Quotes from the book:
If you think you can't make the world a better place with your work, at least make sure you don't make it worse. The art of architecture is not only to make beautiful things nor it's only to make useful things, it's to do both at once... everything we design must be adequate for every situation.
Architecture seems, time and again, incapable of bridging the gap between idea and reality the way art does. Only rarely does architecture succeed in escaping its ostensibly inescapable fate, that of seeking to assert itself in one trend or another, instead of exposing the superficiality of trendiness and replacing it by a truer reality. And architecture, it seems, to tends to be too material to be ideal, and instead of attacking existing reality it does the opposite: it does its utmost to affirm it.
In our work we must always aim at quality on so many levels as are needed to create an environment which does not exclusively serve a particular group of people but which serves all people. Architecture must be both generous and inviting to all alike. Architecture must be both generous and inviting if its design is as forthcoming to the outsiders of society as to members of the establishments, and if one could imagine it existing in any other conceivable cultural context.