History of Architecture
History of Architecture
History of Architecture
POSTCOLONIAL MODERNITY:
Architecture of Early Independence
(1946-1960s)
Presented by:
Lagamon, K.M.
FREDERICO S.
ILUSTRE
COMPLEX (1950s)
designed by Enrique J.L. Ruiz
one of the hallmarks of Philippine-American cooperation
presented as a gift of the American people to the Philippines
as a sign of gratitude to
Filipino soldiers who fought side-by-side with the Americans in
World War II.
design was characterized by no-nonsense composition,
symmetry, and axial spatial configuration for efficient delivery
of medical services
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Jose Zaragoza
Francisco Fajardo
Edmund Lucero
Gabino de Leon
Felipe Mendoza
Gaite
important postwar capitol edifice that deviated Beaux Arts formalism
ith wraparound louvers and sun baffles
use of concrete translated into a saw-tooth folded plate roof
plex laid out in classical proportion and axial symmetry despite its mode
(1960s)
designed by Gaite, Ruperto
achieved visual weightless of a
massive, elongated, octagonal structure
with the use of two tapering stilts
octagonal structure dimensions: 10 x
40 meters was setting for relief
sculptures carved out of adobe
depicting the life and accomplishments
of Manuel L. Quezon as a national
leader.
8. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION COMPLEX (1967)
in Arroceros , Manila
designed by Ilustre
featured a rectangular block whose mass was suspended by
sculptural stilts to attain visual weightlessness
surface of the block accented with fenestration of delicate vertical
louvers
feature lifted from Basilia was the thin shell dome structure whose
geometry was sanctioned-off to taper before reaching the ground
William Parsons
Dilimans master planner in 1939
responded with a grand design focused on
core
of green park space approachable via a grand
boulevard (now known as University Avenue);
his calling for a series of paired structures built
opposite each other in the oval-shaped center,
perimeters surrounded by hectares of open
field
FROM MID-FIFTIES
ONWARD
International Style of Modern
Architecture became the unifying
motif in the construction of
buildings in Diliman
more functional application of
design, minimal treatment of
volumes and detailing
*ex. Church of the Holy Sacrifice
(1955) by Leandro Locsin
Church of of the Risen Lord (1955)
and the Student Services Center
or Vinsons Hall (1957),
use of openwork masonry
to increase ventilation
FOLDED PLATE
roof structure in which strength and
stiffness is derived from pleated or folded
geometry
a special class of shell structure formed by
joining flat, thin slabs along edges to create
a 3-dimensional spatial structure
i.e. International Center in Diliman and