Week 2 Notes
Week 2 Notes
• Eero Saarinen’s two most famous works are the Gateway Arch at St. Louis, Missouri
(1961–66) and the TWA Terminal (1956–62) at New York’s John F. Kennedy
International Airport.
- The Gateway Arch was designed to match and if possible, exceed the Paris’ Eiffel
Tower’s in scale, technological prowess and symbolic stature. Most prominently,
it was referenced as America’s origins.
- The TWA Terminal was innovative as it was viewed as a bird with wings spread
18.82 TWA Terminal, John F. Kennedy International Airport, Queens, New York
and poised to take off. Designed with no façade and right angle, the terminal
evoked a sense of grace and lightness through its undulating(wavy) interiors and
TWA red carpeted floors.
• Archigram
- A publication begun in 1961 (alternative ideas).
- Produced by the young English architects Peter Cook, David Greene, Michael
Webb, Ron Herron, Warren Chalk, and Dennis Crompton.
- Called for a holistic vision of the city and its parts as a living, flowing, pulsing,
flexible organism
- They challenged the grid by Le Corbusier and emphasised the use of anything but
90-degree angles and thematized the curving and twisting of Le Corbusier’s
straight lines.
- Used bright colours a nonstandard format, and an explicitly cut-and paste style of
assembly to deliver visions of technologically advanced cities
- Embraced the language and images of the youth culture that was blooming in
England and abroad.
• Buckminster Fuller
- His goal was to develop ways to distribute nature’s resources to all through an
informed, efficient, flexible, and responsible attitude toward design
- Fuller saw housing as tightly interwoven with industrialization and social utopian
thinking.
- Earliest advocates of renewable energy sources
- Fuller’s geodesic dome was most efficient structure built as it would create local
triangular rigidity and distribute the stress
• Counterculture Architecture
- The early 1960s saw architects building with sod or discarded building elements
and studying vernacular practices around the world.
- Criticized the social norms of the age and exploitation of natural resources
- An example would be when a building that was once the scourge of the
neighbourhood, is now a tourist attraction (made by Art Beal, a garbage collector
for the town of Cambria, California.
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