Architecture: What's Hot Now: Brooklyn Bridge in New York

Sunday, 31 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Brooklyn Bridge in New York
Jul 31st 2011, 10:00

Location: New York, over the East River connecting Manhattan and Brooklyn
Opened: May 24, 1883
Type: Suspension bridge with cable-stays
Length: 1,825 meters / 5,989 feet
Designer: John Augustus Roebling
Engineer: Washington Roebling, and then Washington's wife, Emily Warren Roebling

About the Brooklyn Bridge

Brooklyn Bridge is one of the oldest suspension bridges in the United States. Designer John A. Roebling had designed important suspension bridges in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Texas. Tragically, Roebling was injured while surveying the property and died of tetanus before the bridge was built. His son, Washington Roebling completed the design and briefly supervised the engineering, but he also died. Fourteen years after it began, the project was completed by Washington Roebling's wife, Emily Warren Roebling.

When the Brooklyn Bridge opened, crushing foot traffic, fired by a rumor that the bridge was about to collapse, stirred a stampede that killed twelve and injured thirty-five people.

This photo of Brooklyn Bridge was taken before the World Trade Center Twin Towers (in background) were destroyed.

More About the Brooklyn Bridge

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: The Katrina Kernal Cottage II

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
The Katrina Kernal Cottage II
Jul 31st 2011, 10:00

After a devastating storm, an attractive solution for low-cost housing...

Quality Details

The Katrina Kernal Cottage II by Steve Mouzon - Tiled Bathroom

Photo © 2006 Jackie Craven

Although designed for a tight budget, quality materials are used to construct the Katrina Kernal Cottage II. Floor to ceiling tile in the bathroom bring a sense of luxury. Tile is also more durable than less expensive plastics.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Beitucheng Station in Beijing, China

Friday, 29 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Beitucheng Station in Beijing, China
Jul 29th 2011, 10:00

Beitucheng Station, the transfer station of Line 10 and the Olympic Branch Line, opened for the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, China.

Beitucheng Station in Beijing, China

Beitucheng Station in Beijing, China

Photo © China Photos/Getty Images

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: World Trade Center Tower 2

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
World Trade Center Tower 2
Jul 29th 2011, 10:00

See the dreams of architects and designers in these plans for reconstruction at Ground Zero. This picture: Tower 2, designed by Foster and Partners.

Architect's Sketch

Concept Sketch for World Trade Center Tower 2

Image: Foster and Partners, courtesy Silverstein Properties

Tower 2 will comprise four blocks arranged around a central cruciform core. Light-filled, flexible, column-free office floors will rise to the 59th floor, where the glass facades will shear off at an angle to address the Memorial Park. On all four sides notches will divide the Tower into four interconnected blocks.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: CCTV Building - China Central Television in Beijing

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
CCTV Building - China Central Television in Beijing
Jul 29th 2011, 10:00

Designed by the Pritzker Prize-winning Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, the new CCTV building is one of the largest office buildings in the world. The angular 49-story towers appear about to topple, yet the structure is carefully designed to withstand earthquakes. Jagged cross sections made with some 10,000 tons of steel form the sloping towers.

Home to China's only broadcaster, China Central Television, the CCTV building has studios, production facilities, theaters, and offices. The CCTV building is one of several bold new designs constructed for the Beijing Olympics.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Googie Architecture

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Googie Architecture
Jul 29th 2011, 10:00

Definition:

Googie describes a futuristic, often flashy, building style that evolved in the United States during the 1950s. Often used for restaurants, motels, bowling alleys, and assorted roadside businesses, Googie architecture was designed to attract customers.

Googie Features

Reflecting high-tech space-age ideas, the Googie style grew out of the Streamline Moderne, or Art Moderne, architecture of the 1930s. As in Streamline Moderne architecture, Googie buildings are made with glass and steel. However, Googie buildings are deliberately flashy. Typical Googie details include:

  • Flashing lights and neon signs
  • Boomerang and palette shapes
  • Starburst shapes
  • Atom motifs
  • Flying saucer shapes
  • Sharp angles and trapezoid shapes
  • Zig-zag roof-lines

Where to Find Googie Architecture

Googie has its roots in the mid-century modern architecture of southern California. The word Googie comes from Googie's, a Los Angeles coffee shop designed by architect John Lautner. However, Googie ideas can be found on commercial buildings in other parts of the country, most noticeably in the Doo Wop architecture of Wildwood, New Jersey.

Other names for Googie

  • Coffee House Modern
  • Doo Wop
  • Populuxe
  • Space Age
Related Stlyes

Googie is just one type of Roadside Architecture that evolved after World War II when Americans began to spend more time in cars. Other types of American Roadside Architecture include:

Is mid-20th century architecture historic? Share your views!

Common Misspellings: Googie should not be confused with the Internet search engine Google. Other misspellings: Goggie, Googy, Goggy

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Astor Courts

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Astor Courts
Jul 29th 2011, 10:00

Name: Astor Courts, also known as Ferncliff Casino or Astor Casino
Constructed: 1902-1904
Architects: Stanford White, McKim Mead & White
Renovation: Samuel G. White (great-grandson of Stanford White), Platt Byard Dovell White Architects LLP
Location: Rhinebeck, NY

About Astor Courts

At the turn of the twentieth century, wealthy homeowners often erected small recreation houses on the grounds of their estates. These sporting pavilions were called casinos after the Italian word cascina, or little house, but were sometimes quite large. John Jacob Astor IV and his wife, Ava, commissioned noted architect Stanford White to design an elaborate Beaux Arts style casino for their Ferncliff Estate in Rhinebeck, New York. With an expansive columned terrace, the Fencliff Casino, Astor Courts, is often compared to Louis XIV’s Grand Trianon at Versailles.

Stretching across a hillside with sweeping views of the Hudson River, Astor Courts featured state-of-the art facilities:

  • Indoor swimming pool with a vaulted ceiling
  • Indoor tennis court beneath steel Gothic arches
  • Outdoor tennis court (now a lawn)
  • Two squash courts (now a library)
  • Bowling alley on the lower level
  • Shooting range on the lower level
  • Guest bedrooms
John Jacob Astor IV did not enjoy Astor Courts for long. He divorced his wife Ava in 1909 and married the younger Madeleine Talmadge Force in 1911. Returning from their honeymoon, he died on the sinking Titanic.

Astor Courts passed through a succession of owners. During the 1960s the Catholic Diocese operated a nursing home at Astor Courts. In 2008, owners Kathleen Hammer and Arthur Seelbinder worked with Samuel G. White, great-grandson of the original architect, to restore the casino's original floor plan and decorative details.

Chelsea Clinton, daughter of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and former USA president Bill Clinton, selected Astor Courts as the site of her July 2010 wedding.

Astor Courts is privately owned and not open for tours.

Learn More About Astor Courts

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: San Giorgio Maggiore

Thursday, 28 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
San Giorgio Maggiore
Jul 28th 2011, 10:00

San Giorgio Maggiore
Andrea Palladio, architect
Started in 1566 and continued by Vincenzo Scamozzi after Palladio's death
Completed in 1610
Located on the island of San Giorgio in Venice, Italy

San Giorgio Maggiore is a Christian basilica, but from the front it looks like a temple from Classical Greece. Four massive columns on pedestals support a high pediment. Behind the columns is yet another version of the temple motif. Flat pilasters support a wide pediment. The taller "temple" appears to be layered on top of the shorter temple.

The two versions of the temple motif are brilliantly white, virtually hiding the brick church building behind.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: olso city hall

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
olso city hall
Jul 28th 2011, 10:00

Oslo City Hall, Oslo, Norway
Completed: 1950
Architects: Arnstein Arneberg and Magnus Poulsson

Every year on December 10, the Nobel Peace Prize is awarded during a ceremony at the Oslo City Hall in Oslo, Norway. Located in the center of downtown Oslo, the modern structure captures the history and culture of Norway.

The brick facade of Oslo City Hall is decorated with historical themes. Two tall towers and an enormous clock echo the design of traditional northern-European town halls.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Homes for Haiti

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Homes for Haiti
Jul 28th 2011, 10:00

When an earthquake struck Haiti in January 2010, the capital city of Port-au-Prince was reduced to rubble. Tens of thousands of people were killed, and millions were left homeless.

How could Haiti provide shelter for so many people? The emergency shelters would need to be inexpensive and easy to build. Moreover, the emergency shelters should be more durable than makeshift tents. Haiti needed homes that could stand up to earthquakes and hurricanes.

Within days after the earthquake struck, architects and designers began working on solutions.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: New House Photos

Wednesday, 27 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
New House Photos
Jul 27th 2011, 10:01

January 17: The home is finished with a brick details

The home is finished with a brick detailing

The home is finished with a brick detailing

Karen Hudson

Once most of the inside was finished, the builders added finishing touches to the outside. A brick facade was installed on some of the exterior walls.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Wacky Restaurant in Aruba

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Wacky Restaurant in Aruba
Jul 27th 2011, 10:01

Visitors vacationing on the Caribbean island of Aruba can snack at this wacky restaurant with dinosaurs, cars, and other things on the roof.

Googie Restaurant in Aruba

Googie Restaurant in Aruba

Photo (cc) Flickr Member Dennis from Atlanta
Aruba is a favorite Caribbean vacation spot and this wacky restaurant is sure to entertain. The building goes all out for Googie, with dinosaurs, cars, and cows on the roof.

This restaurant is also an example of programmatic, or mimetic, architecture. The walls are painted with black and white spots, suggesting the idea of cows. The enormous red Dutch shoe conveys the theme of chocolate and dairy products. The message? Eat here and you can get chocolate ice cream or a milk shake.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Free Spirit House in British Columbia, Canada

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Free Spirit House in British Columbia, Canada
Jul 27th 2011, 10:01

Free Spirit Houses in British Columbia, Canada are wooden spheres that hang from trees, cliffs, or other surfaces.

Free Spirit House in British Columbia, Canada

Free Spirit Houses in British Columbia, Canada float above the ground.

Photo © Tom Chudleigh, courtesy of PointClickHome.com
A Free Spirit House is a tree house for grownups. Invented and manufactured by Tom Chudleigh, each house is a hand-crafted wooden sphere that is suspended from a web of rope. The house seems to hang from trees like a nut or a piece of fruit. To enter a Free Spirit House, you must climb a spiral stairway or cross a suspension bridge. The sphere sways gently in the breeze and rocks when persons inside move.

Free Spirit Houses may look odd, but their design is a practical form of bio-mimicry. Their shape and their function imitate the natural world.

This Free Spirit House on Vancouver Island in British Columbia, Canada was featured in the Gravity-Defying Homes photo gallery at PointClickHome.com.

If you want to try out a Free Spirit House, you can rent one for the night. Or, you can purchase your own Free Spirit House or Free Spirit House kit to place on your own land. Learn more at Free Spirit Spheres.

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Architecture: I Love Ted

Tuesday, 26 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture
Get the latest headlines from the Architecture GuideSite.
I Love Ted
Jul 26th 2011, 09:30

Madly love Ted--Ted Talks, that is. The online video collection is simply the best source for short, lively, provocative conversations about architecture, design, and anything else you might want to explore. Just look what a quick search unearths: FIND MORE:

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: 1904: Martin House Conservatory

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
1904: Martin House Conservatory
Jul 26th 2011, 10:00

125 Jewett Parkway, Buffalo, NY

The Prairie Style Conservatory by Frank Lloyd Wright

The Prairie Style Conservatory by Frank Lloyd Wright, in the Martin House complex, Buffalo, NY

Photo by Jaydec, Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: 1908: Walter V. Davidson House

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
1908: Walter V. Davidson House
Jul 26th 2011, 10:00

57 Tillinghast Place, Buffalo, NY

The Walter V. Davidson House by Frank Lloyd Wright, Buffalo, NY

The Prairie Style Walter V. Davidson House by Frank Lloyd Wright, Buffalo, NY

Photo by Wikimedia member Monsterdog77, public domain

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Pod House in New York State

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Pod House in New York State
Jul 26th 2011, 10:00

Also known as the Mushroom House, this unusual home is modeled after the shape of the delicate wildflower, Queen Anne's Lace.

Pod House in New York State

Pod House, also known as the Mushroom House

Photo © Chris Marcera, courtesy of PointClickHome.com
Architect James H. Johnson was inspired by the shape of the local wildflower, Queen Anne's Lace, when he designed this unusual home in Powder Mills Park, near Rochester, New York. The home is actually a complex of several pods with connecting walkways. Perched atop thin stems, the pods are amusing yet eerie examples of organic architecture.

This photo of the Pod House is from the Gravity-Defying Homes collection featured on PointClickHome.com. The Pod House was also featured on Offbeat America on HGTV and in the book Weird New York (compare prices).

Learn More About the Pod House: James H. Johnson, architect

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Banna Park Birdwatch in Japan

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Banna Park Birdwatch in Japan
Jul 26th 2011, 10:00

Bird watchers get a great view from this egg-shaped lookout at Banna Park on Ishigaki Island, Japan.

Banna Park Birdwatch, Japan

Banna Park Birdwatch, Japan

Photo (cc) Flickr Member Ken@Okinawa

Banna Park on Ishigaki Island, Okinawa, Japan is a sanctuary for more than 2500 species of birds. This playful overlook is an example of programmatic, or mimetic, architecture. Its shape refers to its theme of wild birdlife.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: Architecture in France

Monday, 25 July 2011 0 意見
Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
Architecture in France
Jul 25th 2011, 10:00

A Guide for Travelers to France

From medieval times to modern days, France has been at the forefront of architectural innovation. Follow these links for an architectural tour of France. Also find travel help and resources for planning your French tour.

Must-See Buildings:

Important Styles:

Famous Architects:

Plan Your Trip:

Pop Quiz:

Find out how much you know about buildings in France. Here's an Architecture Quiz from your Guide to the French Language.

History:

Over the centuries, France has been at the forefront of architectural innovation. In Medieval times, the radical new Gothic style found its beginnings in France. During the Renaissance, the French borrowed from Italian ideas to create lavish Chateaux. In the 1600s, the French brought classical restraint to the elaborate Baroque style. Neoclassism was popular in France till about 1840, followed by a revival of Gothic ideas.

From 1885 till about 1820, the hot new trend was "Beaux Arts" -- an elaborate, highly decorated fashion inspired by many ideas from the past. Art Nouveau originated in France in the 1880s. Art Deco was born in Paris in 1925. Then came the various modern movements -- with France solidly in the lead.

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Architecture: What's Hot Now: The mansard roof and second empire architecture

Architecture: What's Hot Now
These articles that had the largest increase in popularity over the last week
The mansard roof and second empire architecture
Jul 25th 2011, 10:00

The Mansard Roof
and the Second Empire Style
by Jackie Craven

Originating during the Renaissance, the high, boxy mansard roof has a long and interesting history.

High Style Second Empire home with mansard roof
Second Empire buildings with tall mansard roofs were modeled after the opulent
architecture of Paris during the reign of Napoleon III.
Illustration
© ArtToday.com

Steep, double-sloped roofs were characteristic of Italian and French Renaissance architecture. The Louvre, originally built in 1546, had high sloping roofs. A century later, the French architect François Mansart (1598-1666) used double-sloped roofs so extensively that they were coined mansard - a derivation of Mansart's name.

In the mid-1800s, when Louis Napoleon (Napoleon III) established the Second Empire in France, Paris was transformed into a city of grand boulevards and monumental buildings. The Louvre was enlarged, and interest in the tall, majestic mansard roof was revived. The fashion was not merely grandiose, but also practical. The nearly perpendicular roofs transformed cramped attics into livable space.


From our Mystery House series, this Second Empire
home has a Queen Anne porch.
Photo © Randy LaCoille


"The introduction of circular-headed windows, circular projections, or verandahs, and of curved lines in the design of the roof, and in the details generally, will always have an easy, agreeable effect, if well managed; and curved roofs especially deserve to be introduced more frequently than has hitherto been the practice here." - Calvert Vaux, Villa and Cottage Architecture, 1864


Second Empire architecture spread to England during the Paris Exhibitions of 1852 and 1867. Before long, French fever spread to the United States.

Related Resources

• Second Empire Style
• Victorian Architecture
• French Inspired Houses

The first important Second Empire building in America was the Cocoran Gallery (1859-61 and 1870-71, later renamed the Renwick Gallery) in Washington, DC by James Renwick. The largest was Philadelphia's City Hall, designed by John McArthur, Jr. Because it was based on a contemporary movement in Paris, the Second Empire style was considered more progressive than Greek Revival or Gothic Revival architecture.

When the Second Empire style was applied to residential architecture, builders created interesting innovations. High mansard roofs were placed atop houses in a variety of contemporary styles. Also, older buildings were often renovated to include trendy and practical mansard roofs. For this reason, Second Empire homes in the United States are often composites of Italianate, Gothic Revival, and other styles.

Second Empire home with mansard roof
Second Empire toppings make a small home majestic.
Photo © ArtToday.com

During the presidency of Ulysses Grant (1860-1877), Second Empire was a preferred style for public buildings in the United States. In fact, the style became so closely associated with the prosperous Grant administration that it is sometimes called the General Grant Style. When the age of prosperity turned into the economic depression of the 1870s, flamboyant Second Empire architecture fell out of fashion.

A new wave of French inspired architecture traveled to the United States during the early 1900s, when soldiers returning from World War I brought an interest in styles borrowed from Normandy and Provence. However, these hipped-roof buildings do not have the exuberance of Second Empire architecture... nor do they evoke the sense of imposing height.


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