Birth of Modern Architecture
Birth of Modern Architecture
Birth of Modern Architecture
Modern-
Architecture
Industrial Revolution :
1750 - 1900
Pre Industrial Era :
to -
Before steam power, most factories and mills were powered by water, wind, horse, or man. Birth to railways, steam boats etc.
Age of New Materials –
Cast iron
Wrought Iron
Glass
Cast Iron
Gardners Warehouse,
Glassglow, 1856
Complete facade done in cast iron. Four times more resistant to compression as stone. Windows
larger than ever before
Wrought Iron
Eads bridge,
St. Louis, 1868
Wrought iron good tensile properties. Found application in the construction of bridges
Glass
Constructed from 1887–1889 as the entrance to the 1889 World's Fair. Made of puddling iron (wrought iron)
King Cross Railway Station
London, 1852
St Pancras Railway Station
London, 1864 - 68
Brooklyn Bridge
New York, 1869 – 83
Designed by William Le Baron Jenney The building was completed in 1885 in Chicago, Illinois. The building is
generally noted as the first tall building to be supported both inside and outside by a fireproof structural steel
and metal frame, which included reinforced concrete. Often called the worlds First Skyscraper.
Great Chicago Fire
Designed by Louis Sullivan, Burnham, Daniel H. & Co. Designed by Holabird & Roche
Steel and Metal Frame
.
The Chicago School window grid
.
The phrase "form follows function"
was coined by architect Louis H. Sullivan
in his 1896 essay "The Tall Office
Building Artistically Considered.“
Frank Lloyd Wright started in the firm of Adler and Sullivan but created his
own Prairie Style of architecture. It emerged in Chicago around the early 1900.
They embraced Sullivan’s architectural theories, which called for non-derivative, distinctly
American architecture rooted in nature, with a sense of place, but also incorporated modern
elements, like flat planes and stylized ornamentation.
FL Wright’s Home
Illinois,1896
In 1913, Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus, argued that: "The new
times demand their own expression. Exactly stamped from form devoid of all
accident, clear contrasts, the ordering of members, the arrangement of like part in
series, unity of form and colour…"
Bauhaus building in Dessau
- Industry and mass production over craftsmanship
-Minimalist style
Designed by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, was the German Pavilion for the 1929 International
Exposition in Barcelona, Spain
Farnsworth House
Chicago, 1945 - 51
By Phillip Johnson
Villa Savoy
Poissy, Paris,1931
By Le Corbusier
Art Nouveau (1890 – 190)