Alvar Aalto once argued that what mattered in architecture wasn't what a
building looks like on the day it opens but what it is like to live
inside it thirty years later. In this book, architect and critic Robert
McCarter persuasively argues that interior spatial experience is the
necessary starting point for design, and the quality of that experience
is the only appropriate means of evaluating a work after it has been
built.
McCarter reveals that we can't really know a piece of architecture
without inhabiting its spaces, and we need to counter our contemporary
obsession with exterior views and forms with a renewed appreciation for
interiors. He explores how interior space has been integral to the
development of modern architecture from the late 1800s to today, and he
examines how architects have engaged interior space and its experiences
in their design processes, fundamentally transforming traditional
approaches to composition. Eloquently placing us within a host of
interior spaces, he opens up new ways of thinking about architecture and
what its goals are and should be.