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Synopses & Reviews
Publisher Comments
About the Author
Marian Moffett earned a B.Arch. at North Carolina State University (1971) and the M.Arch. and PhD. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1973 and 1975, respectively). She taught architectural history at he University of Tennessee from 1975 until her death in 2004 where she collaborated with Lawrence Wodehouse in producing exhibitions and catalogs on the architecture of the Tennessee Valley Authority and cantilever barns, as well as co-authoring A History of Western Architecture and East Tennessee Cantilever Barns. Her research included work on wooden architecture in Eastern Europe and town planning in Tennessee. She was active with the Southeast Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians and has served as President of the UT Faculty Senate and as an academic administrator in the Office of the Provost.
Lawrence Wodehouse was an Architecture professor at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville from 1979 to 1993. Wodehouse worked as a professor of Architecture at the Pratt Institute in New York prior to coming to the University of Tennessee. Lawrence Wodehouse received his master’s degree from Cornell in 1963 and his Ph.D. from St. Andrews University in 1980. His major research concentrations have been in 19th and 20th century architecture and also the vernacular architecture of East Tennessee. He has coauthored two books with Marian Moffett, The Cantilever Barn in East Tennessee, and also Built for the People of the United States: Fifty Years of TVA Architecture. Lawrence Wodehouse retired in the spring of 1993 and died in 2002.
Table of Contents
Introduction
A Word about Drawings and Images
1. The Beginnings of Architecture
Prehistoric Settlements and Megalith Constructions
Ancient Mesopotamia
Ancient Egypt
2. The Greek World
The Aegean Cultures
The Minoans
The Mycenaeans
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
1. The Beginnings of Architecture
Prehistoric Settlements and Megalith Constructions
Ancient Mesopotamia
Ancient Egypt
2. The Greek World
The Aegean Cultures
The Minoans
The Mycenaeans
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Ancient Mesopotamia
Ancient Egypt
2. The Greek World
The Aegean Cultures
The Minoans
The Mycenaeans
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
2. The Greek World
The Aegean Cultures
The Minoans
The Mycenaeans
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Minoans
The Mycenaeans
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Greece: The Archaic Period
Greece: The Classical Period
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Greece: The Hellenistic Period
Greek City Planning
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
3. The Architecture of Ancient India and Southeast Asia
Religions of India
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Early Buddhist Shrines
Hindu Temples
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
4. Traditional Architecture of China and Japan
Chinese Architectural Principles
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Principles of City Planning
Houses and Gardens
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Japanese Temple Architecture
Japanese Houses and Castles
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Zen Buddhist Architecture and Its Derivatives
5. The Roman World
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Etruscan Imprints
The Romans
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Building Techniques and Materials
City Planning
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Temples
Public Buildings
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Residences
6. Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Early Christian Basilicas
Martyria, Baptisteries, and Mausolea
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Byzantine Basilicas and Domed Basilicas
Centrally Planned Byzantine Churches
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Churches in Russia
7. Islamic Architecture
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Early Shrines and Palaces
Conception of the Mosque
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Regional Variations in Mosque Design
Tombs
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Houses and Urban Patterns
The Palace and the Garden
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
8. Early Medieval and Romanesque Architecture
Carolingian Architecture
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Viking Architecture
Early Romanesque Architecture
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Romanesque Architecture of the Holy Roman Empire
Pilgrimage Road Churches
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Order of Cluny
Aquitaine and Provence
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Cistercian Monasteries
Norman Architecture
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
9. Gothic Architecture
Early Gothic
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
High Gothic
English Gothic
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
German, Czech, and Italian Gothic
Medieval Construction
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Medieval Houses and Castles
Medieval Cities
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
10. Indigenous Architecture in the Pre-Columbian
Americas
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
North America
Mexico and Central America
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
South America: The Andean World
Africa
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
11. Renaissance Architecture
Filippo Brunelleschi
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Michelozzo Bartolomeo and the Palazzo Medici
Leone Battista Alberti
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Other Renaissance City Plans
The Spread of the Renaissance
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Leonardo da Vinci
Donato Bramante
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Late Renaissance and Mannerism
Michelangelo
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Andrea Palladio
Palladio’s Venice
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Garden Design
The Renaissance in France
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Renaissance in England
12. Baroque Architecture
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Reformation and Counter Reformation
Pope Sixtus V and the Replanning of Rome
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Gianlorenzo Bernini
Francesco Borromini
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Urban Open Spaces in Baroque Rome
The Spread of Baroque Architecture to Northern Italy
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Baroque in Central Europe
The Baroque in France
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Christopher Wren and the Baroque in England
Nicholas Hawksmoor, Sir John VanBrugh, and James Gibbs
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
13. The Eighteenth Century
The English Neo-Palladians
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Return to Antiquity
Robert Adam and William Chambers
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Étienne-Louis Boullée and Claude-Nicolas Ledoux
French Architects and the Aggrandizement of the State
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Designs by the Pensionnaires
French Architectural Education and the Ecole de Beaux Arts
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Challenge of the Industrial Revolution
Romanticism and the Picturesque
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Romantic Landscape
Picturesque Buildings
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
14. Nineteenth Century Developments
Neo-Classicism
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Gothic Revival
The Ecole des Beaux-Arts
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Developments in Steel
Architectural Applications of Iron and Steel Construction
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Skeletal Construction in Concrete and Wood
The Arts and Crafts Movement
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Art Nouveau
The Viennese Secession
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Search for an American Style
15. The Twentieth Century and Modernism
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Idea of a Modern Architecture
Adolf Loos
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
The Modern Masters
Frank Lloyd Wright
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Peter Behrens and the Deutscher Werkbund
Futurism and Constructivism
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Dutch and German Expressionism
Art Deco
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
De Stijl
Exploiting the Potential of Concrete
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Le Corbusier
Walter Gropius
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe
The Weissenhof Siedlung and the International Style
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Later Work of Mies Van der Rohe
Later Work of Frank Lloyd Wright
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Later Work of Le Corbusier
The Continuation of Traditional Architecture
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
16. Modernisms in the Mid- and Late-Twentieth Century
Alvar Aalto
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Eero Saarinen and His Office
Louis I. Kahn
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Robert Venturis Radical Counter-Proposal to Modernism
Philip Johnson
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Charles Moore
Michael Graves
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Robert A. M. Stern
Deconstruction
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Perseverance of the Classical Tradition
Modern Regionalism
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Modernism and Japan
Form-Making in the United States
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Form-Making Elsewhere
European Architecture and Technology
Sustainable Design
Sustainable Design
Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780073053042
- Binding:
- Trade Paperback
- Publication date:
- 01/22/2008
- Publisher:
- MCGRAW HILL COMPANIES
- Edition:
- 3ED
- Pages:
- 608
- Height:
- 1.17IN
- Width:
- 8.65IN
- Thickness:
- 1.17 in.
- Number of Units:
- 1
- Copyright Year:
- 2009
- UPC Code:
- 2800073053044
- Author:
- Media Run Time:
- B
- Subject:
- History
- Subject:
- Architecture — History.
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