John Brown is the editor of theslowhome.com and the founder of the Slow Home Movement. He is a registered architect, real estate broker and Professor of Architecture at the University of Calgary.
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Interviews
- Dan Black, Product Designer
- Adam Frank, Artist and Product Designer
- Merike Reigo & Stephen Bauer, Designers
- Stephen Hugo-Seinader, Furniture and Product Designer
- Dr. William Rees, Human Ecologist
- Martin Fenlon, Architect
- Zoltan E. Pali, Architect
- John Friedman and Alice Kimm, Architects
- Alice Fung and Michael Blatt, Architects
- Christopher Platt, Architect
- Brant Ritter, Product Designer
- Carl Honore, Author
- Kevin Angstadt, Architect
- Graeme Brooker & Sally Stone, Authors
- Daniel Ogassian, Product Designer
- Stephen Teeple, Architect
- Kiyoshi Matsuzaki, RAIC President
- Tim McDonald and Howard Steinberg, Architects
- Felix Schneider, Product Distributor
- John Patkau, Architect
- Building Green TV - Foundations
- Building Green TV - Strawbale
- Dr. Ted Kesik, Researcher
- Drew Mandel, Architect
- Ian Alexander, Architect
- Dr. Stuart Walker, Author
- Brigitte Shim, Architect
- Brian Messana and Toby O'Rorke, Architects
- Paul Cha, Architect
- Jonathan Segal, Architect
- Dr. Setha Low, Author
- Michael Christensen, Architect
- Jorge Gracia, Architect
- Kenneth Frampton, Architecture Historian
- S. Claire Conroy, Editor
- Mark McInturff, Architect
- John Shnier, Architect
- Soren Rasmussen, Architect
- Dr. Ray Cole, Professor of Architecture
- Wes Jones, Architect
- Anna Maria Indrio, Architect
- Frank Harmon, Architect
- Kevin Southerland and David Thompson, Architects
- Belle van't Hoff, Architect
- Ned Engs, Architect
- Dick van Gameren, Architect
- Sharon Johnston, Architect
- Dan Hisel, Architect
- Katy Flammia, Architect
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We
believe that our homes and neighborhoods should be healthy, vibrant places that uplift the spirit and gracefully fit our needs. We call for an end to poor construction, bad design, misleading marketing, unfair lending practices and environmental neglect in the housing industry. We acknowledge our collective responsibility to create Good, Close, Light places to live that leave a positive legacy for future generations.
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is an international movement devoted to bringing good design into real life. It takes its name from the slow food movement which arose as a reaction to the processed food industry. The sprawl of cookie cutter housing that surrounds us is like fast food - standardized, homogenous, and wasteful. It contributes to a too fast life that is bad for us, our cities, and the environment. In the same way that slow food raises awareness of the food we eat and how these choices affect our lives, Slow Home provides design focused information to empower each of us to take more control of our homes and improve the quality of where and how we live.
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