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Contemporary architecture

Contemporary architecture is the architecture of the 21st century. No single style is dominant.[1] Contemporary architects work in several different styles, from postmodernism, high-tech architecture and new references and interpretations of traditional architecture[2][3] to highly conceptual forms and designs, resembling sculpture on an enormous scale. Some of these styles and approaches make use of very advanced technology and modern building materials, such as tube structures which allow construction of buildings that are taller, lighter and stronger than those in the 20th century, while others prioritize the use of natural and ecological materials like stone, wood and lime.[4] One technology that is common to all forms of contemporary architecture is the use of new techniques of computer-aided design, which allow buildings to be designed and modeled on computers in three dimensions, and constructed with more precision and speed.

Contemporary architecture
Years active2000–present
CountryInternational

Contemporary buildings and styles vary greatly. Some feature concrete structures wrapped in glass or aluminium screens, very asymmetric facades, and cantilevered sections which hang over the street. Skyscrapers twist, or break into crystal-like facets. Facades are designed to shimmer or change color at different times of day.

Whereas the major monuments of modern architecture in the 20th century were mostly concentrated in the United States and western Europe, contemporary architecture is global; important new buildings have been built in China, Russia, Latin America, and particularly in Arab states of the Persian Gulf; the Burj Khalifa in Dubai was the tallest building in the world in 2019, and the Shanghai Tower in China was the second-tallest.

Additionally, in the late 20th century, New Classical Architecture, a traditionalist response to modernist architecture, emerged, continuing into the 21st century.[5] The 21st century saw the emergence of multiple organizations dedicated to the promotion of local and/or traditional architecture. Examples include the International Network for Traditional Building, Architecture & Urbanism (INTBAU),[6] the Institute of Classical Architecture & Art (ICAA),[7] the Driehaus Architecture Prize,[8] and the Complementary architecture movement. New traditional architects include Michael Graves, Léon Krier, Yasmeen Lari, Robert Stern and Abdel-Wahed El-Wakil.

Most of the landmarks of contemporary architecture are the works of a small group of architects who work on an international scale. Many were designed by architects already famous in the late 20th century, including Mario Botta, Frank Gehry, Jean Nouvel, Norman Foster, Ieoh Ming Pei and Renzo Piano, while others are the work of a new generation born during or after World War II, including Zaha Hadid, Santiago Calatrava, Daniel Libeskind, Jacques Herzog, Pierre de Meuron, Rem Koolhaas, and Shigeru Ban. Other projects are the work of collectives of several architects, such as UNStudio and SANAA, or large multinational agencies such as Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, with thirty associate architects and large teams of engineers and designers, and Gensler, with 5,000 employees in 16 countries.

Museums edit

Some of the most striking and innovative works of contemporary architecture are art museums, which are often examples of sculptural architecture, and are the signature works of major architects. The Quadracci Pavilion of the Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava. Its structure includes a movable, wing-like brise soleil that opens up for a wingspan of 217 feet (66 m) during the day, folding over the tall, arched structure at night or during bad weather.[9]

The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis (2005), was designed by the Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron, who designed the Tate Modern museum in London, and who won the Pritzker Architecture Prize, the most prestigious award in architecture, in 2001. It updates and provides a contrast to the austere earlier Modernist structure designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes by adding a five-story tower clad in panels of delicately sculpted gray aluminum, which change color with the changing light, connecting by a wide glass gallery leading to the older building. It also harmonizes with two stone churches opposite.[10]

The Polish-born American architect Daniel Libeskind (born 1946) is one of the most prolific of contemporary museum architects; He was an academic before he began designing buildings and was one of the early proponents of the architectural theory of Deconstructivism. The exterior of his Imperial War Museum North in Manchester, England (2002), has an exterior which resembles, depending upon the light and time of day, huge and broken pieces of earth or armor plates, and is said to symbolize the destruction of war. In 2006 Libeskind finished the Hamilton Building of the Denver Art Museum in Denver Colorado, composed of twenty sloping planes, none of them parallel or perpendicular, covered with 230,000 square feet of titanium panels. Inside, the walls of the galleries are all different, sloping and asymmetric.[11] Libeskind completed another striking museum, the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada (2007), also known as "The Crystal," a building whose form, resembles a shattered crystal.[12] Libeskind's museums have been both admired and attacked by critics. While admiring many features of the Denver Art Museum, The New York Times' architecture critic Nicolai Ouroussoff wrote that "In a building of canted walls and asymmetrical rooms—tortured geometries generated purely by formal considerations — it is virtually impossible to enjoy the art."[13]

The De Young Museum in San Francisco was designed by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron. It opened in 2005, replacing an older structure that was badly damaged in an earthquake in 1989. The new museum was designed to blend with the park's natural landscape and resist strong earthquakes. The building can move up to three feet (91 centimeters) on ball-bearing sliding plates and viscous fluid dampers that absorb kinetic energy.

The Zentrum Paul Klee by Renzo Piano is an art museum near Bern, Switzerland, located next to an autoroute in the Swiss countryside. The museum blends into the landscape by taking three rolling hills made of steel and glass. One building houses the gallery (which is almost entirely underground to preserve the fragile drawings of Klee from the effects of sunlight). At the same time, the other two "hills" contain an education center and administrative offices.[14]

The Centre Pompidou-Metz, in Metz, France, (2010), a branch of the Centre Pompidou museum of modern art in Paris, was designed by Shigeru Ban, a Japanese architect who won the Pritzker Prize for Architecture in 2014. The roof is the most dramatic feature of the building; it is a 90 m (300 ft) wide hexagon with a surface area of 8,000 m2 (86,000 sq ft), composed of sixteen kilometers of glued laminated timber, that intersect to form hexagonal wooden units resembling the cane-work pattern of a Chinese hat. The roof's geometry is irregular, featuring curves and counter-curves over the entire building, particularly the three exhibition galleries. The entire wooden structure is covered with a white fiberglass membrane, and a coating of teflon protects from direct sunlight and allows light to pass through.

The Louis Vuitton Foundation by Frank Gehry (2014) is the gallery of contemporary art located adjacent to the Bois de Boulogne in Paris was opened in October 2014. Gehry described his architecture as inspired by the glass Grand Palais of the 1900 Paris Exposition and by the enormous glass greenhouses of the Jardin des Serres d'Auteuil near the park, built by Jean-Camille Formigé in 1894–95.[15] Gehry had to work within strict height and volume restrictions, which required any part of the building over two stories to be made of glass. The building is low because of the height limits, sited in an artificial lake with water cascading beneath the building. The interior gallery structures are covered in a white fiber-reinforced concrete called Ductal.[16] Similar in concept to Gehry's Walt Disney Concert Hall, the building is wrapped in curving glass panels resembling sails inflated by the wind. The glass "Sails" are made of 3,584 laminated glass panels, each one a different shape, specially curved for its place in the design.[17] Inside the sails is a cluster of two-story towers containing 11 galleries of different sizes, with flower garden terraces, and rooftop spaces for displays.[18]

The new Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City by Renzo Piano (2015) took a very different approach from the sculptural museums of Frank Gehry. The Whitney has an industrial-looking facade and blends into the neighborhood. Michael Kimmelman, the architecture critic of The New York Times called the building a "mishmash of styles" but noted its similarity to Piano's Centre Pompidou in Paris, in the way that it mixed with the public spaces around it. "Unlike so much big-name architecture," Kimmelman wrote, "it's not some weirdly shaped trophy building into which all the practical stuff of a working museum must be fitted."[19]

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is actually two buildings by different architects fit together; an earlier (1995) five-story postmodernist structure by the Swiss architect Mario Botta, to which has been joined a much larger ten-story white gallery by the Norwegian-based firm of Snøhetta (2016). The expanded building includes a green living wall of native plants in San Francisco; a free ground-floor gallery with 25-foot (7.6 m) tall glass walls that will place art on view to passersby and glass skylights that flood the upper floors of offices (though not the galleries) with light. The facades clad are with lightweight panels made of Fibre-Reinforced Plastic. The critical reaction to the building was mixed. Roberta Smith of The New York Times said the building set a new standard for museums and wrote: "The new building's rippling, sloping facade, rife with subtle curves and bulges, establishes a brilliant alternative to the straight-edged boxes of traditional modernism and the rebellion against them initiated by Frank Gehry, with his computer-inspired acrobatics."[20] On the other hand, the critic of The Guardian of London compared the facade of the building to "a gigantic meringue with a hint of Ikea."[21]

Concert halls edit

Santiago Calatrava designed the Auditorio de Tenerife he concert hall of Tenerife, the major city of the Canary Islands. with a shell-like wing of reinforced concrete. The shell touches the ground at only two points.[9]

The Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles (2003) is one of the major works by California architect Frank Gehry The exterior is stainless steel, formed like the sails of sailboats. The interior is in the Vineyard style, with the audience surrounding the stage. Gehry designed the dramatic array of pipes of the organ to complement the exterior style of the building.

The Casa da Musica in Porto, Portugal, by the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas (2005) is unique among concert halls in having two walls made entirely of glass. Nicolai Ouroussoff, architecture critic from The New York Times, wrote "The building's chiseled concrete form, resting on a carpet of polished stone, suggests a bomb about to explode. He declared that in its originality it was one of the most important concert halls built in the last 100 years". ranking with the Walt Disney Concert Hall, in Los Angeles, and the Berliner Philharmonie.[22]

The interior of the Copenhagen Opera House by Henning Larsen (2005) has an oak floor and maple walls to enhance hat acoustics. The royal box of the Queen, usually placed in the back, is next to stage.

The Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville, Tennessee, by David M. Schwarz & Earl Swensson (2006), is an example of Neo-Classical architecture, borrowed literally from Roman and Greek models. It complements another Nashville landmark, a full-scale replica of the Parthenon.

Three concert halls were awarded with the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture: the Oslo Opera House by Snøhetta (2008), the Harpa concert hall in Reykjavík by Henning Larsen Architects and Olafur Eliasson (2011) as well as the Szczecin Philharmonic by Studio Barozzi Veiga (2014).

The Philharmonie de Paris by French architect Jean Nouvel opened in 2015. The concert hall is at La Villette, in a park at the edge of Paris devoted to museums, a music school and other cultural institutions, where its unusual shape blends with the late 20th-century modern architecture. The exterior of the building takes the form of glittering irregular cliff cut by horizontal fins which reveal ar amp leading upwards The exterior is clad in thousands of small pieces of aluminum in three different colors, from white to gray to black. A path leads up the ramp to the top of building to a terrace with a dramatic view of the peripheric highway around the city. view of the neighborhood. The hall, like the Disney Hall in Los Angeles, has Vineyard style seating, with the audience surrounding the main stage. The seating can be re-arranged in different styles depending upon the type of music performed.[23] When it opened, the architectural critic of the London Guardian compared it to a space ship that had crash-landed on the outskirts of the city.[24]

The Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany, by Herzog & de Meuron, which was inaugurated in January 2017, is the tallest inhabited building in the city, with a height of 110 meters (360 feet). The glass concert hall, which has 2100 seats in Vineyard style, is perched atop a former warehouse. One side of the concert hall building contains a hotel, while the structure on the other side above the concert hall contains forty five apartments. The concert hall in the middle is isolated from the sound of the other parts of the building by an "eggshell" of plaster and paper panels and insulation resembling feather pillows.[25]

Skyscrapers edit

The skyscraper (usually defined as a building over 40 stories high)[26] first appeared in Chicago in the 1890s, and was largely an American style in the mid 20th century, but in the 21st century skyscrapers were found in almost every large city on every continent. A new construction technology, the framed tube structure, was first developed in the United States in 1963 by structural engineer Fazlur Rahman Khan of Skimore, Owings and Merrill, which permitted the construction of super-tall buildings, which needed fewer interior walls, had more window space, and could better resist lateral forces, such as strong winds.[27]

The Burj Khalifa in Dubai, United Arab Emirates is the tallest structure in the world, standing at 829.8 m (2,722 ft).[28] Construction of the Burj Khalifa began in 2004, with the exterior completed 5 years later in 2009. The primary structure is reinforced concrete. Burj Khalifa was designed by Adrian Smith, then of Skidmore, Owings & Merrill (SOM). He also was lead architect on the Jin Mao Tower, Pearl River Tower, and Trump International Hotel & Tower.

Adrian Smith and his own firm are the architects for the building which, in 2020, meant to replace the Burj-Khalifa as the tallest building in the world. The Jeddah Tower in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, is planned to be 1,008 meters, or (3,307 ft) tall, which will make it the tallest building in the world, and the first building to be more than one kilometer in height. Construction began in 2013, and the project is scheduled to be completed in 2020.[29][needs update]

After the destruction of the twin towers of the World Trade Center in the September 11 terrorist attacks, a new trade center was designed, with the main tower designed by David Childs of SOM. One World Trade Center, opened in 2015, is 1,776 feet (541 m) tall, making it the tallest building in the western hemisphere.

In London, one of the most notable contemporary landmarks is 30 St Mary Axe, popularly known as "The Gherkin", designed by Norman Foster (2004). It replaced the London Millennium Tower – a much taller project that Foster earlier had proposed for the same site, which would have been the tallest building in Europe, but was so tall that it interfered with the flight pattern for Heathrow Airport. The steel framework of the Gherkin is integrated into the glass facade.[30]

The tallest building in Poland and in the European Union (as of 2023) is Varso in Warsaw, designed by Norman Foster. Completed in 2022, it is 310-meter (1,020-foot) tall.

The tallest building in Moscow is the Federation Tower, designed by the Russian architect Sergei Tchoban with Peter Schweger. Completed in 2017, with a height 373 meters, it surpassed Mercury City Tower, another skyscraper in Moscow, when it was built as the tallest building in Europe.

The tallest building in China as of 2015 is the Shanghai Tower by the U.S. architectural and design firm of Gensler. It is 632-meter (2,073-foot) tall, with 127 floors, making it in 2016 the second-tallest building in the world. It also features the fastest elevators, which reach a speed of 20.5 meters per second (67 feet per second; 74 kilometers per hour) .[31][32]

Most skyscrapers are designed to express modernity; the most notable exception is the Abraj Al Bait, a complex of seven skyscraper hotels build by the government of Saudi Arabia to house pilgrims coming the holy shrine of Mecca. The centerpiece of the group is the Makkah Palace Clock Tower Hotel, with a gothic revival tower; it was the fourth-tallest building in the world in 2016, 581.1 meters (1,906 feet) high.

Residential buildings edit

A tendency in contemporary residential architecture, particularly in the rebuilding of older neighborhoods in large cities, is the luxury condominium tower, with very expensive apartments for sale designed by "starchitects", that is, internationally famous architects. These buildings frequently have little relationship with the architecture of their neighborhood, but stand like signature works of their architects.

Daniel Libeskind (born 1946), was born in Poland and studied, taught and practiced architecture in the United States. In 2016 he was professor of architecture at UCLA in Los Angeles, He is known as much for his writings as his architecture; he was a founder of the movement called Deconstructivism. Best known for his museums, he also constructed a notable complex of residential apartment buildings in Singapore (2011) and The Ascent at Roebling's Bridge a 22-story apartment building in Covington, Kentucky (2008). The name of the latter is taken from the Roebling Suspension Bridge nearby on the Ohio River, but the structure of the building of luxury condominiums is extremely contemporary, sloping upward like the bridge cables to a peak, with a sharp edge and leaning slightly outward as the building rises.

One cheerful feature of contemporary residential architecture is color; Bernard Tschumi uses colored ceramic tiles on facades as well as unusual forms to make his buildings stand out. One example is the Blue Condominium in New York City (2007).[33]

Another contemporary tendency is the conversion of industrial buildings into mixed residential communities. An example is the Gasometer in Vienna, a group of four massive brick gas production towers constructed at the end of the 19th century. They have been transformed into a mixed residential, office and commercial complex, completed between 1999 and 2001. Some residences are located inside the towers, and others are in new buildings attached to them. The upper floors are devoted to housing units the middle floors to offices, and the ground floors to entertainment and shopping malls. with sky bridges connecting the shopping mall levels. Each tower was built by a prominent architect the participants were Jean Nouvel, Coop Himmelblau, Manfred Wehldorn and Wilhelm Holzbauer. The historic exterior walls of the towers were preserved.[34]

The Isbjerget, Danish for "iceberg", in Aarhus, Denmark (2013), is a group of four buildings with 210 apartments, both rented and owned, for residents with a range of incomes, located on the waterfront of a former industrial port in Denmark. The complex was designed by the Danish firms CEBRA and JDS Architects, French architect Louis Paillard and the Dutch firm SeARCH, and was financed by the Danish pension fund. The buildings are designed so that all the units, even those in the back, have a view of sea. The design and color of the buildings is inspired by icebergs. The buildings are clad in white terrazzo and have balconies made of blue glass.

Religious architecture edit

Surprisingly few contemporary churches were built between 2000 and 2017. Church architects, with a few exceptions, rarely showed the same freedom of expression as architects of museums, concert halls and other large buildings.[35] The new cathedral for the City of Los Angeles California, was designed in a postmodern style by the Spanish architect Rafael Moneo.[36] The previous cathedral had been serious damaged by an earthquake in 1995; the new building was specially designed to resist similar shocks.

The Northern Lights Cathedral, by the Denmark-based international firm of Schmidt, Hammer and Lassen, is located in Alta, Norway, one of northernmost cities in the world.[37] Their other important works include the National Library of Denmark in Copenhagen.[38]

The Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir is a Hindu Temple in Vrindivan, in Uttar Pradesh state in India, which was under construction at the end of 2016. The architects are InGenious Studio Pvt. Ltd. of Gurgaon and Quintessence Design Studio of Noida, in India. The entrance is in the traditional Nagara style of Indian architecture, while the tower is contemporary, with a glass facade up to the 70th floor.[39] It is scheduled for completion in 2019. When completed, at 700 feet (210 meters) or 70 floors) it will be the tallest religious structure in the world.[40]

One of the most unusual contemporary churches is St. Jude's Anglican Cathedral in Iqaluit, the capital of Nunavut, the northernmost and least populous region of Canada. The church is built in the shape of an igloo, and serves the Inuktitut-speaking population of the region.

Another unusual contemporary church is the Cardboard Cathedral in Christchurch, New Zealand designed by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban. It replaced the city's main cathedral, damaged by the 2011 Christchurch earthquake. The cathedral, which seats seven hundred persons, rises 21 metres (69 ft) above the altar. Materials used include 60-centimetre (24 in)-diameter cardboard tubes, timber and steel.[41] The roof is of polycarbon,[42] with eight shipping containers forming the walls. "coated with waterproof polyurethane and flame retardants" with two-inch gaps between them so that light can filter inside.[43]

Stadiums edit

The Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron designed the Allianz Arena in Munich, Germany, completed in 2005. It seats 75,000 spectators. The structure is wrapped in 2,874 ETFE-foil air panels that are kept inflated with dry air; each panel can be independently illuminated red, white, or blue. When illuminated, the stadium is visible from the Austrian Alps, fifty miles (80 kilometers) away.[44]

Among the most prestigious projects and best-known projects in contemporary architecture are the stadiums for the Olympic Games, whose architects are chosen by highly publicized international competitions. The Beijing National Stadium, built for the 2008 Games and popularly known as the Bird's Nest because of its intricate exterior framework, was designed by the Swiss firm of Herzog & de Meuron, with Chinese architect Li Xinggang. It was designed to seat 91,000 spectators, and when constructed had a retractable roof, since removed. Like many contemporary buildings, it is actually two structures; a concrete bowl in which the spectators sit, surrounded at distance of fifty feet by a glass and steel framework. The exterior "Bird's nest" design was inspired by the pattern of Chinese ceramics. The stadium when completed was the largest enclosed space in the world, and was also the largest steel structure, with 26 kilometers of unwrapped steel.[45][46]

The National Stadium in Kaohsiung, Taiwan by Japanese architect Toyo Ito (2009), is the form of a dragon. Its other distinctive feature is the array of solar panels that cover almost all of the exterior, providing most of the energy needed by the complex.

Government buildings edit

Government buildings, once almost universally serious and sober looking, usually in variations of the school of neoclassical architecture, began to appear in more sculptural and even whimsical forms. One of the most dramatic examples was the London City Hall by Norman Foster (2002), the headquarters of the Greater London Authority. The unusual egg-like building design was intended to reduce the amount of exposed wall and to save energy, though the results have not entirely met expectations.[47] One unusual feature is a helical stairway that spirals from the lobby up to the top of the building.

Some new government buildings, such as the Parliament House, Valletta, Malta by Renzo Piano (2015) created controversy because of the contrast between their style and the historic architecture around them.[48]

Most new government buildings attempt to express solidity and seriousness; an exception is the Port Authority (Havenhuis) in Antwerp, Belgium by Zaha Hadid (2016), where a ship-like structure of glass and steel on a white concrete perch seems to have landed atop the old port building constructed in 1922. The faceted glass structure also resembles a diamond, a symbol of Antwerp's role as the major market of diamonds in Europe. It was one of the last works of Hadid, who died in 2016.

University buildings edit

The Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is a Business School building of the University of Technology Sydney in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, designed by Frank Gehry and completed in 2015. It is the first building in Australia designed by Gehry. The building's façade, made of 320,000 custom designed bricks, was described by one critic as the "squashed brown paper bag". Frank Gehry responded, "Maybe it's a brown paper bag, but it's flexible on the inside, there's a lot of room for changes or movement."[49]

The Siamese Twins Towers" at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile in Santiago, Chile are by the Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena (born 1967), completed in 2013. Aravena was the winner of the 2016 Pritzker Architecture Prize.

Libraries edit

The Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria, Egypt, by the Norwegian firm of Snøhetta (2002), attempts to recreate, in modern form, the famous Alexandria Library of antiquity. The building, by the edge of the Mediterranean, has shelf space for eight million books,[50] and a main reading room covering 20,000 square metres (220,000 sq ft) on eleven cascading levels. plus galleries for expositions and a planetarium. The main reading room is covered by a 32-meter-high glass-panelled roof, tilted out toward the sea like a sundial, and measuring some 160 m in diameter. The walls are of gray Aswan granite, carved with characters from 120 different human scripts.

The Seattle Central Library by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas (2006) features a glass and steel wrapping around a stack of platforms. One unusual feature is a ramp with continuous bookshelves spiraling upward four floors.

Malls and retail stores edit

The shopping malls are the elephants of commercial architecture, massive structures which combine retail stores, food outlets, and entertainment under a single roof. The largest in area (though not in retail space, since much of the mall is devoted to entertainment and public space) and perhaps most extravagant is the Dubai Mall in the United Arab Emirates, designed by DP Architects of Singapore and opened in (2008), which features, in addition to shops and restaurants, a gigantic walk-through aquarium and underwater zoo, plus a huge ice skating rink, and, just outside, the highest fountain and tallest building in the world.

In competition with shopping malls are downtown department stores and shops of individual designer brands. These buildings are traditionally designed to attract attention and to express the modernity of the products they sell. A notable example is the Selfridge's Department Store in Birmingham, England, a department store designed by the firm of Future Systems, founded in 1979 by Jan Kaplický (1937–2009). The department store exterior is composed of undulating concrete in convex and concave forms, entirely covered with gleaming blue and white ceramic tiles.[51]

Designer brand shops try make their logo visible and to set themselves apart from department stores. One notable example is the Louis Vuitton store in the Ginza district of Tokyo, with a new facade designed by Japanese studio of Jun Aoki and Associates with a patterned and perforated shell based on the brand's logo.[52]

Airports, railway stations and transport hubs edit

Beijing Capital International Airport has been one of the fast-growing airports in the world. The new Terminal Three was designed by Norman Foster to handle the increased number of passengers coming for the 2008 Beijing Olympics. The terminal is the second largest in the world, after the Dulles Airport terminal near Washington, DC, and in 2008 was the sixth largest building in the world. The flat-roofed building looks like part of the runway from above.

The World Trade Center Transportation Hub is a station constructed beneath fountain and plaza honoring the victims of the 2001 terrorist attacks in 2001 in New York City, It was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and opened in 2016. The above-ground structure, called the Oculus, has been compared to a bird about to take flight, and leads passengers down to the train station below the plaza. Michael Kimmelman, the architecture critic of The New York Times praised the soaring upward view inside the Oculus, but condemned what he called the buildings cost (the most expensive railroad station ever built) "scale, monotony of materials and color, preening formalism and disregard for the gritty urban fabric."[53]

Bridges edit

Several of the most prominent contemporary architects, including Norman Foster, Santiago Calatrava, Zaha Hadid, have turned their attention to designing bridges. One of the most remarkable examples of contemporary architecture and engineering is the Millau Viaduct in southern France, designed by architect Norman Foster and structural engineer Michel Virlogeux. The Millau Viaduct crosses the valley of the River Tarn and is part of the A75-A71 autoroute axis from Paris to Béziers and Montpellier. It was formally inaugurated on 14 December 2004.[54] It is the tallest bridge in the world with one mast's summit at 343.0 metres (1,125 ft) above the base of the structure.[55][56]

The British-Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid constructed the Bridge Pavilion in Zaragoza. Spain for an international exposition there in 2008. The bridge, which also served as an exposition hall, is constructed of concrete reinforced with an external layer of fiberglass in different shades of gray. Since the event closed, the bridge has been used to host expositions and shows.

Some smaller new bridges also offer simple but very innovative designs. The Gateshead Millennium Bridge in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, (2004) designed by Michel Virlogeux, to enable pedestrians and cyclists to cross the Tyne River, tilts to one side to permit boats to pass beneath.

Eco-architecture edit

A growing tendency in the 21st century is eco-architecture, also termed sustainable architecture; buildings with features which conserve heat and energy, and sometimes produce their own energy through solar cells and windmills, and use solar heat to generate solar hot water. They also may be built with their own wastewater treatment and sometimes rainwater harvesting Some buildings integrate gardens green walls and green roofs into their structures. Other features of eco-architecture include the use of wood and recycled materials. There are several green building certification programs, the best-known of which is the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED rating, which measure the environmental impact of buildings.

Many urban skyscrapers such as 30 Saint Mary Axe in London use a double skin of glass to conserve energy. The double skin and curved shape of the building creates differences in air pressure which help keep the building cooler in summer and warmer in winter, reducing the need for air conditioning.[57]

BedZED, designed by British architect Bill Dunster, is an entire community of eighty-two homes in Hackbridge, near London, built according to eco-architecture principles. Houses face south to take advantage of sunlight and have triple-glazed windows for insulation, a significant portion of the energy comes from solar panels, rainwater is collected and reused, and automobiles are discouraged. BedZED successfully reduced electricity usage by 45 percent and hot water usage by 81 percent of the borough average in 2010, though a successful system for producing heat by burning wood chips proved elusive and difficult.[58]

The CaixaForum Madrid is a museum and cultural center in Paseo del Prado 36, Madrid, by the Swiss architects Herzog & de Meuron, built between 2001 and 2007, is an example of both green architecture and recycling. The main structure is an abandoned brick electric power station, with new floors constructed on top. The new floors are encased in oxidized cast iron, which has a rusty red color as the brick of the old power station below it. The building next to it features a green wall designed by French botanist Patrick Blanc. The red of the top floors contrast with the plants on the wall, while the green wall harmonizes with the botanical garden next door to the cultural center.[59]

Unusual materials are sometimes recycled for use in eco-architecture; they include denim from old blue jeans for insulation, and panels made from paper flakes, baked earth, flax, sisal, or coconut, and particularly fast-growing bamboo. Lumber and stone from demolished buildings are often reclaimed and reused for flooring, while hardware, windows and other details from older buildings are reused.

Topics in contemporary architecture edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Urban, Florian (2017). The new tenement. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-40244-4. OCLC 1006381281.
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  7. ^ Adam, Robert (Fall 2004). "INTBAU Shares ICA&CA's Mission" (PDF). The Forum. Institute of Classical Architecture & Art. (PDF) from the original on Apr 17, 2023.
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  9. ^ a b Taschen 2016, pp. 108–111.
  10. ^ Ouroussoff, Nicolai (15 April 2005). "An Expansion gives new life to an old box". The New York Times. p. 392. Retrieved 23 December 2016.
  11. ^ "Spotlight: Denver Art Museum" (PDF). Structure Magazine. November 2007. (PDF) from the original on Mar 8, 2023.
  12. ^ Taschen 2016, p. 392.
  13. ^ Ouroussoff, Nicolai (12 October 2006). "A Razor-Sharp Profile Cuts Into a Mile-High Cityscape". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
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Bibliography and Further reading edit

  • Bony, Anne (2012). L'Architecture Moderne (in French). Larousse. ISBN 978-2-03-587641-6.
  • Poisson, Michel (2009). 1000 Immeubles et monuments de Paris (in French). Parigramme. ISBN 978-2-84096-539-8.
  • Taschen, Aurelia and Balthazar (2016). L'Architecture Moderne de A à Z (in French). Bibliotheca Universalis. ISBN 978-3-8365-5630-9.
  • Prina, Francesca; Demaratini, Demartini (2006). Petite encyclopédie de l'architecture (in French). Solar. ISBN 2-263-04096-X.
  • Hopkins, Owen (2014). Les styles en architecture- guide visuel (in French). Dunod. ISBN 978-2-10-070689-1.
  • De Bure, Gilles (2015). Architecture contemporaine- le guide (in French). Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-134385-6.

External links edit

  • Rndrd - a website documenting un-built 20th century architectural concept art
  • ArchArticulate a website documenting architectural project

contemporary, architecture, architecture, 21st, century, single, style, dominant, contemporary, architects, work, several, different, styles, from, postmodernism, high, tech, architecture, references, interpretations, traditional, architecture, highly, concept. Contemporary architecture is the architecture of the 21st century No single style is dominant 1 Contemporary architects work in several different styles from postmodernism high tech architecture and new references and interpretations of traditional architecture 2 3 to highly conceptual forms and designs resembling sculpture on an enormous scale Some of these styles and approaches make use of very advanced technology and modern building materials such as tube structures which allow construction of buildings that are taller lighter and stronger than those in the 20th century while others prioritize the use of natural and ecological materials like stone wood and lime 4 One technology that is common to all forms of contemporary architecture is the use of new techniques of computer aided design which allow buildings to be designed and modeled on computers in three dimensions and constructed with more precision and speed Contemporary architectureTop Resorts World Sentosa by Michael Graves Center left One World Trade Center by David Childs Center right Makkah Royal Clock Tower by Mahmoud Bodo Rasch Bottom Beijing National Stadium by Herzog amp de MeuronYears active2000 presentCountryInternationalContemporary buildings and styles vary greatly Some feature concrete structures wrapped in glass or aluminium screens very asymmetric facades and cantilevered sections which hang over the street Skyscrapers twist or break into crystal like facets Facades are designed to shimmer or change color at different times of day Whereas the major monuments of modern architecture in the 20th century were mostly concentrated in the United States and western Europe contemporary architecture is global important new buildings have been built in China Russia Latin America and particularly in Arab states of the Persian Gulf the Burj Khalifa in Dubai was the tallest building in the world in 2019 and the Shanghai Tower in China was the second tallest Additionally in the late 20th century New Classical Architecture a traditionalist response to modernist architecture emerged continuing into the 21st century 5 The 21st century saw the emergence of multiple organizations dedicated to the promotion of local and or traditional architecture Examples include the International Network for Traditional Building Architecture amp Urbanism INTBAU 6 the Institute of Classical Architecture amp Art ICAA 7 the Driehaus Architecture Prize 8 and the Complementary architecture movement New traditional architects include Michael Graves Leon Krier Yasmeen Lari Robert Stern and Abdel Wahed El Wakil Most of the landmarks of contemporary architecture are the works of a small group of architects who work on an international scale Many were designed by architects already famous in the late 20th century including Mario Botta Frank Gehry Jean Nouvel Norman Foster Ieoh Ming Pei and Renzo Piano while others are the work of a new generation born during or after World War II including Zaha Hadid Santiago Calatrava Daniel Libeskind Jacques Herzog Pierre de Meuron Rem Koolhaas and Shigeru Ban Other projects are the work of collectives of several architects such as UNStudio and SANAA or large multinational agencies such as Skidmore Owings amp Merrill with thirty associate architects and large teams of engineers and designers and Gensler with 5 000 employees in 16 countries Contents 1 Museums 2 Concert halls 3 Skyscrapers 4 Residential buildings 5 Religious architecture 6 Stadiums 7 Government buildings 8 University buildings 9 Libraries 10 Malls and retail stores 11 Airports railway stations and transport hubs 12 Bridges 13 Eco architecture 14 Topics in contemporary architecture 15 See also 16 References 17 Bibliography and Further reading 18 External linksMuseums edit nbsp The Quadracci Pavilion of the Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee Wisconsin by Santiago Calatrava 2001 nbsp Meadows Museum in Dallas Texas USA by HBRA architects 2001 nbsp Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth Fort Worth Texas by Tadao Ando 2002 nbsp Imperial War Museum North in Manchester England by Daniel Libeskind 2002 nbsp Walker Art Center in Minneapolis Minnesota by Herzog amp de Meuron 2005 nbsp De Young Museum in San Francisco by Herzog amp de Meuron 2005 nbsp The Zentrum Paul Klee in Bern Switzerland by Renzo Piano 2005 nbsp The Denver Art Museum in Denver Colorado by Daniel Libeskind 2006 nbsp New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York City by SANAA 2007 nbsp The Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto Ontario Canada by Daniel Libeskind 2007 nbsp Millennium Gate Museum in Atlanta Georgia USA by ADAM Architecture 2008 nbsp The Centre Pompidou Metz in Metz France by Shigeru Ban 2010 nbsp The Titanic Museum in Belfast Northern Ireland United Kingdom by Eric Kuhne and Associates 2012 nbsp Whitney Museum of Art in New York City by Renzo Piano 2015 nbsp San Francisco Museum of Modern Art by Mario Botta front and Snohetta rear 2016 nbsp Ceiling of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art by Snohetta 2016 covered with fiber reinforced plasticSome of the most striking and innovative works of contemporary architecture are art museums which are often examples of sculptural architecture and are the signature works of major architects The Quadracci Pavilion of the Milwaukee Art Museum in Milwaukee Wisconsin was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava Its structure includes a movable wing like brise soleil that opens up for a wingspan of 217 feet 66 m during the day folding over the tall arched structure at night or during bad weather 9 The Walker Art Center in Minneapolis 2005 was designed by the Swiss architects Herzog and de Meuron who designed the Tate Modern museum in London and who won the Pritzker Architecture Prize the most prestigious award in architecture in 2001 It updates and provides a contrast to the austere earlier Modernist structure designed by Edward Larrabee Barnes by adding a five story tower clad in panels of delicately sculpted gray aluminum which change color with the changing light connecting by a wide glass gallery leading to the older building It also harmonizes with two stone churches opposite 10 The Polish born American architect Daniel Libeskind born 1946 is one of the most prolific of contemporary museum architects He was an academic before he began designing buildings and was one of the early proponents of the architectural theory of Deconstructivism The exterior of his Imperial War Museum North in Manchester England 2002 has an exterior which resembles depending upon the light and time of day huge and broken pieces of earth or armor plates and is said to symbolize the destruction of war In 2006 Libeskind finished the Hamilton Building of the Denver Art Museum in Denver Colorado composed of twenty sloping planes none of them parallel or perpendicular covered with 230 000 square feet of titanium panels Inside the walls of the galleries are all different sloping and asymmetric 11 Libeskind completed another striking museum the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto Ontario Canada 2007 also known as The Crystal a building whose form resembles a shattered crystal 12 Libeskind s museums have been both admired and attacked by critics While admiring many features of the Denver Art Museum The New York Times architecture critic Nicolai Ouroussoff wrote that In a building of canted walls and asymmetrical rooms tortured geometries generated purely by formal considerations it is virtually impossible to enjoy the art 13 The De Young Museum in San Francisco was designed by the Swiss architects Herzog amp de Meuron It opened in 2005 replacing an older structure that was badly damaged in an earthquake in 1989 The new museum was designed to blend with the park s natural landscape and resist strong earthquakes The building can move up to three feet 91 centimeters on ball bearing sliding plates and viscous fluid dampers that absorb kinetic energy The Zentrum Paul Klee by Renzo Piano is an art museum near Bern Switzerland located next to an autoroute in the Swiss countryside The museum blends into the landscape by taking three rolling hills made of steel and glass One building houses the gallery which is almost entirely underground to preserve the fragile drawings of Klee from the effects of sunlight At the same time the other two hills contain an education center and administrative offices 14 The Centre Pompidou Metz in Metz France 2010 a branch of the Centre Pompidou museum of modern art in Paris was designed by Shigeru Ban a Japanese architect who won the Pritzker Prize for Architecture in 2014 The roof is the most dramatic feature of the building it is a 90 m 300 ft wide hexagon with a surface area of 8 000 m2 86 000 sq ft composed of sixteen kilometers of glued laminated timber that intersect to form hexagonal wooden units resembling the cane work pattern of a Chinese hat The roof s geometry is irregular featuring curves and counter curves over the entire building particularly the three exhibition galleries The entire wooden structure is covered with a white fiberglass membrane and a coating of teflon protects from direct sunlight and allows light to pass through The Louis Vuitton Foundation by Frank Gehry 2014 is the gallery of contemporary art located adjacent to the Bois de Boulogne in Paris was opened in October 2014 Gehry described his architecture as inspired by the glass Grand Palais of the 1900 Paris Exposition and by the enormous glass greenhouses of the Jardin des Serres d Auteuil near the park built by Jean Camille Formige in 1894 95 15 Gehry had to work within strict height and volume restrictions which required any part of the building over two stories to be made of glass The building is low because of the height limits sited in an artificial lake with water cascading beneath the building The interior gallery structures are covered in a white fiber reinforced concrete called Ductal 16 Similar in concept to Gehry s Walt Disney Concert Hall the building is wrapped in curving glass panels resembling sails inflated by the wind The glass Sails are made of 3 584 laminated glass panels each one a different shape specially curved for its place in the design 17 Inside the sails is a cluster of two story towers containing 11 galleries of different sizes with flower garden terraces and rooftop spaces for displays 18 The new Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City by Renzo Piano 2015 took a very different approach from the sculptural museums of Frank Gehry The Whitney has an industrial looking facade and blends into the neighborhood Michael Kimmelman the architecture critic of The New York Times called the building a mishmash of styles but noted its similarity to Piano s Centre Pompidou in Paris in the way that it mixed with the public spaces around it Unlike so much big name architecture Kimmelman wrote it s not some weirdly shaped trophy building into which all the practical stuff of a working museum must be fitted 19 The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is actually two buildings by different architects fit together an earlier 1995 five story postmodernist structure by the Swiss architect Mario Botta to which has been joined a much larger ten story white gallery by the Norwegian based firm of Snohetta 2016 The expanded building includes a green living wall of native plants in San Francisco a free ground floor gallery with 25 foot 7 6 m tall glass walls that will place art on view to passersby and glass skylights that flood the upper floors of offices though not the galleries with light The facades clad are with lightweight panels made of Fibre Reinforced Plastic The critical reaction to the building was mixed Roberta Smith of The New York Times said the building set a new standard for museums and wrote The new building s rippling sloping facade rife with subtle curves and bulges establishes a brilliant alternative to the straight edged boxes of traditional modernism and the rebellion against them initiated by Frank Gehry with his computer inspired acrobatics 20 On the other hand the critic of The Guardian of London compared the facade of the building to a gigantic meringue with a hint of Ikea 21 Concert halls edit nbsp Auditorio de Tenerife Canary Islands Spain by Santiago Calatrava 2003 nbsp Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles by Frank Gehry 2003 nbsp Interior of the Walt Disney Concert Hall with organ facade designed by Frank Gehry 2003 nbsp Copenhagen Opera House in Copenhagen Denmark by Henning Larsen 2005 nbsp Casa da Musica in Porto Portugal by Rem Koolhaas 2005 nbsp Interior of the Casa da Musica by Rem Koolhaas 2005 nbsp The Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville Tennessee by David M Schwarz amp Earl Swensson 2006 nbsp Oslo Opera House by Snohetta 2008 nbsp Harpa concert hall in Reykjavik by Henning Larsen Architects and Olafur Eliasson 2011 nbsp Szczecin Philharmonic by Studio Barozzi Veiga 2014 nbsp Interior of the Philharmonie de Paris by Jean Nouvel 2015 nbsp The Elbphilharmonie in Hamburg by Herzog amp de Meuron 2017 Santiago Calatrava designed the Auditorio de Tenerife he concert hall of Tenerife the major city of the Canary Islands with a shell like wing of reinforced concrete The shell touches the ground at only two points 9 The Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles 2003 is one of the major works by California architect Frank Gehry The exterior is stainless steel formed like the sails of sailboats The interior is in the Vineyard style with the audience surrounding the stage Gehry designed the dramatic array of pipes of the organ to complement the exterior style of the building The Casa da Musica in Porto Portugal by the Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas 2005 is unique among concert halls in having two walls made entirely of glass Nicolai Ouroussoff architecture critic from The New York Times wrote The building s chiseled concrete form resting on a carpet of polished stone suggests a bomb about to explode He declared that in its originality it was one of the most important concert halls built in the last 100 years ranking with the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles and the Berliner Philharmonie 22 The interior of the Copenhagen Opera House by Henning Larsen 2005 has an oak floor and maple walls to enhance hat acoustics The royal box of the Queen usually placed in the back is next to stage The Schermerhorn Symphony Center in Nashville Tennessee by David M Schwarz amp Earl Swensson 2006 is an example of Neo Classical architecture borrowed literally from Roman and Greek models It complements another Nashville landmark a full scale replica of the Parthenon Three concert halls were awarded with the European Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture the Oslo Opera House by Snohetta 2008 the Harpa concert hall in Reykjavik by Henning Larsen Architects and Olafur Eliasson 2011 as well as the Szczecin Philharmonic by Studio Barozzi Veiga 2014 The Philharmonie de Paris by French architect Jean Nouvel opened in 2015 The concert hall is at La Villette in a park at the edge of Paris devoted to museums a music school and other cultural institutions where its unusual shape blends with the late 20th century modern architecture The exterior of the building takes the form of glittering irregular cliff cut by horizontal fins which reveal ar amp leading upwards The exterior is clad in thousands of small pieces of aluminum in three different colors from white to gray to black A path leads up the ramp to the top of building to a terrace with a dramatic view of the peripheric highway around the city view of the neighborhood The hall like the Disney Hall in Los Angeles has Vineyard style seating with the audience surrounding the main stage The seating can be re arranged in different styles depending upon the type of music performed 23 When it opened the architectural critic of the London Guardian compared it to a space ship that had crash landed on the outskirts of the city 24 The Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg Germany by Herzog amp de Meuron which was inaugurated in January 2017 is the tallest inhabited building in the city with a height of 110 meters 360 feet The glass concert hall which has 2100 seats in Vineyard style is perched atop a former warehouse One side of the concert hall building contains a hotel while the structure on the other side above the concert hall contains forty five apartments The concert hall in the middle is isolated from the sound of the other parts of the building by an eggshell of plaster and paper panels and insulation resembling feather pillows 25 Skyscrapers edit nbsp 30 St Mary Axe or The Gherkin in London by Norman Foster 2004 nbsp The Turning Torso building in Malmo Sweden by Santiago Calatrava 2005 nbsp Eureka Tower in Melbourne Australia by Fender Katsalidis Architects 2006 nbsp Hearst Tower in New York City by Norman Foster 2006 nbsp The Burj Khalifa in Dubai by Adrian Smith of SOM 2009 nbsp The Abraj Al Bait a complex of seven skyscraper hotels in Mecca Saudi Arabia 2011 nbsp The Shard in London by Renzo Piano 2012 nbsp The Mercury City Tower in Moscow by Frank Williams and partners 2012 nbsp CCTV Headquarters in Beijing by Rem Koolhaas 2012 nbsp De Rotterdam in Rotterdam Netherlands by Office for Metropolitan Architecture 2013 nbsp The One World Trade Center in New York City by David Childs of SOM 2014 nbsp The Shanghai Tower in Shanghai China by Gensler 2015 nbsp Lakhta Center in Saint Petersburg 2019 nbsp Varso in Warsaw by Norman Foster 2022 The skyscraper usually defined as a building over 40 stories high 26 first appeared in Chicago in the 1890s and was largely an American style in the mid 20th century but in the 21st century skyscrapers were found in almost every large city on every continent A new construction technology the framed tube structure was first developed in the United States in 1963 by structural engineer Fazlur Rahman Khan of Skimore Owings and Merrill which permitted the construction of super tall buildings which needed fewer interior walls had more window space and could better resist lateral forces such as strong winds 27 The Burj Khalifa in Dubai United Arab Emirates is the tallest structure in the world standing at 829 8 m 2 722 ft 28 Construction of the Burj Khalifa began in 2004 with the exterior completed 5 years later in 2009 The primary structure is reinforced concrete Burj Khalifa was designed by Adrian Smith then of Skidmore Owings amp Merrill SOM He also was lead architect on the Jin Mao Tower Pearl River Tower and Trump International Hotel amp Tower Adrian Smith and his own firm are the architects for the building which in 2020 meant to replace the Burj Khalifa as the tallest building in the world The Jeddah Tower in Jeddah Saudi Arabia is planned to be 1 008 meters or 3 307 ft tall which will make it the tallest building in the world and the first building to be more than one kilometer in height Construction began in 2013 and the project is scheduled to be completed in 2020 29 needs update After the destruction of the twin towers of the World Trade Center in the September 11 terrorist attacks a new trade center was designed with the main tower designed by David Childs of SOM One World Trade Center opened in 2015 is 1 776 feet 541 m tall making it the tallest building in the western hemisphere In London one of the most notable contemporary landmarks is 30 St Mary Axe popularly known as The Gherkin designed by Norman Foster 2004 It replaced the London Millennium Tower a much taller project that Foster earlier had proposed for the same site which would have been the tallest building in Europe but was so tall that it interfered with the flight pattern for Heathrow Airport The steel framework of the Gherkin is integrated into the glass facade 30 The tallest building in Poland and in the European Union as of 2023 is Varso in Warsaw designed by Norman Foster Completed in 2022 it is 310 meter 1 020 foot tall The tallest building in Moscow is the Federation Tower designed by the Russian architect Sergei Tchoban with Peter Schweger Completed in 2017 with a height 373 meters it surpassed Mercury City Tower another skyscraper in Moscow when it was built as the tallest building in Europe The tallest building in China as of 2015 is the Shanghai Tower by the U S architectural and design firm of Gensler It is 632 meter 2 073 foot tall with 127 floors making it in 2016 the second tallest building in the world It also features the fastest elevators which reach a speed of 20 5 meters per second 67 feet per second 74 kilometers per hour 31 32 Most skyscrapers are designed to express modernity the most notable exception is the Abraj Al Bait a complex of seven skyscraper hotels build by the government of Saudi Arabia to house pilgrims coming the holy shrine of Mecca The centerpiece of the group is the Makkah Palace Clock Tower Hotel with a gothic revival tower it was the fourth tallest building in the world in 2016 581 1 meters 1 906 feet high Residential buildings edit nbsp The Organic Forsters Weinterrassen by Udo Heimermann 2000 nbsp Celebration Florida USA by Cooper Robertson 2000 nbsp Gasometer Vienna by Coop Himmelb l au 2001 nbsp Accordia Cambridge England Alison Brooks 2003 2011 nbsp Blue Condominium tower in New York City by Bernard Tschumi 2007 nbsp The Ascent at Roebling s Bridge in Covington Kentucky by Daniel Libeskind 2008 nbsp Reflections at Keppel Bay apartment complex in Keppel Bay Singapore by Daniel Libeskind 2011 nbsp Isbjerget housing project in Aarhus Denmark inspired by form and color of icebergs 2013 A tendency in contemporary residential architecture particularly in the rebuilding of older neighborhoods in large cities is the luxury condominium tower with very expensive apartments for sale designed by starchitects that is internationally famous architects These buildings frequently have little relationship with the architecture of their neighborhood but stand like signature works of their architects Daniel Libeskind born 1946 was born in Poland and studied taught and practiced architecture in the United States In 2016 he was professor of architecture at UCLA in Los Angeles He is known as much for his writings as his architecture he was a founder of the movement called Deconstructivism Best known for his museums he also constructed a notable complex of residential apartment buildings in Singapore 2011 and The Ascent at Roebling s Bridge a 22 story apartment building in Covington Kentucky 2008 The name of the latter is taken from the Roebling Suspension Bridge nearby on the Ohio River but the structure of the building of luxury condominiums is extremely contemporary sloping upward like the bridge cables to a peak with a sharp edge and leaning slightly outward as the building rises One cheerful feature of contemporary residential architecture is color Bernard Tschumi uses colored ceramic tiles on facades as well as unusual forms to make his buildings stand out One example is the Blue Condominium in New York City 2007 33 Another contemporary tendency is the conversion of industrial buildings into mixed residential communities An example is the Gasometer in Vienna a group of four massive brick gas production towers constructed at the end of the 19th century They have been transformed into a mixed residential office and commercial complex completed between 1999 and 2001 Some residences are located inside the towers and others are in new buildings attached to them The upper floors are devoted to housing units the middle floors to offices and the ground floors to entertainment and shopping malls with sky bridges connecting the shopping mall levels Each tower was built by a prominent architect the participants were Jean Nouvel Coop Himmelblau Manfred Wehldorn and Wilhelm Holzbauer The historic exterior walls of the towers were preserved 34 The Isbjerget Danish for iceberg in Aarhus Denmark 2013 is a group of four buildings with 210 apartments both rented and owned for residents with a range of incomes located on the waterfront of a former industrial port in Denmark The complex was designed by the Danish firms CEBRA and JDS Architects French architect Louis Paillard and the Dutch firm SeARCH and was financed by the Danish pension fund The buildings are designed so that all the units even those in the back have a view of sea The design and color of the buildings is inspired by icebergs The buildings are clad in white terrazzo and have balconies made of blue glass Religious architecture edit nbsp Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels in Los Angeles California by Rafael Moneo 2002 nbsp Swaminarayan Akshardham in New Delhi India by members of the Sompura family 2005 nbsp Cathedral of Christ the Light in Oakland California by SOM 2008 nbsp Chapel at Thomas Aquinas College by Duncan Stroik 2009 nbsp St Jude s Anglican Cathedral in Iqaluit Canada 2012 nbsp Ash Shaliheen Mosque in Bandar Seri Begawan Brunei by Abdel Wahed El Wakil 2012 nbsp The Northern Lights Cathedral in Alta Norway by the Danish architects Schmidt Hammer and Lassen 2013 nbsp The Cardboard Cathedral in Christchurch New Zealand by Shigeru Ban 2013 nbsp The Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir in Mathura India 2016 nbsp The central mosque of Cambridge England dubbed as Europe s first eco mosque by Marks Barfield Architects 2019 Surprisingly few contemporary churches were built between 2000 and 2017 Church architects with a few exceptions rarely showed the same freedom of expression as architects of museums concert halls and other large buildings 35 The new cathedral for the City of Los Angeles California was designed in a postmodern style by the Spanish architect Rafael Moneo 36 The previous cathedral had been serious damaged by an earthquake in 1995 the new building was specially designed to resist similar shocks The Northern Lights Cathedral by the Denmark based international firm of Schmidt Hammer and Lassen is located in Alta Norway one of northernmost cities in the world 37 Their other important works include the National Library of Denmark in Copenhagen 38 The Vrindavan Chandrodaya Mandir is a Hindu Temple in Vrindivan in Uttar Pradesh state in India which was under construction at the end of 2016 The architects are InGenious Studio Pvt Ltd of Gurgaon and Quintessence Design Studio of Noida in India The entrance is in the traditional Nagara style of Indian architecture while the tower is contemporary with a glass facade up to the 70th floor 39 It is scheduled for completion in 2019 When completed at 700 feet 210 meters or 70 floors it will be the tallest religious structure in the world 40 One of the most unusual contemporary churches is St Jude s Anglican Cathedral in Iqaluit the capital of Nunavut the northernmost and least populous region of Canada The church is built in the shape of an igloo and serves the Inuktitut speaking population of the region Another unusual contemporary church is the Cardboard Cathedral in Christchurch New Zealand designed by Japanese architect Shigeru Ban It replaced the city s main cathedral damaged by the 2011 Christchurch earthquake The cathedral which seats seven hundred persons rises 21 metres 69 ft above the altar Materials used include 60 centimetre 24 in diameter cardboard tubes timber and steel 41 The roof is of polycarbon 42 with eight shipping containers forming the walls coated with waterproof polyurethane and flame retardants with two inch gaps between them so that light can filter inside 43 Stadiums edit nbsp American Airlines Center in Dallas Texas USA by David M Schwarz Architects 2001 nbsp The Allianz Arena in Munich Germany by Herzog amp de Meuron 2005 nbsp Beijing National Stadium by Herzog amp de Meuron 2008 nbsp National Stadium in Kaohsiung Taiwan by Toyo Ito 2009 nbsp Jawaharlal Nehru Stadium in Delhi by Gerkan Marg and Partners 2010 nbsp Stadium for the 2012 Summer Olympics in London by Populous 2012 nbsp Gazprom Arena in Saint Petersburg by Kisho Kurokawa 2016 The Swiss architects Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron designed the Allianz Arena in Munich Germany completed in 2005 It seats 75 000 spectators The structure is wrapped in 2 874 ETFE foil air panels that are kept inflated with dry air each panel can be independently illuminated red white or blue When illuminated the stadium is visible from the Austrian Alps fifty miles 80 kilometers away 44 Among the most prestigious projects and best known projects in contemporary architecture are the stadiums for the Olympic Games whose architects are chosen by highly publicized international competitions The Beijing National Stadium built for the 2008 Games and popularly known as the Bird s Nest because of its intricate exterior framework was designed by the Swiss firm of Herzog amp de Meuron with Chinese architect Li Xinggang It was designed to seat 91 000 spectators and when constructed had a retractable roof since removed Like many contemporary buildings it is actually two structures a concrete bowl in which the spectators sit surrounded at distance of fifty feet by a glass and steel framework The exterior Bird s nest design was inspired by the pattern of Chinese ceramics The stadium when completed was the largest enclosed space in the world and was also the largest steel structure with 26 kilometers of unwrapped steel 45 46 The National Stadium in Kaohsiung Taiwan by Japanese architect Toyo Ito 2009 is the form of a dragon Its other distinctive feature is the array of solar panels that cover almost all of the exterior providing most of the energy needed by the complex Government buildings edit nbsp London City Hall by Norman Foster 2002 nbsp Dutch Ministry of Health Welfare and Sport at The Hague Netherlands by Michael Graves 2003 nbsp The Wayne Lyman Morse United States Courthouse in Eugene Oregon by Thom Mayne 2006 nbsp The Judiciary City in Luxembourg by the brothers Leon and Rob Krier 2008 nbsp Lombardy Palace in Milan by Pei Cobb Freed amp Partners 2010 nbsp Parliament House Valletta Malta by Renzo Piano 2015 nbsp The Port Authority Building Havenhuis in Antwerp Belgium by Zaha Hadid 2016 Government buildings once almost universally serious and sober looking usually in variations of the school of neoclassical architecture began to appear in more sculptural and even whimsical forms One of the most dramatic examples was the London City Hall by Norman Foster 2002 the headquarters of the Greater London Authority The unusual egg like building design was intended to reduce the amount of exposed wall and to save energy though the results have not entirely met expectations 47 One unusual feature is a helical stairway that spirals from the lobby up to the top of the building Some new government buildings such as the Parliament House Valletta Malta by Renzo Piano 2015 created controversy because of the contrast between their style and the historic architecture around them 48 Most new government buildings attempt to express solidity and seriousness an exception is the Port Authority Havenhuis in Antwerp Belgium by Zaha Hadid 2016 where a ship like structure of glass and steel on a white concrete perch seems to have landed atop the old port building constructed in 1922 The faceted glass structure also resembles a diamond a symbol of Antwerp s role as the major market of diamonds in Europe It was one of the last works of Hadid who died in 2016 University buildings edit nbsp Weill Cornell Medical College in Qatar by Arata Isozaki 2004 nbsp Sharp Centre for Design at Ontario College of Art and Design by William Alsop 2004 nbsp Whitman College at Princeton University New Jersey USA by Demetri Porphyrios 2007 nbsp Rolex Learning Center at the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne in Lausanne Switzerland by SANAA 2010 nbsp The Siamese Towers at the Pontifical Catholic University in Santiago Chile by Alejandro Aravena 2013 nbsp Innovation Tower of Hong Kong Polytechnic University by Zaha Hadid 2013 nbsp Dr Chau Chak Wing Building in Sydney Australia by Frank Gehry 2014 nbsp Blavatnik School of Government Oxford University UK by Herzog amp de Meuron 2015 The Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is a Business School building of the University of Technology Sydney in Sydney New South Wales Australia designed by Frank Gehry and completed in 2015 It is the first building in Australia designed by Gehry The building s facade made of 320 000 custom designed bricks was described by one critic as the squashed brown paper bag Frank Gehry responded Maybe it s a brown paper bag but it s flexible on the inside there s a lot of room for changes or movement 49 The Siamese Twins Towers at the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile in Santiago Chile are by the Chilean architect Alejandro Aravena born 1967 completed in 2013 Aravena was the winner of the 2016 Pritzker Architecture Prize Libraries edit nbsp The Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria Egypt 2002 by Snohetta 2002 nbsp Interior of the Bibliotheca Alexandrina 2002 nbsp Jacksonville Public Library in Jacksonville Florida USA by Robert A M Stern Architects 2005 nbsp Seattle Central Library by Rem Koolhaas 2006 nbsp Interior of the Seattle Central Library by Rem Koolhaas 2006 nbsp Library and Learning Center of the University of Vienna by Zaha Hadid 2008 nbsp The Library of Birmingham in Birmingham England by Francine Houben 2013 nbsp Part of the interior of the Library of Birmingham nbsp Halifax Central Library in Halifax Canada by schmidt hammer lassen architects 2014 nbsp Helsinki Central Library Oodi 2018 The Bibliotheca Alexandrina in Alexandria Egypt by the Norwegian firm of Snohetta 2002 attempts to recreate in modern form the famous Alexandria Library of antiquity The building by the edge of the Mediterranean has shelf space for eight million books 50 and a main reading room covering 20 000 square metres 220 000 sq ft on eleven cascading levels plus galleries for expositions and a planetarium The main reading room is covered by a 32 meter high glass panelled roof tilted out toward the sea like a sundial and measuring some 160 m in diameter The walls are of gray Aswan granite carved with characters from 120 different human scripts The Seattle Central Library by Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas 2006 features a glass and steel wrapping around a stack of platforms One unusual feature is a ramp with continuous bookshelves spiraling upward four floors Malls and retail stores edit nbsp The aquarium of the Dubai Mall in the United Arab Emirates by DP Architects of Singapore 2008 nbsp The Gold Souk of the Dubai Mall 2008 nbsp Christian Dior Tower in Omotesando Tokyo Japan by SANAA 2003 nbsp Prada Aoyama store Tokyo by Herzog amp de Meuron 2003 nbsp The Selfridge s Department Store in Birmingham England designed by Future Systems 2003 nbsp Bugis previously Iluma in Singapore by WOHA 2009 nbsp Louis Vuitton store Ginza Namiki Tokyo by Jun Aoki and Associates 2014 nbsp Citylife Shopping District in Milan by Zaha Hadid 2017 The shopping malls are the elephants of commercial architecture massive structures which combine retail stores food outlets and entertainment under a single roof The largest in area though not in retail space since much of the mall is devoted to entertainment and public space and perhaps most extravagant is the Dubai Mall in the United Arab Emirates designed by DP Architects of Singapore and opened in 2008 which features in addition to shops and restaurants a gigantic walk through aquarium and underwater zoo plus a huge ice skating rink and just outside the highest fountain and tallest building in the world In competition with shopping malls are downtown department stores and shops of individual designer brands These buildings are traditionally designed to attract attention and to express the modernity of the products they sell A notable example is the Selfridge s Department Store in Birmingham England a department store designed by the firm of Future Systems founded in 1979 by Jan Kaplicky 1937 2009 The department store exterior is composed of undulating concrete in convex and concave forms entirely covered with gleaming blue and white ceramic tiles 51 Designer brand shops try make their logo visible and to set themselves apart from department stores One notable example is the Louis Vuitton store in the Ginza district of Tokyo with a new facade designed by Japanese studio of Jun Aoki and Associates with a patterned and perforated shell based on the brand s logo 52 Airports railway stations and transport hubs edit nbsp Interior of Terminal Four of Barajas Airport in Madrid by Richard Rogers 2007 nbsp Aerial view of Terminal Three of Beijing Capital International Airport orange roof in center by Norman Foster 2008 nbsp Express train in the Transportation Center of Terminal Three of Beijing Capital International Airport 2008 nbsp Liege Guillemins railway station in Liege Belgium by Santiago Calatrava 2009 nbsp Berlin Hauptbahnhof Berlin Germany by Gerkan Marg and Partners 2006 nbsp Shenzhen Bao an International Airport China by Massimiliano Fuksas 2014 nbsp New Street railway station of Birmingham by Foreign Office Architects 2015 nbsp Central atrium of Birmingham New Street railway station nbsp The World Trade Center Transportation Hub in New York City by Santiago Calatrava 2016 nbsp Interior of the Oculus of the World Trade Center Transportation Hub by Santiago Calatrava 2016 Beijing Capital International Airport has been one of the fast growing airports in the world The new Terminal Three was designed by Norman Foster to handle the increased number of passengers coming for the 2008 Beijing Olympics The terminal is the second largest in the world after the Dulles Airport terminal near Washington DC and in 2008 was the sixth largest building in the world The flat roofed building looks like part of the runway from above The World Trade Center Transportation Hub is a station constructed beneath fountain and plaza honoring the victims of the 2001 terrorist attacks in 2001 in New York City It was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava and opened in 2016 The above ground structure called the Oculus has been compared to a bird about to take flight and leads passengers down to the train station below the plaza Michael Kimmelman the architecture critic of The New York Times praised the soaring upward view inside the Oculus but condemned what he called the buildings cost the most expensive railroad station ever built scale monotony of materials and color preening formalism and disregard for the gritty urban fabric 53 Bridges edit nbsp Gateshead Millennium Bridge a tilt bridge for bicycles and pedestrians in Newcastle upon Tyne England by WilkinsonEyre 2001 nbsp The Sundial Bridge in Redding California by Santiago Calatrava 2004 nbsp Bridge Pavilion in Zaragoza Spain by Zaha Hadid 2008 nbsp Samuel Beckett Bridge in Dublin Ireland by Santiago Calatrava 2009 nbsp The Helix Bridge in Singapore by Philip Cox 2010 nbsp The Bandra Worli Sea Link in Mumbai by Hindustan Construction Company 2010 nbsp The Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge in Dallas Texas by Santiago Calatrava 2012 Several of the most prominent contemporary architects including Norman Foster Santiago Calatrava Zaha Hadid have turned their attention to designing bridges One of the most remarkable examples of contemporary architecture and engineering is the Millau Viaduct in southern France designed by architect Norman Foster and structural engineer Michel Virlogeux The Millau Viaduct crosses the valley of the River Tarn and is part of the A75 A71 autoroute axis from Paris to Beziers and Montpellier It was formally inaugurated on 14 December 2004 54 It is the tallest bridge in the world with one mast s summit at 343 0 metres 1 125 ft above the base of the structure 55 56 The British Iraqi architect Zaha Hadid constructed the Bridge Pavilion in Zaragoza Spain for an international exposition there in 2008 The bridge which also served as an exposition hall is constructed of concrete reinforced with an external layer of fiberglass in different shades of gray Since the event closed the bridge has been used to host expositions and shows Some smaller new bridges also offer simple but very innovative designs The Gateshead Millennium Bridge in Newcastle upon Tyne England 2004 designed by Michel Virlogeux to enable pedestrians and cyclists to cross the Tyne River tilts to one side to permit boats to pass beneath Eco architecture edit nbsp Primary school of Gando Burkina Faso by Diebedo Francis Kere 2001 nbsp Roofs of BedZED residential project in Hackbridge near London by Bill Dunster 2002 nbsp K2 sustainable apartments in Windsor Victoria Australia by DesignInc 2006 features passive solar design recycled and sustainable materials photovoltaic cells wastewater treatment rainwater collection and solar hot water nbsp Ksar Tafilelt fr in Ghardaia Algeria 2006 which won the 1st prize for best sustainable city at the 2016 United Nations Climate Change Conference nbsp CaixaForum Madrid in Spain by Herzog amp de Meuron with green wall by Patrick Blanc 2007 nbsp Green wall of the School of the Arts in Singapore by WOHA 2010 nbsp The Passivhaus Goldsmith Street development in Norwich England by Mikhail Riches 2019 Winner of the 2019 Stirling Prize A growing tendency in the 21st century is eco architecture also termed sustainable architecture buildings with features which conserve heat and energy and sometimes produce their own energy through solar cells and windmills and use solar heat to generate solar hot water They also may be built with their own wastewater treatment and sometimes rainwater harvesting Some buildings integrate gardens green walls and green roofs into their structures Other features of eco architecture include the use of wood and recycled materials There are several green building certification programs the best known of which is the Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design or LEED rating which measure the environmental impact of buildings Many urban skyscrapers such as 30 Saint Mary Axe in London use a double skin of glass to conserve energy The double skin and curved shape of the building creates differences in air pressure which help keep the building cooler in summer and warmer in winter reducing the need for air conditioning 57 BedZED designed by British architect Bill Dunster is an entire community of eighty two homes in Hackbridge near London built according to eco architecture principles Houses face south to take advantage of sunlight and have triple glazed windows for insulation a significant portion of the energy comes from solar panels rainwater is collected and reused and automobiles are discouraged BedZED successfully reduced electricity usage by 45 percent and hot water usage by 81 percent of the borough average in 2010 though a successful system for producing heat by burning wood chips proved elusive and difficult 58 The CaixaForum Madrid is a museum and cultural center in Paseo del Prado 36 Madrid by the Swiss architects Herzog amp de Meuron built between 2001 and 2007 is an example of both green architecture and recycling The main structure is an abandoned brick electric power station with new floors constructed on top The new floors are encased in oxidized cast iron which has a rusty red color as the brick of the old power station below it The building next to it features a green wall designed by French botanist Patrick Blanc The red of the top floors contrast with the plants on the wall while the green wall harmonizes with the botanical garden next door to the cultural center 59 Unusual materials are sometimes recycled for use in eco architecture they include denim from old blue jeans for insulation and panels made from paper flakes baked earth flax sisal or coconut and particularly fast growing bamboo Lumber and stone from demolished buildings are often reclaimed and reused for flooring while hardware windows and other details from older buildings are reused Topics in contemporary architecture editBlobitecture Critical Regionalism Complementary architecture Computer aided design Conceptual architecture Digital architecture Digital morphogenesis Deconstructivism Futurist architecture High tech architecture Industrial chic Modern architecture Neomodern architecture Neo futurism Neohistorism New Classical Architecture New Urbanism Novelty architecture Postmodern architecture Sustainable architectureSee also edit nbsp Architecture portalEuropean Union Prize for Contemporary Architecture biennial prize by the European Union Driehaus Architecture Prize sometimes nicknamed the anti Pritzker established in 2003 Mathematics and architecture World Architecture Festival annual awards for recently completed buildings World Architecture Survey most important works since 1980 according to a survey of 52 architects and criticsReferences edit Creating Your Architectural Style Pelican Publishing 15 September 2009 ISBN 978 1 4556 0309 1 Urban Florian 2017 The new tenement New York Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 40244 4 OCLC 1006381281 Dickinson Duo 2017 Does the New Traditionalism Have A Point Common Edge Retrieved 29 April 2021 Wainwright Oliver 4 March 2020 The miracle new sustainable product that s revolutionising architecture stone The Guardian Retrieved 29 April 2021 Boylan Alexis L ed 2011 Thomas Kinkade The Artist in the Mall Durham N C Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 4839 9 OCLC 658200776 Crysler Christopher Greig Cairns Stephen Heynen Hilde eds 2012 The SAGE handbook of architectural theory Los Angeles SAGE ISBN 978 1 84860 039 3 OCLC 797835437 Adam Robert Fall 2004 INTBAU Shares ICA amp CA s Mission PDF The Forum Institute of Classical Architecture amp Art Archived PDF from the original on Apr 17 2023 Haddad Elie Rifkind David eds 2016 A Critical History of Contemporary Architecture 1960 2010 London Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 26395 3 OCLC 973142750 a b Taschen 2016 pp 108 111 Ouroussoff Nicolai 15 April 2005 An Expansion gives new life to an old box The New York Times p 392 Retrieved 23 December 2016 Spotlight Denver Art Museum PDF Structure Magazine November 2007 Archived PDF from the original on Mar 8 2023 Taschen 2016 p 392 Ouroussoff Nicolai 12 October 2006 A Razor Sharp Profile Cuts Into a Mile High Cityscape The New York Times Retrieved 5 January 2017 Site of Zentrum Paul Klee English Retrieved 23 December 2016 Rowan Moore 19 October 2014 Fondation Louis Vuitton Paris review everything and the bling from Frank Gehry The Guardian Paul Goldberger September 2014 Gehry s Paris Coup Vanity Fair Judy Fayard 23 October 2014 The Louis Vuitton Foundation By the Numbers The Wall Street Journal Christopher Hawthorne 17 October 2014 Review Gehry s Louis Vuitton Foundation museum is a triumph but to what end Los Angeles Times Kimmelman Michael 19 April 2015 A New Whitney The New York Times Retrieved 24 December 2016 Smith Roberta SFMoMA s Expansion Sets a New Standard for Museums The New York Times 13 May 2016 SFMOMA s new extension a gigantic meringue with a hint of Ikea The Guardian 29 April 2016 Nicolai Ouroussoff A Vision of a Mobile Society Rolls Off the Assembly Line The New York Times 25 December 2005 France s New Music Temple Philharmonie de Paris Jean Nouvel s spaceship crashes in France TheGuardian com 15 January 2015 Retrieved 30 December 2016 Fonseca Wollheim Corinna da 10 January 2017 Finally a Debut for the Elbphilharmonie Hall in Hamburg The New York Times Retrieved 11 January 2017 Skyscraper Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 25 October 2016 Beedle Lynn S Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat 1986 Advances in tall buildings Van Nostrand Reinhold Company p 149 ISBN 978 0 442 21599 6 Burj Khalifa The Skyscraper Center Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat Roberts Ben 13 August 2011 Crown of the Kingdom ConstructionWeekOnline Retrieved 13 August 2011 Worsley Giles 28 April 2004 Glory of the Gherkin The Daily Telegraph London The world s fastest elevator 6 October 2016 China unveils world s fastest elevator CNN 5 October 2016 De Bure 2015 p 208 The Architecture of the Gasometers Wiener gasometer at Archived from the original on 13 October 2014 Retrieved 16 July 2016 Contemporary Religious Architecture That Rethinks Traditional Spaces for Worship ArchDaily 26 June 2018 Retrieved 3 March 2020 CATHEDRAL OF OUR LADY OF THE ANGELS Rafael Moneo Arquitecto Retrieved 3 March 2020 The Northern Lights what you need to know before you plan your trip Spectator Life 7 February 2020 Retrieved 3 March 2020 Det Kongelige Bibliotek The Royal Library www5 kb dk Retrieved 3 March 2020 InGenious Studio Private Limited www ingeniousstudio in Retrieved 3 March 2020 Spaces Betty Wood The 22 November 2016 Indian temple will be the world s tallest religious skyscraper CNN Retrieved 3 March 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mann Charley 16 April 2012 Work to start on cardboard cathedral stuff co nz Retrieved 20 April 2012 Rain no dampener for New Zealand cardboard cathedral by architect Shigeru Ban artdaily org 29 July 2013 Retrieved 30 July 2013 McGuigan Cathleen 25 February 2013 Ban s Cardboard Cathedral Rises in Christchurch Architectural Record Retrieved 30 July 2013 Nuts and bolts allianz arena de Archived from the original on 2 August 2013 Retrieved 21 December 2016 Filler Martin Makers of Modern Architecture Volume 1 New York The New York Review of Books 2007 ISBN 978 1 59017 227 8 p 226 designbuild network Beijing National Stadium Retrieved 19 December 2016 Peter Macdiarmid Getty Images 2 October 2008 Public building CO2 footprints revealed The Guardian Retrieved 14 September 2015 Squires Nick 8 May 2010 Maltese anger at plans to rebuild Valletta The Telegraph Archived from the original on 31 August 2015 Jonathan Pearlman 3 February 2015 Frank Gehry unveils squashed brown paper bag building in Sydney The Telegraph Telegraph Media Group Limited Retrieved 19 May 2015 Planet Lonely Bibliotheca Alexandrina Lonely Planet Lonely Planet Retrieved 18 May 2016 Taschen 2016 pp 210 211 Louis Vuitton Matsuya Ginza Facade Renewal by Jun Aoki and Associates ArchDaily October 14 2014 14 October 2014 Retrieved 10 January 2017 Santiago Calatrava s Transit Hub Is a Soaring Symbol of a Boondoggle review by Michael Kimmelman The New York Times 2 March 2016 Millau Viaduct official website Home Leviaducdemillau com Archived from the original on 8 July 2013 Retrieved 14 June 2013 Bridge claims record Sydney Morning Herald January 2012 Spiegel Online In German Es ist noch nicht fertig Hopkins 2014 p 210 Kucharek Jan Carlos 23 July 2010 Bedding in nicely BedZed was the ultimate sustainability trailblazer Nearly a decade on it may be thriving but it remains an anomaly BD Reviews Sustainability supplement to Building Design Review of CaixaForum Madrid by Herzog and de Meuron in ArcSpace com March 31 2008 Retrieved 10 January 2017 Bibliography and Further reading editBony Anne 2012 L Architecture Moderne in French Larousse ISBN 978 2 03 587641 6 Poisson Michel 2009 1000 Immeubles et monuments de Paris in French Parigramme ISBN 978 2 84096 539 8 Taschen Aurelia and Balthazar 2016 L Architecture Moderne de A a Z in French Bibliotheca Universalis ISBN 978 3 8365 5630 9 Prina Francesca Demaratini Demartini 2006 Petite encyclopedie de l architecture in French Solar ISBN 2 263 04096 X Hopkins Owen 2014 Les styles en architecture guide visuel in French Dunod ISBN 978 2 10 070689 1 De Bure Gilles 2015 Architecture contemporaine le guide in French Flammarion ISBN 978 2 08 134385 6 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to 21st century architecture Rndrd a website documenting un built 20th century architectural concept art ArchArticulate a website documenting architectural project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Contemporary architecture amp oldid 1206305176, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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