The Architecture of Happiness  

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The Architecture of Happiness is a book by Alain de Botton which discusses the importance of beauty, published by Pantheon Books in 2006. De Botton, inspired by Stendhal's motto "beauty is the promise of happiness," analyzes human surroundings and how human needs and desires manifest their ideals in architecture.

The book attracted wide and favourable attention from architects and architectural critics. In the Boston Globe, the architectural critic Robert Campbell declared it the best book about architecture that he had ever read. There was a chorus of approval from UK, US and Australian critics. The book featured prominently in the film 500 Days of Summer, where it was the reading matter of choice for the hero. In recognition of his services to architecture with the book, the RIBA made Alain de Botton an honorary fellow of the Institute in February 2010.

There have inevitably been some negative voices too. Reviewing the book, New York Times reviewer Jim Holt noted that although the book is in part humorous "in a Woody Allen-ish sort of way", the book, "like de Botton’s previous books, ... contains its quota of piffle dressed up in pompous language." Another reviewer, Mark Lamster in I.D. Magazine wrote, "[De Botton] has produced a meandering, pompous disquisition that betrays an autodidact’s haphazard sense of the field, but with little of the original thinking that might be expected from an outsider. ... The Architecture of Happiness would be an innocuous castoff if not for its proselytizing ambitions (it has so far spawned a PBS miniseries) and a set of rather insidious ideas camouflaged in its twee prose."

Chapter headings

  • I. The Significance of Architecture
  • II. In What Style Shall We Build?
  • III. Talking Buildings
  • IV. Ideals of Home
  • V. The Virtues of Buildings
  • VI. The Promise of a Field

A television series, The Perfect Home, commissioned for Channel 4 and which first aired in 2006, was based on the book.

The book was featured in the 2009 movie (500) Days of Summer.




Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "The Architecture of Happiness" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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