VOYAGE LE CORBUSIER: Drawing on the Road. It features 175 drawings from Corb's early sketchbooks, from 1907 to 1911, including ruins, interiors, landscapes, and the people and objects that populated them. There are dozens of never-before-published drawings and paintings, some reproduced for the first time in full color, or available only in disparate sources. Also included is a foreword by Jean-Louis Cohen, the French architect, historian and Le Corbusier scholar.

The book is aimed at the general public and students as well, with distinct messaging for each. "I would love for non-architects to get an idea of the appreciation of drawing and painting as a form of research and travel - that you can take away a lot with a pad and pencil," he says. "For students, there's the idea that drawing is still relevant and meaningful and at the core of what we do."

This is a book that's meant to teach young architects how to see what they're looking at - to unpack a scene, piece-by-piece and brick-by-brick. "They learn about the culture, the material and life," he says. "You can't learn that from a computer. It stays with you because it's an active experience, not a passive one, like looking at a screen." ... Brillhart believes that the computer will never replace drawing because it cannot draw what the architect sees or thinks or does. "If you want to convey that, you have to sketch it and then have the computer draw it," he says. "These drawings are so beautiful that younger architects will want to learn from that process."