Buildings of the United States is a multi-volume series of illustrated reference works. The series focuses on the architectural history and legacy of various States, regions, or metropolitan areas, "identifying the rich cultural, economic, and geographical diversity of the United States as it is reflected in the architecture. . . " The books in the series are intended as a resource for academics, architects, and preservationists, as well as guidebooks for the general public. Each volume is intended to be written by an individual expert or contributing experts. The series is sponsored by the Society of Architectural Historians, having established its editorial board, consisting of academics and representatives of the National Park Service, the Library of Congress, and the American Institute of Architects. As of 2012, the head of the editorial committee is Professor Emerita at Tulane University, Karen Kingsley, Editor-in-Chief and Managing Editor. The Society also coordinates fundraising for the project.
The series is a planned 60 volume work. Work on the series was inspired by Nikolaus Pevsner's Buildings of England guidebooks. The Society has overseen the publication of 20 volumes since 1993. The series first 10 volumes were published by Oxford University Press and since 2006, it has been published by the University of Virginia Press. Its first four volumes (1993) on buildings in Alaska, the District of Columbia, Iowa, and Michigan (2nd ed. 2012) received American publishing awards, and its volumes on Colorado (1997) and Louisiana (2004) have also received honors. The most recent volume is Savannah, Georgia (2016). A volume on Wisconsin has a planned publication date. In addition to the foregoing, the existing series includes volumes on architecture in Delaware (2008), Hawaii (2011), Massachusetts: Metropolitan Boston (2009), Nevada (2000), North Dakota (2015), Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvania (2010), Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania (2007 and 2010), Rhode Island (2004), Texas: Central, South and Gulf Coast (2013), Virginia: Tidewater and Piedmont (2002), and Valley, Piedmont, Southside, and Southwest (2014), Vermont (2014), and West Virginia (2004).