Tag-Archive for ◊ how modern architecture works ◊

Author: cloud
• Friday, September 18th, 2009

Modern design is a style found in the buildings that have easy form without any decorative structures to them.

This style of design first came up around 1900. By 1940, modern design was identified as a global style and became the dominant way to build for many decades in the 20th century. Modern designers apply systematic and analytical techniques to design. Many historians relate the origins of this style of design to the social and political revolution of the time, though others see modern design as essentially driven by technical and engineering developments. The supply of new materials such as iron, steel, concrete, and glass led to new building strategies as a part of the commercial revolution. Some regard modern design as a reaction against traditional building style. For the international style, the most ordinarily used materials are glass for the cover, steel for exterior support, and concrete for the floors and interior supports.

However many of us aren’t keen on the modern style. They find its sheer, uncompromisingly oblong geometrical designs quite inhumane. They suspect this universal style is sterile, elitist, and lacks meaning.

Modern design challenged normal concepts about the types of structures acceptable for architectural design.

Only crucial civic buildings, elegant palaces, churches, and public institutions had long been the basis of architectural practices. However modernist designers disagreed that designers should design everything that was mandatory for society, even the most humble buildings. Designers started to plan low cost housing, railroad stations, factories, warehouses, and commercial spaces. In the first part of the twentieth century, modern designers produced furniture, textiles, and wallpaper – as well as designing homes – to form a completely designed domestic environment. The aesthetics employed by modern designers celebrated function in all sorts of design, from household furnishings to large sea liners and new flying machines. Modern design came from the U.S.

And Europe and spread across the remainder of the planet. The characteristic features that made modern design possible were buildings, stylistic movements, technology, and modern materials.

  • Share/Bookmark