A Czech architect contemplates a return to nature in his approach to
building design
At the age of 70, the Czech architect and author Martin Rajnis (born
1944) embarked on a four-year journey around the world, during which he
studied the buildings of various nations and cultures, and a range of
natural landscapes. He returned from this sojourn as the exponent and
theorist of a new "natural architecture"; in fact, his buildings had
already begun to shift in materials and aesthetics from steel and
concrete to "naturalistic" wood, stone and glass, resulting in a number
of experimental and organically shaped structures. Complementing the
monumental Martin Rajnis Architecture Guild volume, this autobiography
recounts his thoughts and memories, looking back on his personal and
professional life and contemplating his future in light of his new
organicist vision of architecture.