1. ArchDaily
  2. Modernism

Modernism: The Latest Architecture and News

Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography

Sometimes sculptural and expressive, sometimes monolithic and monotonous, the Brutalist architectural style is equal parts diverse and divisive. From its origins as a by-product of the Modernism movement in the 1950s to today, Brutalist buildings, in architectural discourse, remain a popular point of discussion. A likely reason for this endurance is — with their raw concrete textures and dramatic shadows, brutalist buildings commonly photograph really well.

Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography - Image 1 of 4Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography - Image 2 of 4Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography - Image 3 of 4Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography - Image 4 of 4Color, Composition, and Scale: Analyzing Brutalist Photography - More Images+ 17

Arquitectonica and Its Latin American Contribution to Modernism

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

Arquitectonica has refuted Koolhaas’ accusation that “Modern architecture had never achieved the promised alchemy of quantity and quality,” and Alistair Gordon’s enormous compendium of the firm’s work certainly disproves it.

But what of Rossi’s backhanded praise: “In America … quantity is quality!”? Although absolutely deserving of praise, the quantity of the work is not the basis for Arquitectonica’s achievement—even when associated with the virtuosity of design. The importance of Arquitectonica derives from certain specific contributions to modern architecture in the United States.

A Brief History of The International Style

When people describe the modernist movement as a whole, they broadly reference the steel and glass skyscrapers which dot many of our cities’ skylines, or more specifically, the International Style that once emerged from Europe after World War I. The International Style represented technological and industrial progress and a renaissance of social constructs that would forever influence the way that we think about the use of space across all scales. Often designed as politically charged buildings seeking to make a statement towards totalitarian governments, many architects who influenced the style moved to the United States after World War II, paving the way for some of the most iconic buildings and skyscrapers to be built in the 20th century.

“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra

Rahul Mehrotra is a practicing architect based in Boston and Mumbai and he has been teaching at Harvard’s GSD where he is currently Chair of the Department of Urban Planning and Design and Director of the Master in Architecture in Urban Design Degree Program. Born in 1959, Mehrotra grew up in Lucknow, a city in Northern India and an important cultural and artistic hub. His father was a manager at a large machine tool company. The family moved a lot following Mehrotra senior’s frequent promotions, which led to changing residences owned by his company. Besides a few years in Lucknow and Delhi, they lived in different neighborhoods within Mumbai.

“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra - Image 1 of 4“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra - Image 2 of 4“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra - Image 3 of 4“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra - Image 4 of 4“As Architects, We Don’t Discover Our Identity, We Construct It”: In Conversation with Rahul Mehrotra - More Images+ 25

Theodore Prudon: ‘Modernism Has Never Been a Popular Movement’

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

Theodore Prudon, the founding president of Docomomo US, recently stepped down as the organization’s head. (Robert Meckfessel is the new president.) “Docomomo” is shorthand for the group’s mission: the documentation and conservation of buildings, sites, and neighborhoods of the Modern movement. Prudon has had a storied career as a preservationist, architect, and educator, heading his own practice and teaching at Columbia University. In October, he was presented with the Connecticut Architecture Foundation’s Distinguished Leadership Award at the newly reborn Marcel Breuer building in New Haven, which began its life in 1970 as the Pirelli Tire Building and is now the Hotel Marcel (designed, planned, and developed by architect Bruce Redman Becker).

Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture

Chicago, The Windy City, Chi-Town, or The Second City. It’s a place that is known by many names, but to architects and urban planners alike, it’s famous for its history which has given us some of the best-known buildings and important advancements that have helped to shape other cities across the United States. From its inception, Chicago has long served as an architectural hub for innovation.

Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture - Image 1 of 4Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture - Image 2 of 4Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture - Image 3 of 4Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture - Image 4 of 4Make No Little Plans: A Brief History of Chicago Architecture - More Images+ 1

Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels

Subscriber Access | 

The luxury hotel, as an architectural typology, is distinctive. In effect, it's a self-contained community, a building that immerses the well-off visitor into their local context. Self-contained communities they might be, but these hotels are also vessels of the wider socioeconomic character of a place, where luxury living is often next door to informal settlements in the most extreme examples of social inequality.

Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels - Image 1 of 4Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels - Image 2 of 4Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels - Image 3 of 4Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels - Image 4 of 4Abandoned Modernism in Liberia and Mozambique: The Afterlives of Luxury Hotels - More Images+ 9

The Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio

The Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio - Interior Photography, Renovation, FacadeThe Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio - Interior Photography, RenovationThe Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio - Interior Photography, RenovationThe Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio - Interior Photography, Renovation, Column, ChairThe Niemeyer Guest House Renovation / East Architecture Studio - More Images+ 16

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2500
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Gazzaoui & Co., Onelight, Weber

Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities

The year 2021 has been a turbulent one –coronavirus rages on, and the design and construction industries have been forced to keep adapting two years into a global pandemic. As virtual methods of working and communicating continue to be tweaked and honed, a plethora of virtual events has meant that architectural discourse outside the western canon and Eurocentric gaze, in a small way, has been able to claim space front and center in the global architectural conversation.

Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities  - Image 1 of 4Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities  - Image 2 of 4Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities  - Image 3 of 4Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities  - Image 4 of 4Uncovered Ground: Architectural Elements, Urbanism and Cities  - More Images+ 9

Cairo Modern Celebrates Egyptian Modernism and Raises the Alarm for Its Future

On view at the Center for Architecture in New York City, the exhibition features 20 projects in Cairo and a warning about the threatened future of Egypt’s Modernist heritage.

Cairo Modern, a new exhibition at the Center for Architecture in New York, features 20 demolished, extant, and proposed projects in Cairo dating from the 1930s to the 1970s and also shines a light on the wrecking ball-threatening Modern architecture here and elsewhere.

From Festivals to Schools, Cathedrals, and Bomb Sites: The Story of Mid-Century Modernism in Britain

The term “mid-century modern” conjures up images of a sharp-suited Don Draper, slender teak cabinets, and suave chairs from Scandinavia. That is, at least, one perspective of the design movement and a view more of 1950s-era Manhattan offices than anything else. But in Britain, mid-century modernism manifested as something slightly different, coming in the form of schools, cathedrals, housing, and an era-defining festival, all eloquently described and illustrated by the prolific architectural historian Elain Harwood in Mid-Century Britain: Modern Architecture 1938-1963.

Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large

Subscriber Access | 
Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - Image 1 of 4
Parkwoods United. Image © Amanda Large

Between the late 1940s to the 1980s, Toronto, Canada, experienced a high rate of growth and development, resulting in a wealth of modernist-style buildings. Due to an increasing population, parishes were also outgrowing their spaces and found themselves in need of new facilities. Consequently, many well-designed modernist churches began to pop up throughout Toronto. This black and white photography series, titled Fifty/50 by Amanda Large, is an ode to these churches, and a celebration of their enduring importance to the city more than fifty years after their construction.

Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - Image 1 of 4Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - Image 2 of 4Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - Image 3 of 4Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - Image 4 of 4Documenting Fifty Modernist Churches in Toronto by Photographer Amanda Large - More Images+ 9

Iraqi Architect Rifat Chadirji Dies at 93 after Contracting the Coronavirus

Father of Iraqi architecture Rifat Chadirji has passed away at 93, on April 10 in London, after contracting the novel coronavirus. Born in 1926 in Baghdad, he is responsible for more than 100 buildings across Iraq.

Some of his most iconic works include the Tahrir Square's Freedom Monument, the Tobacco Monopoly Headquarters in 1965, the Central Post Office in Baghdad in 1975 and the Unknown Soldier Monument, one of his most culturally significant intervention designed in 1959, demolished in 1982 and then replaced by a statue of Saddam Hussein in 2003.

12 Important Modernist Styles Explained

Subscriber Access | 

Modernism could be described as one of the most optimistic styles in architectural history, drawing from notions of utopia, innovation, and the reimagination of how humans would live, work, and interact. As we reflected in our AD Essentials Guide to Modernism, the philosophy of Modernism still dominates much of architectural discourse today, even if the world that gave rise to Modernism has changed utterly.

As we say goodbye to 2019, a year that saw the centenary of the Bauhaus, we have collated a list of key architectural styles that defined Modernism in architecture. This tool for understanding the development of 20th-century design is complete with examples of each style, showcasing the practice of Modernism that lay behind the theory.

12 Important Modernist Styles Explained - Image 1 of 412 Important Modernist Styles Explained - Image 2 of 412 Important Modernist Styles Explained - Image 3 of 412 Important Modernist Styles Explained - Image 4 of 412 Important Modernist Styles Explained - More Images+ 8

Modernist San Francisco Map: Guide to Modernist Architecture in Bay Area

Description via Amazon. Guide map to Modernist architecture across San Francisco and the Bay Area. This two-sided folded map with original photography by Jason Woods is edited by Mitchell Schwarzer, Professor at California College of the Arts, and author of numerous books about architecture. The guide features over fifty influential examples of Modernist and Brutalist architecture from Berkeley and Oakland to Palo Alto and San Mateo. Details for individual buildings are supported by an introduction to Modernism in the Bay Area by Schwarzer. Architects featured include Vernon de Mars, Beverley Thorne, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Frank Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, Pier Luigi Nervi, Mario Ciampi, Kevin Roche and John Dinkeloo and many others.

Open Call: Workshop for SESAM 2020 Poliklinika

Call for workshop tutors for SESAM 2020 Poliklinika is now officially open! The event will take place between 28th May and 7th June 2020 in Slavutych, Ukraine.

Anyone studying or working in the field of architecture, or any other area of expertise closely related to spatial practices, anywhere in the World, can apply by submitting a single pdf file in English to easaukraine@gmail.com by Feb 17, 23:59 Slavutych TIME (EET, GMT +2).

Colonialist Modernism Strikes Again

Subscriber Access | 

Imagine the following scenario. It is 1902, and to the great shock and distress of the citizens of Venice, the beautiful campanile tower in its Piazza San Marco has just collapsed. That very evening, the city’s communal council votes to approve 500,000 Lire for the prompt rebuilding, “com’era, dov’era” — “as it was, where it was”. Future residents and visitors alike may now continue to enjoy this beautiful structure, which had also been restored and added to many times previously.

But then an authority from far away steps up to speak. “Our regulations do not allow this! Our funding policies require that ‘a project shall use contemporary design’ — which means that you may use only current styles of which we approve, and you may not use the local traditional styles of Venice. That would be a ‘falsification of history’, a ‘mingling of the false with the genuine’, and we decree that this would have harmful consequences!” The project does not go forward, and something entirely “contemporary” is built instead. 

Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy

Subscriber Access | 

For the 1957 International Builders Fair, Oscar Niemeyer developed the Interbau Apartment House, a modernist eight-storey building that sits on V-shaped pillars in the city of Berlin. While the building's facade consists of uniform windows and loggias clad with primary-colored mosaics, it is interrupted by enclosed pathways that connect the structure to the external elevator.

Architectural photographer Bahaa Ghoussainy explored the building and highlighted the complementary relationship between its uniform modernity and dynamic suspensions.

Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy  - Image 1 of 4Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy  - Image 2 of 4Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy  - Image 3 of 4Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy  - Image 4 of 4Interbau Apartment House Through the Lens of Bahaa Ghoussainy  - More Images+ 11