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For me, skyscrapers are living, functional works of art. Those of the
1920s and 1930s strike me most. They are fusions of the day's latest materials and
technology with Classical, Gothic, Romanesque, and Art Deco detailing (if you
are confused by any terms, go to the end of this page for more detailed
definitions). In this sense, they
are monuments to both past and presentin contrast to the Modernist structures in
vogue since the 1950s. Although I appreciate Modernism's concern for function and
simplicity (I am impressed by Mies van der Rohe's Toronto-Dominion
Centre and Musson Cattell Mackey's TD Tower in Vancouver), I favour the earlier skyscrapers for their
ornate detailing and their individual "personalities". I also appreciate
Post-modernism's attempt to rekindle the artistic quality of architecture, a quality that
seems to have been muted by the matter-of-fact International Style. For me, although
function and simplicity promote efficient working and living, imagination and whimsy
promote human spirit. The following are some of my favourite buildings (including some
Modernist ones!) Each says something important about my personality and my
tastes...
Early 20th Century
At the beginning of the century, the skyscraper was often inspired by Classical, Gothic, and Renaissance architectural styles of previous centuries. Starting around 1930, it started taking on its own individual style, highly influenced by the Art Deco movement. The aim of Art Deco was to pay homage to the modern machine age by imbuing it with an original, non-traditional sense of luxury and opulence. Regular repetitions of clean, sharp geometric shapes; conventional, stylised motifs of animals and foliage; bold colours; and symmetry all epitomise this style. Towers used modern materials such as glass and plastics, as well as rich natural materials such as silver, chrome, jade, and ivory. Art Deco went out of style during World War II, but it saw a renewed interest starting in the late 60s and is still used in buildings today.
Big Ben (St. Stephen's Tower), C. Barry &
A.W.N. Pugin, 1859
The Flatiron Building (Toronto), David Roberts Jr, 1892
Gillender Building, Charles Berg, Edward H. Clark, 1897
The Flatiron Building (New York), Daniel H. Burnham, 1902
Singer Building, Ernest Flagg, 1908
Metropolitan Life Tower, Napoleon LeBrun & Sons, 1909
The Sun Tower, T. Whiteway, 1912
Bankers Trust Tower, Shreve, Lamb, & Harmon, 1912
Woolworth Building, Cass Gilbert, 1913
Tribune Tower, Raymond Hood, John Mead Howells, 1922
American Radiator Building, Raymond Hood, 1924
Jewelers Building, Thielbar & Fugard, Giaver,
Dinkelberg, 1926
Fred F. French Building, J. Sloan & M.T. Robertson, 1927
New York Life Insurance Building, Cass Gilbert, 1928
Marine Building, McCarter & Nairne, 1929
Pigott Building, Bernard and Fred Prack, 1929
Chanin Building, J. Sloan, M.T. Robertson, 1929
Chrysler Building, William van Allen, 1930
Terminal Tower, Graham, Anderson, Probst, & White, 1930
40 Wall Street, H. Craig Severance, Yasuo Matsui, 1930
Empire State Building, Shreve, Lamb, & Harmon, 1931
RCA Victor Building, Cross & Cross, 1931
American International, Clinton & Russell, Holton &
George, 1932
Cathedral of Learning, U of Pittsburgh, Charles Klauder, 1937
A non-skyscraper favourite from this time period:
Dundurn
Castle, Robert Wetherall, 1835
Modern
The post-World World II era saw the advent of modern
skyscrapers. Most of these towers adhered to the International Style, the mantra of which
was "form follows function" and not vice versa. Decorative design was
no longer to be the main feature of skyscrapers. Architects were now designing
towers to symbolise functionality, which in turn was meant to express the new
spirit of modern "progress". These towers were simple and
unadorned, rectangular in shape, and often clad with glass-curtain walls. They were often
severe and imposing. Their functional quality was clearly expressed through visible
heating/air conditioning grills and floors and roofs topped with mechanical equipment.
Unfortunately, only some of these buildings managed to be elegant and aesthetically
pleasing. Most of the towers were poorly proportioned carbon copies of the ideal
prototypes, and eventually led to a public distaste for modern architecture. Below are some of my favourite modern skyscrapers (and also an art gallery).
You will find that I love slender, slab-type towers with continuous glass curtain walls.
Polished granite spandrels and mullions flush to windows is also a draw. The juxtaposition
of some of these modern towers against historic masonry buildings is as attractive as
their actual design.
United Nations Secretariat, UN Board of Design, Le
Corbusier, 1950
BC Electric Building, Sharp Thompson Berwick & Pratt,
1955
Corning Glass Works Building, Harrison, Abramovitz &
Abbe, 1959
CBS Building, Eero Saarinen, 1965
Macmillan Bloedel Building, Arthur Erickson, 1969
John Hancock Center, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1970
Commerce Court West, I.M. Pei, 1973
Stelco Tower, Arthur C.F. Lau, 1973
First Interstate Bank Tower, Charles Luckman, 1974
Olympic Tower, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, 1976
John Hancock Tower, Henry Cobb, I.M. Pei, 1977
Art Gallery of Hamilton, Trevor Garwood-Jones, 1977
Other favourites to come:
US
Steel Building (Pittsburgh)
Transamerica Pyramid
One
Penn Plaza
One
Astor Plaza
The Law Courts
(Vancouver)
Simon Fraser University
Campus
Lethbridge University
Campus
Post-modern
Post-modern towers were a reaction against the stark simplicity and austerity of the higHly functional yet anonymous skyscrapers of the Modernist era. The movement attempted to create new, distinct skyscrapers with their own unique, symbolic identities. Starting around the late 1970s, this was achieved in several ways. The severe, box-like shape of the International Style was adapted to yield towers with more whimsical shapes. To bridge past and future, other buildings incorporated contemporary styles and materials with allusions to neo-Classical, neo-Gothic, and neo-Renaissance architecture. Modern versions of Classical tripartite column design and Gothic ribbed vaults, turrets, spires, and stone cladding (instead of glass) distinguished many of these stunning towers. Starting around the 1990s, Post-modernism took on a Deconstructivist flavour, yielding futuristic, often jarring skyscraper shapes and facades. Here are some of my favourites:
IBM Building, Edward Larrabee Barnes, 1983
PPG Place, Philip Johnson, John Burgee, 1984
Maison des Co-operants, Webb Zerafa Menkes Housden, 1986
One Atlantic Center, Philip Johnson, John Burgee, 1987
Leo Burnett Building, Cohen Marreto, 1989
900 N. Michigan Building, Perkins & Will, 1989
Mellon Bank Center, Kohn Pedersen Fox, 1991
77 West Wacker Drive, DeStefano & Partners, 1992
Conde Nast Building, Fox & Fowle, 1999
Special thanks to the following individuals for allowing me use of their personal
photographs:
Mary Ann Sullivan, Bluffton College, http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/
Jeffery Howe, Boston College, http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/cas/fnart/archives.html
Patrick Beckers, http://www.skyscraperpicture.com
Scott Murphy, http://members.aol.com/smurphy109/sm.htm
For more information on any of the structures listed on this page, I highly recommend
visiting
http://www.skyscrapers.com.
Detailed definitions of
skyscraper styles
from Frommer's
Traveler's Guide to Art & Architecture
© 2000-2003 by Wiley Publishing, Inc.
"Early skyscrapers (1880-1920). The invention of the skyscraper can be
traced directly to the use of cast iron in the 1840s for storefronts, such as
those seen in New York's SoHo. Experimentation with cast and wrought iron in the
construction of interior skeletons eventually allowed buildings to rise higher.
(Previously, buildings were restricted by the height supportable by their
load-bearing walls.) In Chicago, important technical innovations—involving
safety elevators, electricity, fireproofing, foundations, plumbing, and
telecommunications—combined with advances in skeletal construction to create a
new building type, the skyscraper. These buildings were spacious,
cost-effective, efficient, and quickly erected—in short, the perfect
architectural solution for America's growing downtowns.
Solving the technical problems of the skyscraper did not resolve how the
building should look. Most solutions relied on historical precedents, including
decoration reminiscent of the Gothic, Romanesque (a style characterized by the
use of rounded arches), or beaux arts.
Other features of the early skyscrapers include:
Gothic Revival (1830-1860). The term Gothic Revival refers to a literary
and aesthetic movement of the 1830s and 1840s that occurred in England and later
in the United States. A pervasive current within this movement was known as
Romanticism. Adherents believed that the wickedness of modern times could
benefit with a dose of "goodness" presumed to have been associated with the
Christian medieval past. Architecture was chosen as one of the vehicles to bring
this message to the people. The revival style was used for everything from
timber cottages to stone castles and churches. Some structures had only one or
two Gothic features, most commonly a steeply pitched roof or pointed arches,
whereas other buildings, usually churches, were accurate copies of English
Gothic structures.
A derivative style called Victorian Gothic (1860-90) became popular after the
Civil War. Influenced by the writings of English theorist John Ruskin
(1819-1900), this style is distinguished by contrasting colors of brick and
stone in bold polychromatic patterns and decorative bands. This more
freewheeling interpretation of the Gothic was well suited to the florid
decorative approach of the late 19th century.
Gothic Revival is characterized by:
Modern/International Style (1920-1945). In 1932, the Museum of Modern Art
hosted its first architecture exhibit, titled simply "Modern Architecture."
Displays included images of International Style buildings from around the world,
many designed by architects from Germany's Bauhaus, a progressive design school.
The structures all shared a stark simplicity and vigorous functionalism, a
definite break from historically based, decorative styles.
The International Style was popularized in the United States through the
teachings and designs of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (1886 1969), a German émigré
based in Chicago. Interpretations of the "Miesian" International Style were
built in most U.S. cities, including New York, as late as 1980. In the 1950s,
erecting an office building in this mode made companies appear progressive. In
later decades, after the International Style was a corporate mainstay, the style
took on conservative connotations.
Features of the International Style as popularized by Mies include:
Post-modern (1975-1990). After years of steel-and-glass office towers in
the International Style, postmodernism burst on the scene in the 1970s with the
reintroduction of historical precedents in architecture. With many feeling that
the office towers of the previous style were too cold, postmodernists began to
incorporate classical details and recognizable forms into their designs—often
applied in outrageous proportions.
Characteristics of postmodern skyscrapers tend to include:
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