
Professor Jin-Ho Park of the Department of Architecture at Inha University has published Rudolph M. Schindler’s Unbuilt Architecture: Design Theory, Languages and Methods Toward Space Making with Routledge.
The book is an architectural-historical study that re-examines the architecture and theoretical framework of Rudolph Michael Schindler, focusing on his unrealized projects and related archival records. Drawing on primary sources, including Schindler’s unpublished lecture notes, personal manuscripts, and drawings, Park analyzes proposals and experimental works that were never completed, tracing the development of Schindler’s ideas and the internal logic through which his theories took shape.
Rather than presenting Schindler’s practice as a sequence of discrete projects, the study asks how recurring concerns and design strategies evolved, shifted, and were recalibrated over time. By comparing Schindler’s work across different periods, particularly moments of transition, the book frames his architecture not as a linear progression, but as a continuous process shaped by tension, revision, and reconfiguration.
Research for the publication involved the examination of dispersed archives and drawings held across several institutions, including the Schindler Archive at the University of California, Santa Barbara, the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, the Getty Research Institute, and the TU Wien. In dialogue with existing scholarship in Western architectural history and theory, the book reconstructs Schindler’s architectural thinking through materials that explicitly include unrealized projects.
Professor Park received his M.Arch. and Ph.D. from the UCLA Graduate School of Architecture and Urban Design, and previously served as assistant and associate professor at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa School of Architecture. He is currently a professor at Inha University, with research interests spanning architectural design methods, theory and history, planning and design, digital design and fabrication, and design computation. He has served as chair of the 4th Asia-Pacific Architecture Symposium and has contributed to academic publishing as an editorial board member and guest editor for Nexus Network Journal and Open House International.


































