Week 1 Lecture Introduction To Architecture
Week 1 Lecture Introduction To Architecture
History II
Form
Shape Aesthetic component
Color
Style
Vitruvian characteristics:
• Roman architect and engineer Vitruvius defined
• architecture’s characteristics to include:
Prehistoric Caves/ The Lascaux Caves, Dordogne Valley, Southern France Disney Concert Hall. Los Angeles CA
Architectural space is fist of all utilitarian. Architectural art begins physical and ends Psychological”
James O’Gorman
al
ental
Gathering societies Stonehenge Sumerians Egyptian Old Kingdom
Architecture in Prehistoric Times: Paleolithic, Mesolithic and Neolithic periods, as well as portions of the
Bronze and Iron Ages
Gathering societies
Cooperative hunting
Migrant communities
Relocate close to
• Water
• Food
• And temporary shelter
Terms
Lintel
Mega=Large
lithos = Stone
Mega=Large
lithos = Stone
Ability to
Organize materials
And labor for
Ceremonial purposes
• Spiritual need
• Organize materials
• Labor for
• Ceremonial purposes
• Transportation of megastores
• Connections with ancient
astronomy
Transportation and building techniques
Could have been a burial ground at the beginnings (human bone 3000 BC)
Place with a religious, astronomical and pilgrimage significance
Neolithic people of Britain began to erect a monumental stone structure known as
“Stonehenge” on the Salisbury Plain (5000 years ago).
The Sumerians • Mathematics
• Astronomy
The Oldest Known Civilization • Sexagesimal system:
5000-3500 BCE
• calculation of time and
angles, the multiple
divisibility of the
number 60
Storage
Domesticated animals
Agricultural farming
Growing cereals: discovering of supper food: Wheat
The beginnings of writing
Cuneiform characters
Ancient Egypt
3,050 BC to 900 BC
Powerful rulers constructed
monumental pyramids, temples,
and shrines.
Enormous structures such as the
Pyramids of Giza were feats of
engineering capable of reaching
great heights.
Ancient Egypt Architecture characteristics
• Post and lintel
construction
• Massive walls
covered with
hieroglyphic
and pictorial
carving
• Flat roofs
• Most buildings
were built of
locally mud or
baked bricks
and limestone
• Workers were
slaves
Chapter two
The Greek World
• Columns (Structural)
Decoration:
Displays Wealth and family affluence
• Friezes
• Moldings
• Murals
• Fresco-paintings
• Colored reliefs
• Mosaic inlay
• Roof tiles (occasionally employed)
Themes
• Human figure
• Scenes: everyday life
• Related to nature
• Rite of passage
The ladies in blue fresco from
Neopalatial Knossos Period
for food and commerce The Bronze age Frescoes from Akrotiri on
the Aegean Island of Thera (Santorini)
Lintel
Building Systems:
• Dominant lines:
-Horizontal and vertical
Verticality
• Attention to detail
• Symmetry