|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
9 Reviews
|
Average Customer Review
Share your thoughts with other customers
Create your own review
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointed from Texas,
By A Customer
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
If I had read some of the reviews I would never had purchased the book. When I looked at it closely I realized that it was something I really couldn't use because it did not include the up to date building requirements. If the title shown had mentioned 1932 edition it would have helped in my decsion whether to purchase the book or not. One thing I learned was that I need to check and double check before I purchase.
1.0 out of 5 stars
Be careful, this is the 1932 edition!,
By
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
I bought this book thinking that it was the recent version, but it's a reissue of the 1932 edition! The publishing date is 1998 and the title makes no mention of the antiquated material. This book is an interesting historical work but is useless as a contemporary reference. Make sure you get the "10th Edition" published in 2000 if you want the recent one. I'm trying to return my 1932 antique now.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Lots of Hay, but Very Few Needles,
By
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards (Hardcover)
Once again the editors of Graphic Standards have promised a useful reference for architects, and have fallen way short. In architecture school (1972), I purchased the sixth edition and found it better than most reference books for students of architecture. However, even then I noticed many sections of questionable value. Pages and pages of dimensions of designer furniture and kitchenware fall into this category.Recently, after practicing architecture for 20 years, I was suckered back by publisher Wiley's siren song of how the new tenth edition is new, informative, refreshing, up to date, etc. Fooled again. Sure, the Graphic Standards is a fair source of information, but I question the editors' judgement as to what is worth publishing between the wonderfully bound front and rear cover. For example, look up "R-value" in the index and you are directed to 55 words on page 486 how R-value relates to windows and that it's the inverse of U-values. Nothing on the R-value of all exterior skin construction materials or how the R-value relates poorly to thermal massing materials. These things should be very important to architects and are disappointingly absent from the Graphic Standards. However, if you ever need to know what a Zamboni looks like, or need to know the dimensions required for a rodeo barrel race, this is your book! Want an entire page showing ten pieces of gymnastics equipment (pg. 777) or how to draw an ellipse using pen or pencil (pg.999)? Seek no more. Twenty four pages of kitchen utensils and garden tools are still there. This is the best place to find loads of pages of barely useful information of dubious worth. Once the editors of Graphic Standards discover that a meaningful discussion on R-values in building materials deserves more space than the dimensions of a belt sander, then I might reconsider purchasing a later edition, but I won't hold my breath. Oh, one more thing, for you architects out there working on a Macintosh platform, the accompanying CD-ROM is useless.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Every Architect Needs a Copy,
By Mike Banks (MD) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
The early editions of this book are must-haves for architects. Much of the information, especially residential details, is relevant today. As a literal graphic standard, this work presents visual information that was the genesis of modern professional working drawings. The clarity and richness of information as presented here can stand up in as well as inform today's CADD environment. One note: With a little effort, you can find an original(2nd or 3rd)edition in good condition for less than the cost of this reprint.The first three editions contain nearly identical information.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Architectural Graphic Standards 1932 Edition,
By A Customer
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
The book is fine. ()It only contains standards from 1932.This book is not very usefull to anyone building to current standards.
3.0 out of 5 stars
Don't Be Fooled by the Enclosed CD-Rom,
By A Customer
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards (Hardcover)
While the Architectural Graphics Standards book is as good a reference as always, the enticement of a CD-Rom is a false promise. You have to purchase an unlock code to access the Rom. Said access code is available for a fee of $425.00. That wasn't disclosed before I purchased it.
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Big Red Book,
By Curtis Harkin, AIA (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards (Hardcover)
It has 154 more pages than the 9th edition, so it has new information, but as you page through it you will find it seems almost identical. They need to keep most of the old data, so I wouldn't take off points for that. You can see the publisher's review for all of the new features: I noticed that the Historic Preservation chapter has been shortened a bit. Potentially, the biggest addition is the CD-ROM, which has CAD files ready to use, and includes pretty much everything from the book. You might think that you are getting all that for the cost of the book, but...no. The "demo" CD comes in a sleeve inside the back cover, and is noted: "Full functionality, Limited data." You can access a drawing of a bar joist, for example. It exports a DWG or DXF file with layers based on line weights. The interface is pretty clear; you don't have to read any instructions to start using it. The CD actually has all of the data, but you have to pay another $425 online to "unlock" it. That could be a bargain, but I suspect that most firms will feel that their own detail library is more applicable to the work they do. Still, $425 represents less than a day's worth of billable hours. Every architect knows the value of this book, and most every architecture firm (in the U.S. anyway) will want at least one copy just to stay current, and because the old one is getting worn out. You might as well get it now, and decide on the CD-ROM later. I'd love to have a special edition set with each page ever published in all of the AGS books, or even just the last 3 or 4. I'd give that 6 stars.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Valued Possession,
By A Customer
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
This book is reviewed in The Earth Times, issue of Dec. 1-31, 1999, by Louis Silverstein, executive editor of the publication, who calls the 1953 edition the book he values more than any other in his possession. "If you need to build a home or a small city from scratch ... there is one one book of instruction you would need."
5.0 out of 5 stars
A 1932 Heirloom copy of 1st edition, NOT A CURRENT BOOK!,
By
This review is from: Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen (Paperback)
This text is a coffee-table book or a teaching library text, suitable for impressing novices to architecture how things were actually drawn to be built in 1932. It has no current value, unless one is renovating a building of that era. No code or other standards are included.
|
|
Most Helpful First | Newest First
|
|
Architectural Graphic Standards for Architects, Engineers, Decorators, Builders and Draftsmen by Harold Reeve Sleeper (Paperback - Mar 30 1998)
CDN$ 82.99 CDN$ 66.39
In Stock | ||