Assemble
Building, Community and Collaboration
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Thames & Hudson Ltd
Publishing:7th Aug '25
£45.00
This title is due to be published on 7th August, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The long-awaited monograph on the Turner Prize-winning multidisciplinary architecture collective Assemble, gathering more than a decade of their groundbreaking collaborative work.
Architecture collective Assemble has transformed the definition of a successful young practice by working on temporary, small-scale, community-based projects, often reusing sites and materials. Described by architecture critic Edwin Heathcote as ‘young, widely admired and increasingly influential’, they are the future of architecture and the antithesis of the faceless, corporate juggernaut.
This retrospective of the first decade or so of Assemble’s dynamic work, organized according to project type, highlights how their methods, working practices, interest in craft and building, and focus on reuse and material choices set them apart from other architecture practices. Based on extensive interviews with partners, the group’s archives and documentation of their projects, and itself a collaborative labour of love, the book draws together nearly forty major pieces of work through stunning photography, drawings and text. Their projects range as widely as Granby Four Streets – a community-led project to rebuild a derelict neighbourhood in Liverpool – to a brewery in rural Japan and a train depot renovation in Arles.
Providing an essential overview of the group, from their self-initiated temporary projects to their meteoric rise to international acclaim, Aaron Betsky explores how Assemble’s playful and subversive buildings have forged a pioneering new model of progressive architecture that continues to challenge the establishment.
ISBN: 9780500027004
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
352 pages