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Information about the buildings
Chepren Pyramid,
Giza, Eygpt
Architect: Possibly Imhotep
Pyramids were built as monuments to
house the tombs of the pharaohs. This is one of the famous three
from the fourth Dynasty, built 5,000 years ago. In this society a citizens
eternal life was dependent on the continued existence of their king. This
belief made the pharaoh's tomb a concern of the entire kingdom. The superstructure
of the pyramid was made of small limestone blocks and desert clay. Inside,
the burial chamber and storage spaces were carved out of the earth and
rock beneath the structure. Furniture and riches were buried with the
king so he would have the familiar comforts of his lifetime buried near
him. Attendants and wives who died after the king were also buried close
to him.
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The Parthenon, Athens, Greece
Built: 447-432 BC
Architects: Ictinus & Callicrates
A temple to the goddess Athena. Greek
temples varied in size but were built to a similar format. They enclosed
a rectangular space with a colonnaded porch at one end. The marble was
sculpted and would have been painted with a common colour scheme. The
stonework reflects post and beam techniques used in earlier timber buildings,
still seen on buildings today. The geometry of the structure was refined
to correct the optical illusions of perspective distortion (the columns
bulge outwards in the centre to appear straight, and lean inwards to stop
looking like they are falling outwards). The scale was related to that
of the human body. The Greeks were the originators of the term architect.
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The Colosseum, Rome, Italy
Built: AD 70-82
Commissioned by the Emperor Vespasian
A Roman amphitheatre with a gladiatorial arena.
Built to satisfy the publics enjoyment of violent entertainment
and demonstrate the power of the Empire. The Romans developed Greek columns
into walls with semi-circular arches. Using concrete, stone and brick,
they could develop massive structures. It would have supported an awning
to protect the 50,000 spectators against the sun.
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Leaning Tower of Pisa,
Pisa, Italy
Built: 1174-1271
Built alongside the Cathedral during the Romanesque
period. This style is recognisable
by its round arches and columns and continues Roman methods of construction,
use of materials and style. Exteriors and interiors
are clearly related to each other. The tower (campanile) leans out 4.2
metres from the base and has suffered subsidence since construction.
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Bodiam Castle,
England
Built: 1385
This castle was built as a defence and a
comfortable home for Sir Edward Dalyngrygge. With an almost square construction,
Bodiam Castle is symmetrical and surrounded by a wide moat. At each corner
of the curtain wall stands a four-storey, cylindrical tower, with rectangular
towers located mid-way along each wall. Originally approached by an intriguing
series of bridges and paths this creative design was developed for strategic
purposes, leaving attackers exposed and vulnerable to retaliation from
inside the castle.
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Temple of Heaven,
Beijing, China Built: 1420
The form of this temple is an attempt to
create a space that harmonises with divine and natural forces to create
a realm for the emperor where he can mediate between Humankind and God.
The cycle of these forces is reflected in the circular form of the structure.
Its location was carefully considered in relation to the environmental
features such as mountains and rivers, using the Chinese practice of Feng-Shui.
Its decoration uses Chinese symbolism of the dragon, Yin and Yang and
the phoenix.
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Florence Cathedral, Florence, Italy
Built: 1420-34
Architect of dome: Filippo Brunelleschi
It was fashionable during the Renaissance
period for wealthy families to build great palaces and churches. This
Gothic Cathedral, Santa Maria del Fiore, uses Gothic stone vaulting and
the principles of Roman engineering to support one of the first great
domes. The success of surmounting the technical problems during construction
advanced the prestige of the city and reflects the spirit of scientific
and aesthetic enquiry at the time. The construction of slender columns
allowed Gothic cathedrals to rise high above a cityscape to represent
a synthesis of God, Humanity and Nature.
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The Globe Theatre, London, England
Originally built: 1590s Reconstruction:
1990s
The original Elizabethan Globe theatre opened
in 1599. It burned down in 1613 and was immediately rebuilt. It was then
closed by the Puritans in 1642 and was finally reconstructed and reopened
in 1994. The new building was made using traditional materials and building
techniques. The circular theatre is open-air and three storeys high. It
is thatched with Norfolk reed and the walls are made using frame timber
with lime plaster.
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Chiswick House, London, England
Built: 1725
Architects: Lord Burlington and William Kent
The design of this house imitates another,
Palladios Villa Rotunda, and it was built to contain the owners
paintings and books. A Palladian style house is geometric, repetitive
and symmetrical in style. It is constructed on a rusticated base and uses
temple front porticoes, different angles of roof and domes to break up
the overall look of the building.
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Big Ben,
London
Built: 1836-68
Architects: Sir Charles Barry & A.W.N Pugin
Big Ben is the clock tower for The Houses
of Parliament in London. It was named after Sir Benjamin Hall, the first
Commissioner of Works. Parliament was designed to reflect an authentic
national style as well as Elizabethan and Gothic character. A government
building, it has to serve a complex range of functions and its design
be in keeping with the adjacent buildings of Westminster Cathedral. The
architect Pugin believed that ornament should enrich the essential construction
of a building.
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Chrysler Building, New York
Built: 1928-30
Architect: William Van Alen
The top of this building is made of stainless
steel and the design of the details are derived from the ornamental parts
of cars. As the price of land in New York rose so did the buildings in
order to house more people, living and working spaces. The steel skeletal
structure and organisation of space is expressed through the design, visible
on the outside of the building. The development of skyscrapers changed
city skylines. They demonstrate the developments that have occurred in
the use of technology and materials.
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Villa Savoye, Poissy, France
Built: 1928-31
Architect: Le Corbusier
This villa uses a square plan. The simple
style maximises the effects of natural light and the use of geometric
shapes emphasise volume. An influence drawn from Renaissance palazzos,
the slender columns elevate the living area above the ground and provide
a view. Le Corbusier was a favourite architect of the rich French bourgeoisie.
His ideas for civic buildings, multi-storey housing and urban planning
influenced the future of modern architecture.
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Soloman R. Guggenheim Museum,
New York
Built: 1946-59
Architect: Frank Lloyd Wright
This building is an art museum and is famous
its curving profile and for housing a conical spiralling ramp. The shape
of this building makes an interesting expression. Inside the sloping ramp
and walls inside the building give the perception of and generate an experience
of continuous movement. The interior and exterior of this building therefore
have a direct relationship.
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British Telecom Tower, London
Built: 1961-65
Architect: Eric Bedford
Originally called the Post Office Tower, it was
built as an operational unit to carry 21st century telephone, television
and data traffic. A memorial to 1960's optimism, this was the countrys
tallest building until eclipsed by the NatWest Tower in 1981and was famous
for its revolving restaurant at the top of the tower. It remains an innovative
design built mainly of pre-stressed concrete and glass and has not been
copied since. Lean, practical and futuristic, it epitomised the technical
and architectural skills of the time.
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The Lloyds Building, London
Built: 1979-84
Architect: Richard Rogers
Photographer: Richard Bryant/www.arcaid.co.uk
This building challenged the traditional
concept of the office block. Described as hi-tech it looks like machinery
with hard shiny surfaces and industrial elements like gantries, walkways
and moving parts. The structures and services, a combination of cranes,
ladders, pipes and tubes, are displayed on the outside of the building
rather than hidden in the inside.
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Hongkong and Shangahai Banking Corporation
Headquarters, Hong Kong
Built: 1981-85
Architect: Foster Associates
General view of faÁade, Photograher: Ian Lambot
This office building represents a technological
achievement. It was constructed in a short time period and on a restricted
site out of vertical slices to allow the bank to continue work uninterrupted
and allow for flexible planning of the space. The design integrates modern
materials (steel, concrete, foil, aluminium, and glass), and structural
engineering. Using the Chinese tradition of Feng-Shui, escalators are
positioned on a diagonal to create a dramatic entrance hall and dynamic
geometry. Drawing on the plan of Greek temples, a giant central atrium
makes use of natural sunlight and serves to develop a sense of community
amongst the workers.
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One Canada Square,
Canary Wharf, London
Built: 1991
Architect: Cesar Pelli & Associates
Photographer: David Churchill/www.arcaid.co.uk
The tower at Canary Wharf is the tallest building
in Britain and for a short time was the tallest in Europe. Clad in stainless
steel it is 50 stories high and dominates the London skyline by being
visible up to 20 miles away. It is used as an office building.
The tower has 3,960 windows and 4,388 steps. Lifts
travel from the lobby to the 50th floor in just 40 seconds. The building
is designed to sway 13 and three quarter inches in the strongest winds
that might occur once every 100 years. The aircraft warning light at the
very top of the tower flashes 40 times a minute, 57,600 times a day.
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