Soviet Bus Stops Volume II
By (Author) Christopher Herwig
By (author) FUEL
Edited by Damon Murray
Edited by Stephen Sorrell
FUEL Publishing
FUEL Publishing
1st October 2017
14th September 2017
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Architecture: public, commercial and industrial buildings
Buses, trams and commercial vehicles: general interest
779.092
Hardback
192
Width 200mm, Height 160mm
610g
A follow-up to the hugely successful Soviet Bus Stops, with new photographs of bus stops in Russia, Crimea, Georgia and Ukraine. Christopher Herwig has an insatiable appetite for 'Soviet Bus Stops'. After the popular and critical success of his first book, Herwig has returned to the former Soviet Union to hunt for more. In this second volume, as well as discovering new stops in the remotest areas of Georgia and Ukraine, Herwig turns his camera to Russia itself. Following exhaustive research, he drove 15,000 km from coast to coast across the largest country in the world, in pursuit of new examples of this singular architectural form. A foreword by renowned architecture and culture critic Owen Hatherley reveals new information on the origins of the Soviet bus stop. Examining the government policy that allowed these 'small architectural forms' to flourish, he explains how they reflected Soviet values, and how ultimately they remained - despite their incredible individuality - far-flung outposts of Soviet ideology. The diversity of architectural approaches is staggering: juxtaposed alongside a slew of audacious modern and brutal designs, there are bus stops shaped as trains, birds, light bulbs, rockets, castles, even a bus stop incorporating a statue of St George slaying the dragon. Essential companion to the first volume, this book provides a valuable document of these important and previously overlooked constructions.
Constructed as subtle acts of ingenuity amidst pervasive state control, these bus stops stand as testaments to individual creativity.--Myrto Katsikopoulou "Design Boom"
With twenty years of experience in over ninety countries, Christopher Herwig is a Canadian born photographer and videographer. Currently based in Jordan, his previous homes have included Liberia and Kazakhstan. Owen Hatherley is a British writer and journalist based in London who writes primarily on architecture, politics and culture. Landscapes of Communism, a history of communism in Europe told through the built environments of former socialist states, was published in June 2015.