How Did Materials Shape the Case Study Houses?

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The Case Study Houses (1945-1966), sponsored by the Arts & Architecture Magazine and immortalized by Julius Shulman’s iconic black-and-white photographs, may be some of the most famous examples of modern American architecture in history. Designed to address the postwar housing crisis with quick construction and inexpensive materials, while simultaneously embracing the tenets of modernist design and advanced contemporary technology, the Case Study Houses were molded by their central focus on materials and structural design. While each of the homes were designed by different architects for a range of clients, these shared aims unified the many case study homes around several core aesthetic and structural strategies: open plans, simple volumes, panoramic windows, steel frames, and more. Although some of the Case Study Houses’ materials and strategies would become outdated in the following decades, these unique products and features would come to define a historic era of architectural design in the United States.

How Did Materials Shape the Case Study Houses? - Image 13 of 20
The Entenza House / Charles & Ray Eames, Eero Saarinen & Associates. Image © Julius Shulman Photography Archive
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Cite: Lilly Cao. "How Did Materials Shape the Case Study Houses?" 20 May 2021. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/961900/how-did-materials-shape-the-case-study-houses> ISSN 0719-8884

The Entenza House / Charles & Ray Eames, Eero Saarinen & Associates. Image © Julius Shulman Photography Archive

加州‘案例研究住宅’中的材料性

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