Origins: Modern Architecture, or Modernist Architecture, Was An Architectural Movement or
Origins: Modern Architecture, or Modernist Architecture, Was An Architectural Movement or
Origins: Modern Architecture, or Modernist Architecture, Was An Architectural Movement or
Origins[edit]
Main article: Modernism
The Crystal Palace (1851) was one of the first buildings to have cast plate glass windows supported
by a cast-iron frame
The first house built of reinforced concrete, designed by François Coignet (1853) in Saint-Denis near
Paris
Stoclet Palace by Josef Hoffmann, Brussels, (1906–1911)
William H. Winslow House, by Frank Lloyd Wright, River Forest, Illinois (1893–94)
Early skyscrapers[edit]
Main article: Early skyscrapers
Prudential (Guaranty) Building by Louis Sullivan in Buffalo, New York (1896)
The Woolworth Building and the New York skyline in 1913. It was modern on the inside but neo-
Gothic on the outside.
The Villa La Roche-Jeanneret (now Fondation Le Corbusier) by Le Corbusier, Paris (1923–25)
The Chilehaus in Hamburg by Fritz Höger (1921–24)
the Lenin Mausoleum in Moscow by Alexey Shchusev (1924)
The USSR Pavilion at the 1925 Paris Exposition of Decorative Arts, by Konstantin Melnikov (1925)
Art Deco[edit]
Main article: Art Deco
Crown of the General Electric Building (also known as 570 Lexington Avenue) by Cross &
Cross (1933)
Lovell Health House in Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California, by Richard Neutra (1927–29)
During the 1920s and 1930s, Frank Lloyd Wright resolutely refused to associate himself with any
architectural movements. He considered his architecture to be entirely unique and his own. Between
1916 and 1922, he broke away from his earlier prairie house style and worked instead on houses
decorated with textured blocks of cement; this became known as his "Mayan style", after the
pyramids of the ancient Mayan civilization. He experimented for a time with modular mass-produced
housing. He identified his architecture as "Usonian", a combination of USA, "utopian" and "organic
social order". His business was severely affected by the beginning of the Great Depression that
began in 1929; he had fewer wealthy clients who wanted to experiment. Between 1928 and 1935, he
built only two buildings: a hotel near Chandler, Arizona, and the most famous of all his
residences, Fallingwater (1934–37), a vacation house in Pennsylvania for Edgar J. Kaufman.
Fallingwater is a remarkable structure of concrete slabs suspended over a waterfall, perfectly uniting
architecture and nature.[41]
The Austrian architect Rudolph Schindler designed what could be called the first house in the
modern style in 1922, the Schindler house. Schindler also contributed to American modernism with
his design for the Lovell Beach House in Newport Beach. The Austrian architect Richard
Neutra moved to the United States in 1923, worked for a short time with Frank Lloyd Wright, also
quickly became a force in American architecture through his modernist design for the same client,
the Lovell Health House in Los Angeles. Neutra's most notable architectural work was the Kaufmann
Desert House in 1946, and he designed hundreds of further projects. [42]
The Pavilion of Nazi Germany (left) faced the Pavilion of Stalin's Soviet Union (right) at the 1937
Paris Exposition.
The Zeppelinfield stadium in Nuremberg, Germany (1934), built by Albert Speer for Nazi Party rallies
Pavilion of the Ford Motor Company, in the Streamline Moderne style
Living room of the House of Glass, showing what future homes would look like
The 1939 New York World's Fair marked a turning point in architecture between Art Deco and
modern architecture. The theme of the Fair was the World of Tomorrow, and its symbols were the
purely geometric trilon and perisphere sculpture. It had many monuments to Art Deco, such as the
Ford Pavilion in the Streamline Moderne style, but also included the new International Style that
would replace Art Deco as the dominant style after the War. The Pavilions of Finland, by Alvar Aalto,
of Sweden by Sven Markelius, and of Brazil by Oscar Niemeyer and Lucio Costa, looked forward to
a new style. They became leaders in the postwar modernist movement. [46]
Salon and Terrace of an original unit of the Unité d'Habitation, now at the Cité de l'Architecture et du
Patrimoine in Paris (1952)
The Pfeiffer Chapel at Florida Southern College by Frank Lloyd Wright (1941–1958)
The tower of the Johnson Wax Headquarters and Research Center (1944–50)
The PanAm building (Now MetLife Building) in New York, by Walter Gropius and The Architects
Collaborative (1958–63)
Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus, moved to England in 1934 and spent three years there
before being invited to the United States by Walter Hudnut of the Harvard Graduate School of
Design; Gropius became the head of the architecture faculty. Marcel Breuer, who had worked with
him at the Bauhaus, joined him and opened an office in Cambridge. The fame of Gropius and Breuer
attracted many students, who themselves became famous architects, including Ieoh Ming
Pei and Philip Johnson. They did not receive an important commission until 1941, when they
designed housing for workers in Kensington, Pennsylvania, near Pittsburgh., In 1945 Gropius and
Breuer associated with a group of younger architects under the name TAC (The Architects
Collaborative). Their notable works included the building of the Harvard Graduate School of Design,
the U.S. Embassy in Athens (1956–57), and the headquarters of Pan American Airways in New York
(1958–63).[61]
The Seagram Building, New York City, 1958, by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe described his architecture with the famous saying, "Less is more". As the
director of the school of architecture of what is now called the Illinois Institute of Technology from
1939 to 1956, Mies (as he was commonly known) made Chicago the leading city for American
modernism in the postwar years. He constructed new buildings for the Institute in modernist style,
two high-rise apartment buildings on Lakeshore Drive (1948–51), which became models for high-
rises across the country. Other major works included Farnsworth House in Plano, Illinois (1945–
1951), a simple horizontal glass box that had an enormous influence on American residential
architecture. The Chicago Convention Center (1952–54) and Crown Hall at the Illinois Institute of
Technology (1950–56), and The Seagram Building in New York City (1954–58) also set a new
standard for purity and elegance. Based on granite pillars, the smooth glass and steel walls were
given a touch of color by the use of bronze-toned I-beams in the structure. He returned to Germany
in 1962–68 to build the new Nationalgallerie in Berlin. His students and followers included Philip
Johnson, and Eero Saarinen, whose work was substantially influenced by his ideas. [62]
Manufacturers Trust Company Building, by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, New York City (1954)
Philip Johnson[edit]
Eero Saarinen[edit]
Louis Kahn[edit]
I. M. Pei[edit]
John Hancock Center in Chicago by Fazlur Rahman Khan was the first building to use X-bracing to
create the trussed-tube design.
Minoru Yamasaki[edit]
The Wendell O. Pruitt Homes and William Igoe Apartments Housing Project, in St. Louis (1955-1976)
Latin America[edit]
Africa[edit]
Vincent Timsit Workshop
Villa Camembert
Assunna Mosque
Some notable modernist architects in Morocco were Elie Azagury and Jean-François Zevaco.[51]
Asmara, capitol of Eritrea, is well known for its modernist architecture dating from the period of
Italian colonization.[87][88]
Preservation[edit]
Several works or collections of modern architecture have been designated by UNESCO as World
Heritage Sites. In addition to the early experiments associated with Art Nouveau, these include a
number of the structures mentioned above in this article: the Rietveld Schröder House in Utrecht,
the Bauhaus structures in Weimar, Dessau, and Bernau, the Berlin Modernism Housing Estates,
the White City of Tel Aviv, the city of Asmara, the city of Brasilia, the Ciudad
Universitaria of UNAM in Mexico City and the University City of Caracas in Venezuela, the Sydney
Opera House, and the Centennial Hall in Wrocław, along with select works from Le
Corbursier and Frank Lloyd Wright.
Private organizations such as Docomomo International, the World Monuments Fund, and the Recent
Past Preservation Network are working to safeguard and document imperiled Modern architecture.
In 2006, the World Monuments Fund launched Modernism at Risk, an advocacy and conservation
program. The organization MAMMA. is working to document and preserve modernist architecture in
Morocco.[89]