Winner of Best Guidebook Award 2019 from the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians
"New Orleans isn't like other cities," Stella tells her sister Blanche DuBois in Tennessee Williams's A Streetcar Named Desire. Cradled in the crescent of the Mississippi River and surrounded by water, the city has faced numerous challenges since its founding as a French colonial outpost in 1718. This detailed guidebook to New Orleans architecture--an authoritative, comprehensive, post-Hurricane Katrina overview of buildings, neighborhoods, and landscapes--tells a compelling and fascinating story of the city through concise descriptions of nearly 300 significant structures, open spaces, and lesser-known places, enhanced by 175 photographs and 23 maps. Conveniently organized into thirteen neighborhood tours, two road trips into nearby parishes, and three excursions up and down the Mississippi River along the historic Great River Road, and enlivened by sidebars highlighting everything from renowned authors, cuisine, and jazz to public markets, green spaces, and historic preservation, this handy insider's guide to New Orleans will appeal to all who are interested in the history of one of America's most interesting places.
This is the most up to date guide you will find to the city, including new construction such as Musician's Village and green spaces like the Laffite Greenway that have been created post-Katrina. It starts, as the city did, with the French Quarter but is a worthy companion for anyone, even a local, who wants to explore other areas.
--The Syncopated TimesBuildings of New Orleans falls into the SAH/BUS City Guide series, and is therefore a compact book that is easy to carry around.
--SeriouslyArchitecture.com[F]ills a critically important need for a definitive, up-to-the-minute text about New Orleans' built and natural environment.
--New Orleans Advocate[An] informative, illustrated gidebook.... Entries identify the building's name, primary date of construction, architect/designer, and address/location; this is followed by a concise account of the building's appearance and architectural features, origins, and current use. Significant additions or alterations (including those following Hurricane Katrina in 2005) are also noted. While brief, the entries often include fascinating details about life in New Orleans throughout its 400-year history.
--BooklistBuilding of New Orleans is a unique, in-depth guidebook that encourages New Orleanians to be a tourist in their own hometown, and beyond.... Full of facts, information and trivia, this is the kind of book you'll want to stash in your day tripping bag or glove box for easy reference.
--New Orleans MagazineA paperback with a travel guide's relaxed but informative tone, it's organized into neighborhood tours, making it perfect for tossing into a backpack and jumping on a streetcar for a day of architecture exploration.
--The Times-Picayune