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Top ten monuments in modern architecture

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Title: Top ten monuments in modern architecture


1
Top ten monuments in modern architecture
2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Modern Architecture
  • Part II. Top ten
  • Conclusion
  • References

3
Introduction
  • As the 20th century began modern architects
    believed it was necessary to invent an
    architecture that expressed the spirit of a new
    age and would surpass the styles, materials, and
    technologies of earlier architecture
  • Their aesthetic celebrated function in all forms
    of design, household furnishings, ocean liners
    and new flying machines
  • Modern architecture also challenged traditional
    ideas about the types of structures suitable for
    architectural design
  • Important civic buildings, aristocratic palaces,
    churches, and public institutions had long been
    the mainstay of architectural practices, but
    modernist designers argued that architects should
    design all that was necessary for society, even
    the most humble buildings

4
Part I. Modern architecture
  • Modern Architecture, the buildings and building
    practices of the late 19th and the 20th centuries
  • Modern architects reacted against the
    architecture of the 19th century, which they felt
    borrowed too heavily from the past
  • Italian architect Antonio Sant'Elia resoundingly
    rejected traditional architecture in his Futurist
    Manifesto of 1914 (Futurism)
  • He called for each generation to build its houses
    anew and celebrated glass, steel, and concrete as
    the materials to make this possible
  • In the United States Frank Lloyd Wright also
    rejected 19th-century European architecture

5
Part I. Modern architecture
  • Developments in two materialsiron and
    concreteformed the technological basis for much
    modern architecture
  • Steel for construction also became abundantly
    available in the 19th century
  • In 1892 French engineer François Hennebique
    combined the strengths of both in a new system of
    construction based on concrete reinforced with
    steel
  • His invention made possible previously
    unimaginable effects extremely thin walls with
    large areas of glass
  • Architects in Chicago, Illinois, were the first
    to exploit the possibilities offered by the
    elevator in combination with the new steel and
    concrete technologies

6
Part I. Modern architecture
  • The collective response of a diverse group of
    architects to the reconstruction of the city led
    to the development of the skyscraper
  • Architect William Le Baron Jenney devised a
    solution to the problem of fireproof construction
    for tall buildings by substituting steel in the
    structural system for cast iron
  • Art Nouveau, which flourished in Europe between
    1890 and 1910, was one of the earliest (and
    shortest-lived) efforts to develop an original
    style for the modern age
  • In the three centers of art nouveauBarcelona,
    Spain Brussels, Belgium and Paris,
    Francearchitects struggled to define a style
    with distinctly local characteristics

7
Part II. Top ten
  • Here are presented 10 of the most famous
    monuments and buildings of the 20th century in
    the West
  • Tower Bridge in London, La Defense and Pompidou
    Center in Paris, Sidney Opera House in Australia,
    the Golden Gate in San Francisco, the Empire
    State Building in New York, the Glass pyramid of
    the Louvre, the Arch in Saint Louis, Brasilia and
    the CN Tower in Toronto

8
Tower Bridge
  • Built between 1886 and 1894, bridge on the Thames
    River in London, near the Tower of London, one of
    the city's principal landmarks
  • It was the only movable bridge crossing the
    Thames when it was completed in 1894. Sir Horace
    Jones designed the bridge, and Sir John Wolfe
    Barry built it
  • 150,000 vehicles cross it every day. Over 900
    times a year the roadway parts and lifts to let
    tall ships, cruise liners and other large craft
    pass through
  • t was a hydraulically operated bridge, using
    steam to power the enormous pumping engines
    since 1976 they have been driven by oil and
    electricity rather than steam

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10
La Défense
  • Modern architectural development to the west of
    central Paris, the largest concentration of tall
    buildings in Europe
  • Begun in 1958, the complex consists predominantly
    of office buildings
  • Dominating La Défense is the futuristic Grande
    Arche, completed in 1989, by Danish architect
    Johann Otto von Spreckelsen
  • An office tower in the shape of an enormous open
    cube 105 m on a side, it echoes in modern
    language the shape of (and is exactly the same
    width as) the famous Arc de Triomphe with which
    it is visibly aligned

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12
The Centre National d'Art Pompidou
  • Museum located in the Beaubourg district of Paris
  • President Georges Pompidou conceived (1969) the
    idea
  • Completed (1978) by the architects Renzo Piano of
    Italy and Richard Rogers of England and by the
    engineering firm of Ove Arup and Partners of
    England
  • External mechanical systems elevators painted
    red escalators in clear plastic tunnels and
    giant tubes for air (painted blue), water
    (green), and electricity (yellow)
  • The Center houses the National Museum of Modern
    Art, attracts 25,000 visitors a day and a library

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14
Sydney Opera House
  • Major performing arts center on the harbor in
    Sydney, Australia, regarded as the finest modern
    building in the country completed 1973
  • Designed by Danish architect Jørn Utzon, who won
    an international competition for the project in
    1956
  • Distinctive sail-shaped towers were pronounced
    unbuildable by a British engineering firm,
    redesigned at a lower angle
  • Utzon then resigned from the project, and the
    building was completed by the engineering firm in
    1973
  • Concert hall, theater for opera and ballet,
    smaller theater for plays, recording hall and
    rehearsal rooms, and movie theater

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16
Golden Gate
  • Strait in western California, at the entrance to
    San Francisco Bay, separating the bay from the
    Pacific Ocean
  • The strait is 8 km long and narrows to 1 km in
    width
  • The bridge crosses the strait to connect San
    Francisco, on the south, with Marin County, on
    the north
  • The American explorer John Charles Frémont gave
    the strait the name Golden Gate in 1846
  • Bridge conceived by Joseph Strauss, assisted by
    Irving morrow inauguration in 1937 painted in
    orange international
  • The Golden Gate National Recreation Area,
    established in 1972 by the National Park Service,
    extends north and south of the Golden Gate and
    also includes Alcatraz

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18
Empire State Building
  • New York City, skyscraper located on 5th Avenue
  • Tallest building in the world when completed in
    1931 (381 m)
  • Because of its elegant stepped design it is often
    still regarded as the ultimate American
    skyscraper
  • Designed by the American architectural firm of
    Shreve, Lamb Harmon in a streamlined art deco
    style, the Empire State Building consists of 102
    stories of office space
  • A radio and television mast that was added in
    1951
  • A model of the building was used in the 1933
    version of the motion picture King Kong, in the
    sequence in which the giant ape clings to its
    upper stories while fighting off squadrons of
    fighter planes

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20
Glass pyramid of the Louvre
  • The Louvre, until 1682 a residence of the kings
    of France, occupies the site of a 13th-century
    fortress
  • In 1793 opened as a public museum, and the French
    painter David was appointed head of a commission
    to administer it
  • Controversial glass pyramid (completed in 1989)
    at the entrance to the Louvre, a museum in Paris
  • New visitor entrance to the Louvre museum
    complex, built by Ieoh Ming Pei, born in Canton,
    China in 1917
  • Noted for his unique arrangements of geometric
    shapes, Pei also earned a reputation for his
    creative use of space, surfaces, and materials

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22
St. Louis
  • City in eastern Missouri, extending along the
    west bank of the Mississippi River
  • St. Louis is one of the Midwest's principal
    industrial, commercial, educational, and cultural
    centers
  • St. Louis was established in 1764 by French fur
    traders and named in honor of Louis IX, a
    13th-century king of France canonized as a saint
  • The spectacular Gateway Arch stands at the
    river's edge on the site where St. Louis was
    founded more than two centuries ago
  • The 192-m (630-ft) high city landmark, completed
    in 1965

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24
Brasilia
  • In the 1950s Brazilian architects had an
    opportunity to showcase their designs in an
    entirely new capital city
  • Brasília developed as a planned city, constructed
    (beginning in 1957) on an uninhabited site to
    replace crowded Rio de Janeiro as the national
    capital
  • Planned by Costa and filled with buildings by
    Niemeyer, the city of Brasilia was a lavish
    testimony to Le Corbusiers principles of modern
    architecture and planning
  • Costa divided residential zones by class,
    designated a monumental government and business
    center
  • The Catedral Metropolitana is one of several
    buildings designed by Brazilian architect Oscar
    Niemeyer in the 1960s for the Brazilian capital

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26
CN Tower
  • At a height of 553.33m, it is the World's Tallest
    Building, an important telecommunications hub,
    and the centre of tourism in Toronto
  • Each year, approximately 2 million people visit
    the CN Tower
  • The CN Tower was built in 1976 by Canadian
    National (CN) who wanted to demonstrate the
    strength of Canadian industry by building a tower
    taller than any other in the world
  • With its microwave receptors at 338 m and 553.33m
    antenna, the CN Tower swiftly solved the
    communication problems
  • Dining restaurant is located at 351 m and offers
    guests a complete 360 degree view of the city

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28
Conclusion
  • Deconstructivist architects in the 1980s applied
    their analytical, abstract ideas to the design of
    buildings
  • Their work points toward an architecture that
    focuses less on debates among competing movements
    and more on buildings that are economical,
    environmentally responsible, and beautiful
  • In Asia, new and taller buildings have been
    built, especially in Malaysia (the Petronas
    Towers in Kuala Lumpur) and in China (Hong Kong
    and Shanghai)
  • Completed in 1998, the Petronas Towers, in Kuala
    Lumpur, Malaysia, are the world's tallest
    buildings. Each tower stands 452 m (1,483 ft) tall

29
References
  • http//www.cntower.ca/faqs/l3_faq_coolstuff_photog
    allery.htm
  • http//www.webshots.com/search/search.fcgi?wordsp
    ompidounew1sourcecotopic
  • http//www.louvre.fr/louvrea.htm
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encnet/refpages/RefArticle.
    aspx?refid761595616
  • http//www.towerbridge.org.uk/
  • http//www.greatbuildings.com/buildings/Tower_Brid
    ge.html
  • http//www.architectureweek.com/today.html
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