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Building Green explores the experience of environmental
architects in Mumbai, one of the world’s most populous and
population-dense urban areas and a city iconic for its massive
informal settlements, extreme wealth asymmetries, and ecological
stresses. Under these conditions, what does it mean to learn, and
try to practice, so-called green design? By tracing the training
and professional experiences of environmental architects in
India’s first graduate degree program in Environmental
Architecture, Rademacher shows how environmental architects forged
sustainability concepts and practices and sought to make them
meaningful through engaged architectural practice. The book’s
focus on practitioners offers insights into the many roles that
converge to produce this emergent, critically important form of
urban expertise. At once activists, scientists, and designers, the
environmental architects profiled in
Building Green act as
key agents of urban change whose efforts in practice are shaped by
a complex urban development economy, layered political power
relations, and a calculus of when, and how, their expert skills
might be operationalized in service of a global urban future.