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Power, Flows, and Transformation

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Energy is everywhere—yet the vast infrastructural networks that power our daily lives remain largely invisible. Accounting for three-quarters of global greenhouse gas emissions, energy systems st...
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  • 03 June 2025
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Energy is everywhere—yet the vast infrastructural networks that power our daily lives remain largely invisible. Accounting for three-quarters of global greenhouse gas emissions, energy systems stand at the center of our climate crisis and the transformations needed to address it. This book examines energy supply as a spatial and material phenomenon, exploring the Berlin-Brandenburg capital region through maps, drawings, texts, and photographs. It reveals the hidden geographies connecting energy production and consumption across scales—from household transformations to citywide configurations and regional supply networks. Tracing the flow of fossil and renewable energy carriers through territories, towns, and streets, Power, Flows, and Transformation offers a multi-layered portrait of our energy landscapes past, present, and future. In doing so, the book illuminates the complex assemblages and diverse localities that define and support our urban structures today, unearthing how these will shape the territorial reconfigurations of tomorrow’s energy geography.

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Price: $41.99
Pages: 352
Publisher: JOVIS
Imprint: JOVIS
Publication Date: 03 June 2025
ISBN: 9783986120207
Format: Paperback
BISACs: Individual architects and architectural firms, Environmentally-friendly (‘green’) architecture & design, Architecture: public, commercial and industrial buildings
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David Bauer is a practicing architect as well as an urban researcher affiliated with the Habitat Unit at TU-Berlin’s Institute for Architecture. He teaches architectural and urban design with a focus on infrastructure as a critical lever for transforming toward sustainability and resilience.

Philipp Misselwitz is an architect and urban planner based in Berlin. He holds the Chair of Habitat Unit at the Institute for Architecture, TU-Berlin. He is Executive Director of Bauhaus Earth—an interdisciplinary think-tank and lab dedicated to transforming building and human settlements from being drivers of climate and societal crises into creative forces for systemic regeneration.