'King's importance in shaping the way we understand globalization as an unequal and uneven system not only of economic but of material and cultural processes cannot be understated.' - Rob Shields, Building Research and Information, 2005'This is architectural history at its best.' - Rob Shields, Building Research and Information, 2005'The empirical material in this book is excellent.' - Rob Shields, Building Research and Information, 2005'Proof of the reflection of the "time-space" compression (in the way Harvey names) on our cultural and intellectual reading of the contemporary and "homogenized" world.' - METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture'The book is very interdisciplinary—and inherently geographical ... It is sensitive to political and cultural context and highlights the various hegemonies at play in architecture.' - Loretta Lees, Environment and Planning A, volume 38'King provides an accessible and significant contribution to the literature on how transnational and global identities play out within the built environment ... it will be of considerable interest to a range of courses, from architecture and planning history to the sociology and geography of consumption.' - Journal of Consumer Culture