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The History of Architecture Egyptian Architecture Mastabas 3000 BC Step Pyramids 2600 BC Straight Pyramids 2000 BC Greek Architecture Temple to Athena at the Acropolis, The Parthenon 448-432 BC Temple to Nike 420 BC Roman Architecture The Coliseum 72AD The Pantheon Medieval Gothic Notre Dame Cathedral, France 1145-1220 AD Ancient Far East Most commoners lived in one room mud huts Forbidden City: Imperial Palace, Beijing 1200-1400 AD built/ rebuilt 1st Century AD stacked Pagoda Early Southwest and South American Dwellings/Structures Aztec Burial Pyramid 1100 AD Mesa Verde, Colorado 1100 AD India Taj Mahal 1630-1650 Baroque Palace of Versailles, France Originally a hunting lodge, 1624 Louis XIV, rebuilt it in later 1600’s American Architecture can fit into four main categories • Renaissance Revival -based on English, Italian, French and Dutch Architectural Methods of the 14th+ Century • Classical Revival -based on Greek and Roman Architecture • Medieval Revival -based on Dark Ages/Medieval Architecture • Modern -based on putting aside the past and looking toward the future Renaissance Revival: (Colonial 1607-1830) 1775—1783: American Revolutionary War. Despite winning their independence, the colonies continue to model their architecture on English forms for many years. 1789: US Constitution Ratified. George Washington becomes 1st President. 1801: Thomas Jefferson becomes President of the United States. Rise of Federal Era. English Colonial Seventeenth-century settlers from England brought with them a rural English architecture that resembled late medieval forms. The familiar New England Saltbox and Cape Cod styles were common to this era. Dutch Colonial Houses in the Dutch colonies incorporated steeply pitched gambrel roofs, batten doors and paired chimneys — details common to the architecture in their homeland. French Colonial Elements of French Colonial architecture still exist in southern Louisiana and Mississippi. French Colonial homes featured tall, narrow doors and windows. The roofs were hipped or side gabled, and windows often had paired shutters. Spanish Colonial One story, low-roofed dwellings characterized the homes and public buildings of Spain's American colonies. These homes often had a number of external doors but few windows. Stucco and adobe walls and flat or red tile roofs gave these dwellings their distinctive appearance. This style continues to influence the architecture of the American Southwest Georgian Square, symmetrical shape Paneled front door at center Decorative crown over front door Flattened columns on each side of door Five windows across front Paired chimneys Medium pitched roof Minimal roof overhang Georgian homes incorporated characteristics of the well-known English Colonial homes along with paneled doors with ornate crowns and support pilasters. Georgian homes were designed to be highstyle formal dwellings. They were typically symmetrical and evenly proportioned, with gabled or hipped roofs and double-hung windows with nine to twelve panes for each sash. Mostly found in the southern states. Federalist/Adam Low-pitched roof, or flat roof Windows arranged symmetrically around a center doorway Semicircular fanlight over the front door Narrow side windows flanking the front door Decorative crown or roof over front door Tooth-like dentil moldings in the cornice Palladian window•Circular or elliptical windows Shutters•Decorative swags and garlands Oval rooms and arches Shortly after the adoption of the U.S. Constitution, the Federal, or Adam, style became widely popular throughout the newly unified country. Based on the designs of British architect Robert Adam, this style incorporates many features found in Georgian homes, such as cornices with tooth-like dentils or other decorative molding and double-hung windows with six panes in each sash. Additionally, they often incorporate an elliptical fanlight over the front door, with side lights and decorative crowns as ornamentation Classical Revival (1780-1940) Significant Dates • 1800: Completion of first White House -Federal style heavily influenced by Georgian architecture. • 1803: Louisiana purchase. America's territory expands past the Mississippi River. Westward immigration begins. • 1812 — 1815: War of 1812. The war marks a shift from America's dependence on English trade and architectural forms. • 1814: British forces burn the first White House and much of Washington DC. • 1825: Erie Canal is completed, speeding the immigration of European settlers into the western territories. • 1861—1865: US Civil War. The war marks the end of the popularity of Federal architecture. Much of the historical architecture of the Southern states is destroyed during the war Greek Revival Pedimented gable Symmetrical shape Heavy cornice Wide, plain frieze Bold, simple moldings Entry porch with columns Narrow windows around front door America began to define its own emerging architectural independence from its European heritage. Greek Revival exteriors may include an entry porch supported by square or round columns, decorative pilasters, hipped or gabled roofs, transom windows and side lights surrounding the front door. These buildings often had flat roofs and colonnades inspired by the monuments of ancient Greece. Neo-Classical Very similar to Greek Revival but may have more elaborate column work- Corinthian columns rather than Doric, always extending the full height of the house and with front gable pediment. Medieval Revival 1837 – 1914 Significant Dates • 1837: Queen Victoria I begins reign in United Kingdom. • 1848: European and American immigrants populate the newly opened territories, spreading American architectural forms into Texas, California, and the Midwest. • 1865: Transcontinental Railroad finished, speeding America's industrialization and westward expansion. • 1890: Louis Sullivan designs the Wainwright Bldg. — considered by some the first skyscraper. • 1914—1918: World War I marks the decline of Victorian styles. Gothic Revival Steeply pitched roof Pointed windows Grouped chimneys Asymmetrical floor plan Veranda Spires Gabled roofs Towers Early Victorian houses drew inspiration mostly from Western Europe, usually reinterpreting medieval forms. Multi-colored and textured walls, steeply pitched roofs and asymmetrical facades are traditional features. Gothic Revival homes are most easily identified by the elaborate “gingerbread” trim below the gables, and the strong vertical emphasis of the windows and rooflines Italianate Low-pitched hip or flat roof Balanced, symmetrical rectangular shape Tall appearance, with 2, 3, or 4 stories Wide, overhanging eaves with brackets/corbels Square cupola Tall, narrow, double-paned windows with hood moldings Side bay window Heavily molded double doors Roman or segmented arches above windows and doors Italianate homes featured elaborate porch decoration, decorative eaves, symmetrical facades and arched windows which were often paired. Some Italianate homes featured a central square tower or cupola, and most had flat or lowpitched hipped roofs. Second Empire Mansard roof Dormer windows project like eyebrows from roof Brackets beneath the eaves, balconies, and bay Cupola Patterned slate on roof Wrought iron cresting above upper cornice Classical pediments Paired columns Tall windows on first story Small entry porch Inspired by the ornate cityscapes of Paris, Second Empire architecture incorporates rectangular or square floor plans, tall flat facades capped by Mansard roofs with dormer windows, and double entry doors. Roofs are frequently patterned and bay windows are also common. The Voigt House Victorian: Queen Anne Steep roof Complicated, asymmetrical shape Often front-facing gable One-story porch that extends across one or two sides of the house Round turrets or square towers Wall surfaces textured with decorative shingles Ornamental spindles and brackets Bay windows Queen Anne homes frequently feature irregular floor plans, multiple steep roofs and porches with decorative gables. Dominant octagonal or circular towers, corbelled chimneys, and highly decorative windows and entry doors with glass panels. Victorian: Eastlake Hackley and Hume Homes in Muskegon This colorful Victorian home is a Queen Anne, but the lacy, ornamental details are called Eastlake or Stick. The ornamental style is named after the famous English designer, Charles Eastlake, who was famous for making furniture decorated with fancy spindles. Victorian: Shingle Style A Victorian home covered in shingles. Typically found in New England coastal regions. Asymmetrical Shingles Arches Open Porches Richardson Romanesque Romanesque architecture features massive stone walls, large arched windows, porches, and entries, paired columns, extensive use of sculptural stonework, and grandly scaled interiors reminiscent of the great palaces of Europe. Often found in public buildings, rarely in homes. Constructed of rough-faced, square stones Round towers with cone-shaped roofs Columns and pilasters with spirals and leaf designs Low, broad "Roman" arches over arcades and doorways Patterned masonry arches over windows Tudor Revival Decorative half-timbering Steeply pitched roof Prominent cross gables Tall, narrow windows Small window panes Massive chimneys Decorative chimney pots The inclination away from standardization was nowhere better portrayed than in the ideals of the Tudor Revival. Exterior color schemes were typically of brown, white and black, sometimes combined with red brick. Incorporating exposed framing, thatch or shingle roofs, and roughhewn stonework, Tudor Revival homes were intentionally made to appear older than they actually were. In fact, the apparently primitive construction details of such houses were often purely decorative Modern 1890 – 1940+ Significant Dates • 1830: Inventions of Railroad and Steam Power. Arts & Crafts movement is a reaction against industrialization. • 1849: California Gold Rush prompts many to go west. Spanish Colonial architecture influences the rise of Mission style architecture. • 1865: End of Civil War and the beginning of Reconstruction mark the rise of Arts and Crafts Movement in earnest. • 1901: Gustav Stickley begins publication of "The Craftsman". The first issue is dedicated to William Morris and the second to John Ruskin, leaders of the Arts & Crafts movement in Europe. • 1908: Sears Roebuck catalog introduces the mail order house: the average kit home has 30,000 pieces. Between 1908 and 1940, 100,000 homes are sold. • 1929 — 1939— The Great Depression: The comparatively affordable bungalow gains popularity over more elaborate styles. • 1935: Frank Lloyd Wright builds Fallingwater; modern architecture with elements drawn from the Arts & Crafts Movement. • 1941: Start of World War II marks the decline of Arts & Crafts movement. Arts and Crafts: Craftsman /Bungalow Wood, stone, or stucco siding Low-pitched side gabled roof Wide eaves with triangular brackets Exposed roof rafters Porch with thick square or round columns Stone porch supports Exterior chimney made with stone Open floor plans; few hallways Numerous windows Some windows with stained or leaded glass Beamed ceilings Dark wood wainscoting and moldings Built-in cabinets, shelves, and seating Its greatest American proponent was Gustav Stickley, whose periodical "The Craftsman" gave the style its name. Craftsman houses were generally one and a half to two stories tall. They were environmentally sensitive structures that made exceptional use of their surroundings. Meyer -May House Low-pitched roof Overhanging eaves Horizontal lines Central chimney Open floor plan Rows of small windows One-story projections Arts and Crafts: Prairie Another stylistic variation within the Arts and Crafts Movement is the Prairie style, popularized through the work of Frank Lloyd Wright. Often appearing to nestle into their surroundings, Prairie forms often are horizontal in emphasis with low pitched roofs and large over-hanging eaves. Although firmly grounded in the Arts and Crafts tradition, their forward looking use of materials such as reinforced concrete and dramatic expanses of windows, have lead many to consider this the first Modern style. Arts and Crafts: Four-Square Prairie Symmetrical design with a “box” foundation, although porch may be offcentered. Most prominent characteristic of prairie would be the long overhanging eaves. Mission Smooth stucco siding Roof parapets Large square pillars Arcaded entry porch Red tile roof As populations in California and America's Southwest expanded, architecture throughout America was increasingly influenced by the remnants of Spanish colonial design. One resulting style was Mission, spanning not only architecture but furniture design and other decorative arts. Mission architecture showcases stucco walls with decorative parapets, red tile roofs, arched rooflines above square piers, and open, widely overhanging eaves. Art Nouveau 1890-1905 Known as the New Style, Art Nouveau was first expressed in fabrics and graphic design. The style spread to interior architecture and furniture in the 1890s. Art Nouveau buildings often have asymmetrical shapes, arches and decorative surfaces with curved, plant-like designs. Art Deco 1925-1935 These were the buildings of the future: sleek, geometric, dramatic. With their cubic forms and zigzag designs, art deco buildings embraced the machine age and scientific planetary discovery. Stream-line Curved walls Vertical juxtaposition against rectilinear Glass walls Horizontal or zig zag banding International Style 1930’s Part of the Modern Movement. Architects working in the International style gave new emphasis to the expression of structure, the lightening of mass, and the enclosure of dramatic spaces. Form follows Function. Box- like White-typically Glass Open floor plan Post WW 2 Homes early 1950’s• • • • • Pos- war housing. Cheap, productbased home. Pre-manufactured elements Tight fit neighborhoods Limited decorative exterior and interior Mid Century Modern Ranch Influenced by the Early Modern Movement. Homes are known for being one story with walk out. Open floor plans with wood interior and large south facing glass exteriors to patio. Large stone fireplaces typically two sided. Earth Friendly Homes -1960’s• • • • • Earth bermed/ earth sheltered /hay bail homes Solar-Passive Natural Materials that are native to the land Directional placement Wind powered Current Trends in Architecture • “Mc Mansions” – Urban sprawl – Building for the extremes • New Urbanism New Town of Kentlands, MD – Combating urban sprawl – Building communities through intentional architecture and landscape • Co-Housing – Intentional community – Shared work and resources – Environmentally conscious • Sustainable and Green Architecture – Recycling of materials – Advantages of the systems of the earth – Combating global housing needs – LEED certification – Concern for environment – Concern for social and political issues