Randall S. Lindstrom, PhD, is an architect, author, and teacher. Practising since 1978, he has served clients on four continents and received numerous professional awards. In 2011, his focus shifted to academic pursuits at the University of Tasmania, where he is Adjunct Researcher in Architecture and Design. Previous publications include Kenosis Creativity Architecture (Routledge, 2021).
"""In this thoughtful, engaging, and timely volume, Randall Lindstrom undertakes the first detailed and rigorous inquiry into the concepts of place and space that are so frequently invoked in contemporary architectural rhetoric and yet seldom seriously examined. Lindstrom’s book challenges architects to address the questions: “What does place mean for architecture?” and “What does architecture mean for place?”—which is to ask, “What does architecture contribute to place, to that in which our lives are lived? Such questions relate directly, not only to architectural theory and practice, but to our everyday human existence."" Jeff Malpas, Emeritus Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania, Hobart and author of Place and Experience: A Philosophical Topography ""An Architecture of Place presents a coherent and diligent study on what is at the very core of architecture and so many related disciplines; namely, the idea of place. Randall Lindstrom weaves a compelling narrative around the vast potential and depth of that idea. Whether a professional, educator, or student, if you want to discover the thresholds of architecture and their crucial importance in practice, immerse yourself in these pages."" Despoina Zavraka, Architect and Landscape Architect, TTDZ Architects and Assistant Professor, School of Architecture, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki ""An Architecture of Place offers an intensive yet thoroughly engaging journey to discover, or rediscover, what the idea of “place” is actually all about. With a thoughtful and thought-provoking narrative, Lindstrom challenges readers—including architects, planners, and other designers—to seriously re-examine previously-held beliefs about place. And they stand to emerge from that re-examination with a profoundly altered perspective, one that can equip both professional and layperson to better engage with the places in which they build."" Edward J. Barry Jr., AIA, NCARB, LEED-AP, Architect and Principal, Farnsworth Group ""This book brings together what, in French, spans several distinct but related notions—place (open space), lieu (location), espace (space). and endroit (place)—and it captures the richness of an idea that none of those notions, alone, can convey. This is critically important for practicing architects, because an awareness of place is what finally moves a project from thinking to reality and sees it contribute to humankind and our habitat. Lindstrom offers a brilliant examination of what place is, as well as the implications of listening, discerning, and responding to it. To do so, he draws on an extensive journey of practicing and thinking architecture in the United States, Europe, and Australasia."" Denis Dufourcq, DPLG Versailles, Architect and Principal, DYArchitectes"