FUE - Future University in Egypt Faculty of Engineering and Technology
Department of Architectural Engineering
ARC 322: History & Theories of Architecture (4) Fall 2016 Instructor: Dr. Yasser Mahgoub Lecture 3 - Architectural Timeline
ARCHITECTURAL TIMELINE
Architectural Styles Evolutionary Tree May you be condemned to live in interesting times. A Chinese Proverb This is a brief coverage of the development of architectural styles throughout history using a timeline to provide a better visual overview.
Architectural Styles Evolutionary Tree
Antiquity Architecture
Giza Pyramids
Stone Henge
Petra
Abu Simbel Temple
Islamic Architecture
Mecca
Muhamad Ali Mosque
Dome of the Rock
Al Hambra
Wikalat Al Ghuri
Sultan Hassan
Architecture of the Late 20th Century
Frank Gehry
Shtutgart Museum
Mario Botta
Peter Eisenman
Zaha Hadi
Tado Ando
Renzo Piano
Jean Nouvel
Architecture of the early 21st Century
Nano Materials
Cybertecture
Parametric Design
Architectural Movements: Modern Architecture The Modern movement was an attempt to create a nonhistorical architecture of functionalism in which a new sense of space would be created with the help of modern materials. Believing that the 20th century had given birth to "modern man," who would need a radically new kind of architecture.
Le Corbusier
F. L.. Wright
Walter Gropius
Mies Van Der Rohe
Le Corbusier - Pierre Jeanneret , Villa Savoye - 1931
Frank Lloyd Wright - Fallingwater in Mill Run, Pennsylvania -
Frank Lloyd Wright - Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum - 1959
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - Farnsworth House in Plano, Illinois - 1951
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - Neue Nationalgalerie - 1968
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - Barcelona Pavilion - 1929
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe - Barcelona Pavilion - 1929
Philip Johnson - Glass House - New Canaan, Connecticut - 1949
Bertrand Goldberg - Chicago Marina Apartments - 1964
Architectural Movements: Post-Modern Architecture The postmodernist movement began in America around the 1960’s/70’s and then it spread to Europe and the rest of the world. Postmodernism or Late-modernism began as a reaction to Modernism; it tried to address the limitations of its predecessor. Its list of aims extended to include communicating ideas with the public often in a humorous or witty way. Communication was done by quoting extensively from past architectural styles, often many at once. In breaking away from modernism, it strived to produce buildings that were sensitive to the context within which they are built. This trend became evident in the last quarter of the 20th century as architects started to turn away from modern Functionalism which they viewed as boring, unwelcoming and unpleasant. They turned towards the past, quoting past aspects of various buildings and melding them together to create a new means of designing buildings.
Robert Venturi
Philip Jonson
Michael Graves
Cesar Pelli
Architectural Movements: Post-Modern Architecture For example, pillars and other elements of premodern designs were adapted from Greek and Roman examples but not simply by recreating them, as was done in neoclassical architecture. Another return was that of the “wit, ornament and reference” seen in older buildings in terra cotta decorative façades and bronze or stainless steel embellishments of the Beaux-Arts and Art Deco periods. In post-modern structures this was often achieved by placing contradictory quotes of previous building styles alongside each other, and even incorporating furniture stylistic references at a huge scale. Contextualism influenced the ideologies of the postmodern movement in general. Contextualism was centered on the belief that all knowledge is “context-sensitive”. This idea was even taken further to say that knowledge cannot be understood without considering its context. This influenced Postmodern Architecture to be sensitive to context.
Robert Venturi
Philip Jonson
Michael Graves
Cesar Pelli
Vanna Venturi House / Robert Venturi
Piazza d'Italia, August Perez & Associates and Charles Moore
Michael Graves, Portland Building
1997 Michael Graves, Steigenberger Hotel, El Gouna, Egypt
May 22, 2008
Architectural Movements: High-Tech Architecture The high tech style emerged in the 1980s and remains popular. It involves the use of the materials associated with high tech industries of the 1980s and 1990s, such as space frames, metal cladding and composite fabrics and materials. High tech buildings often have extensive glazing to show to the outside world the activity going on inside. Generally their overall appearance is light, typically with a combination of dramatic curves and straight lines. In many ways high tech architecture is a reaction against Brutalist architecture, without the features of post-modernism. Sir. Norman Foster
London City Hall
Millennium Dome
Hong Kong Bank
Lloyd's of London
Reichstag Dome
Renzo Piano
Richard Rogers
Jean Nouvel
Institut du Monde Arabe
Pompidou Centre
Munich Stadium
1851 Crystal Palace Joseph Paxton London
1899 Gustave Eiffel Paris
1969 John Hancock Center Fazlur Khan Chicago
1971 World Trade Center Minoru Yamasaki New York
1972 Stadion Olimpijski Frei Otto Monachium
1977 Centre Georges Pompidou, Renzo Piano/Richard Rogers, Paris
Foster + Partners’ HSBC building in Hong Kong
Lloyd’s building in London, completed 1986 - Richard Bryant / Arcaid
Lloyd’s building in London, completed 1986 - Richard Bryant / Arcaid
Foster and Partners' Reichstag building in Berlin
1999 Millennium Dome Richard Rogers Londyn
2002 City Hall Norman Foster Londyn
Architectural Movements: Deconstruction Deconstruction is a school of philosophy that originated in France in the late 1960s, has had an enormous impact on Anglo-American criticism. Largely the creation of its chief proponent Jacques Derrida, deconstruction upends the Western metaphysical tradition. It represents a complex response to a variety of theoretical and philosophical movements of the 20th century, most notably Husserlian phenomenology, Saussurean and French structuralism, and Freudian and Lacanian psychoanalysis. In her book The Critical Difference (1981), Barbara Johnson clarifies the term: "Deconstruction is not synonymous with "destruction", however. It is in fact much closer to the original meaning of the word 'analysis' itself, which etymologically means "to undo" -- a virtual synonym for "to deconstruct."
D. Libeskind
Frank Gehry
Peter Eisenman
Zaha Hadid
Architectural Movements: Deconstruction In the 1980's a new tendency was born: the deconstruction, which was also called "new modern architecture" in its beginning. It was meant to replace post modern architecture. The new slogan was "form follows fantasy" analogous to the tradition formula pronounced by Sullivan "form follows function". In 1988 Philip Johnson organized an exposition called "Deconstructive Architecture" which finally brought these ideas to a larger audience. The idea was to develop buildings which show how differently from traditional architectural conventions buildings can be built without loosing their utility and still complying with the fundamental laws of physics. These buildings can be seen as a parallel to other modern arts, which also became more and more abstract, questioning whether a certain object is still art or not. Thanks to their significant differences to all other buildings, the deconstructive ones made clear to the observer, that architecture is an art and not just an engineering discipline.
D. Libeskind
Frank Gehry
Peter Eisenman
Zaha Hadid
1997 Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain
2003 Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles, California
1989 Wexner Center for the Arts Ohio State University Columbus, Ohio
1991 Nunotani building Edogawa Tokyo Japan
1995 Fred and Ginger currently Dancing House, Prague, Czech Republic
Architectural Movements: Minimalism Architecture Minimalism describes movements in various forms of art and design, especially visual art and music, where the work is stripped down to its most fundamental features. The term Minimalism was coined as a means of describing the works by protagonists of the American scene in the late Fifties and Sixties. In the field of architecture, the term Minimalism was used to connote the works of architects from profoundly different origins and cultural backgrounds, who had based their own work on a reduction in expressive media, a rediscovery of the value of empty space and a radical elimination of everything that does not coincide with a programme, also with minimalistic design overtones, of extreme simplicity and formal cleanliness.
Tadao Ando
Luis Barrag‡n
Álvaro Siza
John Pawson
"Less is more“ Ludwig Mies van der Rohe “Clarity and comfort do not depend on quantity but on an absolute quality of space. John Pawson "Gravity builds space, light builds time, and gives reason to time. These are the central questions of architecture: control of gravity and dialogue with light." Alberto Campo Baeza Pawson- Tetsuka House - Tokyo
Mies - Barcelona Pavilion
Siza - Home
Ando - Historical Museum
Barrag‡n - Entrance
Architectural Movements: Minimalism Architecture Architect Mies van der Rohe adopted the motto "Less is More" to describe his aesthetic tactic of arranging the numerous necessary components of a building to create an impression of extreme simplicity, by enlisting every element and detail to serve multiple visual and functional purposes. In minimalism, the architectural designers pay special attention to the connection between perfect planes, elegant lighting, and careful consideration of the void spaces left by the removal of threedimensional shapes from an architectural design.
Tadao Ando
Luis Barrag‡n
Álvaro Siza
John Pawson
"Less is more“ Ludwig Mies van der Rohe “Clarity and comfort do not depend on quantity but on an absolute quality of space. John Pawson "Gravity builds space, light builds time, and gives reason to time. These are the central questions of architecture: control of gravity and dialogue with light." Alberto Campo Baeza Pawson- Tetsuka House - Tokyo
Mies - Barcelona Pavilion
Siza - Home
Ando - Historical Museum
Barrag‡n - Entrance
Architectural Movements: Critical Regionalism Critical regionalism is an approach to architecture that strives to counter the placelessness and lack of meaning in Modern Architecture by using contextual forces to give a sense of place and meaning. The term critical regionalism was first used by Alexander Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre and later more famously by Kenneth Frampton. Frampton put forth his views in "Towards a Critical Regionalism: Six points of an architecture of resistance." He evokes Paul Ricoeur's question of "how to become modern and to return to sources; how to revive an old, dormant civilization and take part in universal civilization". According to Frampton, critical regionalism should adopt modern architecture critically for its universal progressive qualities but at the same time should value responses particular to the context. Emphasis should be on topography, climate, light, tectonic form rather than scenography and the tactile sense rather than the visual. Frampton draws from phenomenology to supplement his arguments.
Jorn Utzon
Botta -
Alvar Aalto
Mario Botta
K. Frampton
Aalto - Finlandia Hall
Utzon - Sydney Opera House
Architectural Movements: Critical Regionalism As put forth by Tzonis and Lefaivre, critical regionalism need not directly draw from the context, rather elements can be stripped of their context and used in strange rather than familiar ways. Here the aim is to make aware of a disruption and a loss of place that is already a fait accompli through reflection and self-evaluation. Critical regionalism is different from regionalism which tries to achieve a one-to-one correspondence with vernacular architecture in a conscious way without consciously partaking in the universal. Critical regionalism is considered a particular form of postmodern (not to be confused with postmodernism as architectural style) response in developing countries. It can be argued that the following architects have used such an approach in some of their works: Alvar Aalto, Jørn Utzon, Studio Granda, Mario Botta, B.V.Doshi, Charles Correa, Alvaro Siza, Rafael Moneo, Geoffrey Bawa, Raj Rewal, Tadao Ando, Mack Scogin / Merrill Elam, Ken Yeang, William S.W. Lim, Tay Kheng Soon, Juhani Pallasmaa, and Tan Hock Beng.
Jorn Utzon
Botta -
Alvar Aalto
Mario Botta
K. Frampton
Aalto - Finlandia Hall
Utzon - Sydney Opera House
KEN YEANG /Malesia/Menara, Mesiniaga, 2003
JORN UTZON, Opera Sydney
JORN UTZON. Kuwait NationalAssembly
RAJ REWAL, India, British High Comitee Housing, New Delhi
RAJ REWAL, India, Scope Company. New Delhi
RAFAEL MONEO /Spain/ Our Lady of the Angels Cathedral, Los Angeles, 2002
Architectural Movements: Sustainable Architecture The 1987 Brundtland Report, defined sustainable development as development that "meets the needs of the present generation without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs". Sustainable Architecture describes an approach to architectural design that minimizes sustenance or resource consumption so as to prolong the availability of natural resources. The real power of the concept of sustainability lies in its integration of economic, social, and ecological systems, previously studied and dealt with separately.
Ballard Library & Neighborhood Service Center
Solar Umbrella House
Westcave Preserve
Architectural Movements: Sustainable Architecture What is a sustainable building? 1. Uses key resources more efficiently – energy, water, materials and land. 2. Reduces ecological loading – greenhouse gases, ozone-depleting substances, wastes. 3. Creates healthier environments for people to live, work and learn 4. Has lower overall lifecycle costs
Ballard Library & Neighborhood Service Center
Solar Umbrella House
Westcave Preserve
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Eco-Architecture Designed by Vincent Callebaut Architectures NAUTILUS ECO-RESORT is a pioneering, eco-tourism complex designed to unite the knowledge of the scientific community with the willingness of ecotourists to optimize the revitalization and protection of a degraded ecosystem such as in the Philippines. Based on biomimicry, the architectures of this EcoResort are inspired by the shapes, structures, intelligence of materials and feedback loops that exist in living beings and endemic ecosystems. By minimizing its ecological footprint, the experience is centered on the preservation of nature and local urban ecology while respecting endemic ecosystems and agro-ecosystems.
Solaris Singapour 2010
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Biomimicry Biomimicry is the term used to describe the substances, equipment, mechanism and systems by which humans imitate natural systems and designs. There are two approaches to biomimetic designs: design → biology biology → design
Supertrees, Singapore
Lotus temple
Beijing National Stadium
Norman Foster’s Gherkin Tower (2003)
The Sagrada Família church by Antoni Gaudi
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Biomimicry Nature has long been a source of inspiration for architects and designers, whether they aim to blend a building into its environment or use only local materials during construction. The process generally emphasizes plants and landscapes, but the growing interest in biomimicry is drawing developers to fauna as well as flora.
Super Trees, Singapore
Chinese Watercube
Esplanade Theatre (Singapore)
The Sagrada FamĂlia church by Antoni Gaudi
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Kinetic Architecture This pair of Abu Dhabi towers are sheathed in a thin skin of glass—fashionable, but not ideal for the desert climate. So the architects at Aedas designed a special, secondary sun screen that deflects some of the glare without permanently blocking the views. Thanks to a series of faceted fiberglass rosettes—based on traditional Islamic mashrabiya —which open and close in response to the temperature of the facade.
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Parametric Parametric design is a process based on algorithmic thinking that enables the expression of parameters and rules that, together, define, encode and clarify the relationship between design intent and design response.
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Parametric
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Parametric
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Flexible Architecture -
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Charles Jencks A new paradigm in architecture will reflect changes in science, religion, and politics. one can discern the beginnings of a shift in architecture that relates to a deep transformation going on in the sciences - in time, permeate all other areas of life. The new sciences of complexity - fractals, nonlinear dynamics, the new cosmology, self-organizing systems - have brought about the change in perspective. We have moved from a mechanistic view of the universe to one that is self-organizing at all levels, from the atom to the galaxy. Illuminated by the computer, this new worldview is paralleled by changes now occurring in architecture.
Daniel Libeskind Imperial War Museum North, Trafford , Manchester 1998–2002
Rem Koolhaas, [OMA] The CCTV Headquarters, to be completed for the Beijing Olympics 2008
LAB with Bates Smart Federation Square Melbourne 1997-2002
MVRDV Dutch Pavilion EXPO 2000 Hannover
Santiago Calatrava City of Arts and Sciences Valencia 1991–2000
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE Several key buildings show promise those by Americans Frank Gehry, Peter Eisenman, and Daniel Libeskind. There is also a vast amount of other work on the edge of the new paradigm by the Dutch architects Rem Koolhaas, Ben van Berkel, and MVRDV; or the Europeans Santiago Calatrava and Coop Himmelblau; or those who have moved on from high-tech in England, such as Norman Foster. These architects, as well as those that flirted with Deconstruction - Hadid, Moss, and Morphosis - look set to take on the philosophy.
Daniel Libeskind Imperial War Museum North, Trafford , Manchester 1998–2002
Rem Koolhaas, [OMA] The CCTV Headquarters, to be completed for the Beijing Olympics 2008
LAB with Bates Smart Federation Square Melbourne 1997-2002
MVRDV Dutch Pavilion EXPO 2000 Hannover
Santiago Calatrava City of Arts and Sciences Valencia 1991–2000
Architectural Movements: Contemporary PARADIGMS IN ARCHITECTURE In Australia, ARM (Ashton Raggatt MacDougall) has been mining the territory for many years. The emergent grammar is constantly provoking. It varies from ungainly blobs to elegant waveforms, from jagged fractals to impersonal datascapes. It challenges the old languages of classicism and modernism with the idea that a new urban order is possible, one closer to the ever-varying patterns of nature. One may not like it at first, and be critical of its shortcomings, but second glance it may turn out to be more interesting, more intune with perception than the incessant repetition of colonnades and curtain walls.
Daniel Libeskind Imperial War Museum North, Trafford , Manchester 1998–2002
Rem Koolhaas, [OMA] The CCTV Headquarters, to be completed for the Beijing Olympics 2008
LAB with Bates Smart Federation Square Melbourne 1997-2002
MVRDV Dutch Pavilion EXPO 2000 Hannover
Santiago Calatrava City of Arts and Sciences Valencia 1991–2000
Thank You.