Suburbia Gone Wild Book
During six years, photographer Martin Adolfsson documented one of the greatest economic and cultural shifts in modern history by photographing model homes in eight emerging economies spanning five continents while pretending to be a potential home buyer and secretly documenting these shiny new Suburbs in Bangkok, Shanghai, Bangalore, Cairo, Moscow, Johannesburg, São Paulo, and Mexico City.
Foreword by Joseph Grima
Number of pages: 128
Size: 13” x 10” (33 x 25 cm)
Shipping Cost: Free
Shipping Time: 2-3 weeks - worldwide.
Published in 2013 by Visual Structures LLC
During six years, photographer Martin Adolfsson documented one of the greatest economic and cultural shifts in modern history by photographing model homes in eight emerging economies spanning five continents while pretending to be a potential home buyer and secretly documenting these shiny new Suburbs in Bangkok, Shanghai, Bangalore, Cairo, Moscow, Johannesburg, São Paulo, and Mexico City.
Foreword by Joseph Grima
Number of pages: 128
Size: 13” x 10” (33 x 25 cm)
Shipping Cost: Free
Shipping Time: 2-3 weeks - worldwide.
Published in 2013 by Visual Structures LLC
During six years, photographer Martin Adolfsson documented one of the greatest economic and cultural shifts in modern history by photographing model homes in eight emerging economies spanning five continents while pretending to be a potential home buyer and secretly documenting these shiny new Suburbs in Bangkok, Shanghai, Bangalore, Cairo, Moscow, Johannesburg, São Paulo, and Mexico City.
Foreword by Joseph Grima
Number of pages: 128
Size: 13” x 10” (33 x 25 cm)
Shipping Cost: Free
Shipping Time: 2-3 weeks - worldwide.
Published in 2013 by Visual Structures LLC
The foreword is written by Joseph Grima, an architecture critic and editor-in-chief at Italian Domus Magazine. Grima calls the work an urgently needed research into the state of contemporary urbanization, it offers a beautiful and sometimes frightening visual counterpoint to the numbers, statistics, and facts that are thrown at us every day, offering a mental image to accompany a fact we already know—that today the human species is an urban species.”