lakanal House and Grenfell Tower legacy Sub-standard retrofits leading to damp and mould in previously sound houses A critical review of recent reports from UK Government and others on air quality and health problems including policy changes on flame retardants Growing evidence of cancer risks and the failure of cancer research organisations to address these issues A critical review of recent climate change and zero carbon policies and a discussion on whether extreme energy efficiency is a good thing This book asks some important and, for some, uncomfortable questions, but in doing so it brings to light important areas for research and provides much needed guidance for architects, engineers, construction professionals, students and researchers on hazardous materials and how to reduce their use and design and build healthier buildings for all occupants.

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