This book chronicles the genesis and early years of Auburn University’s College of Architecture, Design and Construction’s “Rural Studio”, a design-build architecture studio located off-campus in rural Alabama. The studio educates what founder, Samuel Mockbee, calls “citizen architects” through feet-on-the-ground researching, community immersion, collaborative design and hands-on construction in Hale County’s ‘pockets of poverty.’ What started as a new house per year has grown into chapels, community buildings and structures for much needed economic development. Paramount lessons beyond design and construction are those in human decency, class and racial differences and how both client and student are equally helping one another.
“It’s got to be warm, dry and noble.”
Samuel Mockbee
We reach for this book to remind ourselves that good design doesn’t have to come with a large price tag; that listening to and respecting a project’s client, context and culture leads the way to the best design solutions. It teaches us that architecture isn’t on paper, that the profession can and should serve those who need it most, that function alone isn’t enough, and that humble can also be bold.
“Proceed and be bold.”
Samuel Mockbee