Contemporary Architecture

The benefits of drawing

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The act of drawing is an important starting point for the intellectual process we call ‘design’. To be able to draw a chair or...

Neorationalism

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The Italian movement known there as la Tendenza explored a way of building that was at once new and responsive to the shapes, forms...

Brutalism

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The style known as brutalism was a bold, distinctive version of modernism that became popular in the 1960s. Typified by extensive use of concrete...

Heritage

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The way we have looked at historical buildings has changed greatly over the past 150 years. From being all but ignored by the authorities,...

Segregated planning

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Mass car ownership and the increased traffic it brought posed a major challenge to architects and planners. For decades, the obvious solution seemed to...

Dymaxion design

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Richard Buckminster Fuller combined the roles of engineer, inventor and architect to produce a number of innovative designs, the most famous of which were...

Organic architecture. Frank Lloyd Wright

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For thousands of years writers on architecture have compared the creations of builders and architecture to the natural world. The great American architect Frank...

Art Deco

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In the 1920s a number of French designers promoted a style that made ornament modern. They turned their backs on traditional classical and Gothic...

Minimalism

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One of the most familiar interior design styles of recent decades is minimalism—plain walls, surfaces uninterrupted by ornament or moldings, zero clutter. Fashionable as...

The International Style

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The International Style was the name chosen to describe the modernist architecture of the 1920s and early 30s, when the work of architects such...

Bauhaus

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The Bauhaus was a school of design, founded in Germany in 1919, that had a lasting influence on architecture and the design of all...

Constructivism

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The Russian constructivist movement flourished briefly in the 1920s and 30s. Constructivist architects produced breathtaking modern designs, often glorying in unusual and innovative structures....

De Stijl

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Dutch architects were in the vanguard of modernism from 1910 to the end of the 1920s. Their De Stijl movement, which produced stunning white...

Expressionism

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The expressionist movement had its heyday in Germany and the Netherlands in the 1920s. It brought dramatic new forms—curving walls and faceted domes, for...

Futurism

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Italian futurism began as a movement of artists and writers and spread to architecture in the visionary work of Antonio Sant’Elia. Although he built...

Skyscraper*

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Although the cathedral builders of the Middle Ages had known how to build tall towers and spires, the search for ways to build practical...

Garden city

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In the 1870s a number of landlords and social reformers began to design improved housing for ordinary people, creating spacious settlements with generous gardens...

Art Nouveau

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One of the strongest reactions against the clutter, formality and artistic revivalism of the Victorian period was Art Nouveau—a style of art that swept...
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