Architecture of Chicago School, Art Nouveau and Proto-Rationalism
Architecture of Chicago School, Art Nouveau and Proto-Rationalism
Architecture of Chicago School, Art Nouveau and Proto-Rationalism
- The Chicago School was a group of architects active c. 1880-1910 and known for major
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innovations in high-rise construction and for the development of modern commercial building
design.
Known for the American skyscraper and the developed the steel skeleton as a load-bearing
structure.
The safe elevator was invented by Ensha Graves Otis during this time.
Louis Sullivan is one of its best-known exponents.
It was during this period that the schism between construction and architecture, between the
engineer and the architect, was healed.
- Home Insurance Building, Chicago, 1883-1885. First building in which skeleton or steel frame
construction was used. Elevations are still handled in a heavy, monumental fashion.
- Represents the climax of Sullivans development of the tall, free-standing office tower.
- Building now really stands on its columnar legs, but these are contained by corner frames,
which both define the volume and hold it down, stretch upward as they are to the cornice.
- The static slab of the Wainwright Building is abandoned, and Richardsons arches reappear, but
the thin piers that they connect seem to be not so much rising up to them as pulling down like a
dropped screen within the larger frame.
- A drama of vertical continuity and human uprightness is realized.
- Anthropometric.
- Main part made up of office spaces stacked one on top of the other is visually separated from
the base.
- Only the corner piers give the desired continuity. The same corner piers connect also the main
shaft to the attic.
- The setback spandrels emphasise the verticality of the main central part and set it off against the
heavier and more horizontally organised base.
- The thin projecting cornice is just heavy enough to bring the soaring vertical movement to a
definite stop.
- Human body image would have been inappropriate and was abandoned.
- Surface of the building is now horizontally continuous, except at the corner, where it splits apart
as if under interior pressure. This round corner with its emphasis on verticality was introduced at
the insistence of the owners.
- Columns and spandrels are kept in one plane.
- Horizontal Chicago windows are inserted with great precision. With their thin metal frames they
cut sharply into the facade.
- The light-splintering ornament of the lower floors takes all sense of structural support away form
that zone. The upper stories, therefore, float free from attachment to the ground, and thereby the
velocity of the horizontal movement down the street is increased.
- Light wells provided new and unusual sources of illumination for such a narrow space.
- Admired for its perfect adjustment to the needs of the owner and its freedom from any trace of
historical styles.
- Second storey windows run downward from the supporting girders to the floor level.
- Horta took over elements which had appeared first in business and industrial buildings of the
1850s and incorporated them into a private house.
- Flexible ground plan results in the free disposition of rooms at different levels and the
independence of partitions one from another.
Reflects the socialist tendencies of the cultural life of Brussels at the time.
Functionally, it is a social and cultural center for the people, for the workers.
Concave iron and glass facade was one of the boldest achievements of the period.
Generally regarded as Hortas masterpiece.
In the Tassel House, the supporting vertical columns were still derived from plants, and the
sprouting tendrils merged into the painted ceiling. In the Maison du Peuple, the horizontal,
vertical and diagonal members of the structural frame of the lecture hall are connected to a
delicately articulated network, which in its transparency and lightness goes beyond a mere
ornamental effect and becomes an expression of the principles of construction.
- Most gifted of the so-called Glasgow boys, a group of architects, painters and decorators.
- Became especially influential on Otto Wagner and his secession group in Vienna.
- Career and game was short-lived, following the pattern of his contemporaries Horta and
Sullivan.
- Hardly had any commissions during the last 15 years of his life.
- Uses more straight lines, hard, abstract and geometric shapes, as opposed to the free flowing,
soft, organic, concrete and natural forms.
- Contains a series of studio-classrooms on the north side, facing the main street.
- Row of classrooms is interrupted by the asymmetrically placed entrance, which contains the
directors office on the second floor.
- Back of the entrance there is the central stairway, which is surrounded by the museum on the
second floor.
- There are two additional stairs next to the library and the Mackintosh room.
- The front is primarily a wall of large studio windows facing the street and north.
- Front would have been a functional grid, it were not for the entrance bay or front piece, which is
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place out of center and is a free, asymmetrical composition of elements of the Baroque and of
the Scottish-baronial past.
A division into three levels:
- Pediment on the first floor
- Bare turret over the entrance on the second
- Little oriel windows on the third
Functional grid and sturdiness of the centre are relieved by delightful, very thin metalwork, the
railings the handrail of the balcony, and especially the odd hooks carrying transparent, flowerlike balls in front of the upper windows (practical purpose is to hold boards for window-cleaning).
Aesthetic purpose of metalwork is to provide a delicate screen of light and playful form through
which the stronger and sounder rest will be seen.
Mackintosh gathered the national articulations of the past, reinterpreted them in a creative way,
and at the same time anticipated the development of contemporary architecture by
foreshadowing the neoplastic forms of the De Stijl movement, the architecture of Functionalism,
the bold and expressionistic shapes of Gaudi and even those of Le Corbusier at Ronchamp.
- Like Mackintosh, gathered the forms of the past of his native country, Spain, the forms of Gothic,
Moorish and Baroque architecture, and reinterpreted them in a creative way, foreshadowing at
the same time the expressionistic and surrealistic tendencies of the following contemporary
architecture in Europe.
- Eagerly studied Viollet-le-Duc, which helped him explore complicated structural problems.
- Wanted to continue and develop the Gothic style.
- Building layout contains three large elongated rectangular spaces lighted from above for the
three exchanges.
- The largest in front is flanked by galleries of offices, and the allusion to the Romanesque basilica
with side aisles is perhaps intended.
- Another value comes from the ambiguity between its twofold character of cathedral and factory,
which gives the building an aura of mystery.
the development of the figurative arts, especially that of Cubism, and the movements which took
there origin from it, such as Neoplasticism, Constructivism, etc.
Reduced forms to simple geometric shapes, partly for reasons of economy and party as a
consequence of the search for pure, basic and simple forms.
Besides this tendency for simple and pure forms there was the lingering bent towards
Classicism in the romantic-classic vein.
Made reinforced concrete an architectural building material.
Characterized by a certain anti-art and anti-decoration tendency.
An architecture of hard straight lines and angular forms were produced.
A movement tending towards reduction:
- Architecture is reduced to construction
- Function is reduced to material function
- Architectural form is reduced to abstraction
- Building is reduced to an economic enterprise
- Stated that new balance must be found in form, function, and technic.
- Published the famous manifesto Ornament and Crime in 1908, showcasing his obsessive
puritanism.
- Resulted partly from an attempt to get around the existing building regulations, which allowed
only a single story facade on the street side.
- The building is covered on that side with a sweeping curved roof which allows four stories in the
back, making use of the sloping site.
- Side facades show clearly the dramatic arrangement of the interior volumes and are in stark
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contrast with the garden facade, where everything i ordered and composed rhythmically in
iconoclastic and classicistic nudity.
Embodies best the architectural theory of Loos.
Garden facade is a concession to the Neoclassic trends of Proto-Rationalism.
Side facades anticipate already the principles of the so-called Raumplan, in which the facade
is determined by the spaces behind it.
Uses traditional vertical windows.
- Defined for the first time with extreme clarity the relationship between supporting and supported
elements of a building and in his profiling of the elements.
- Influenced Le Corbusier who developed his free plan out of the assumption that the supporting
structure should be separate from the space-enclosing and space-defining walls.
- Most important contribution of Perret to the younger generation of French architects was the
flexible treatment of the floor plan.
- Divided into a main building and an asymmetrically placed annex, architecturally differentiated
from the main building.
- Long facade of the factory is made up of a glass wall from floor to ceiling, inserted between
vertical steel supports
- Steel supports taper towards the bottom into hinged baseplates fixed to the foundation walls.
- By canting the glass surfaces inward, a conspicuously projecting cornice is formed which divides
the building into two halvesa heavy roof looming over a building which is set back.
- Structural system is made up of three-hinged, arched trusses which swing in one movement
from base to crown, obliterating the division between roof and walls.
- Monumental effect is heightened by the massive corners where the long glass facade meets the
gable ends.
- Corners have nothing to do with the structure of the building and were chosen mainly for formal
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reasons.
Building loses somewhat it straightforward practical character and becomes a monument.
On the gable ends appears the first glass curtain wall.
Powerful design is a combination of Romantic Classicism and the Romanticism of the machine.
A synthesis of a Greek temple with a factory.
- Worked in the office of Peter Behrens after finishing his studies from 1907 to 1910, when his
master was engaged in the work for the Turbine Factory of the AEG.
- Took part in discussions at the newly founded Deutscher Werkbund which helped crystallize
his ideas as to what the essential nature of a building ought to be.
- Early in his career became interested in the social aspects of architecture, in the housing
problem, in pre-fabrication as a means of cutting costs and achieving better quality.