Why Do People Hate Modern Architecture?

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  • čas přidán 2. 01. 2019
  • Discuss this video in Discord: / discord
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    Why do people hate modern architecture? This debate has been going on since the 1950s. Let's explore some of these reasons through Denise Scott Brown, Robert Venturi and Steven Izenour's 1972 book "Learning from Las Vegas."
    Thanks to Vlogbrothers for their sponsorship of this video.
    You can also follow me on:
    Twitter: / articulationsv
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    Website: www.articulations.co
    Sources and Further Reading:
    Ghirardo, Diane. Architecture after Modernism. London: Thames and Hudson, 2003.
    Gura, Judith, and Charles Jencks. Postmodern Design Complete. London: Thames & Hudson, 2017.
    Jencks, Charles. The Story of Post-modernism: Five Decades of the Ironic, Iconic and Critical in Architecture. Chichester: Wiley, 2011.
    Jordana, Sebastian. "Interview: Robert Venturi & Denise Scott Brown, by Andrea Tamas." ArchDaily. April 25, 2011. Accessed December 30, 2018. www.archdaily.com/130389/inte....
    Korody, Nicholas. "Learning from 'Learning from Las Vegas' with Denise Scott Brown, Part 2: Pedagogy." Archinect. October 15, 2016. Accessed December 30, 2018. archinect.com/features/articl....
    Ouroussoff, Nicolai. The New York Times. December 22, 2009. Accessed December 29, 2018. www.nytimes.com/2009/12/23/ar....
    Trufelman, Avery. "Lessons from Las Vegas." 99% Invisible. April 09, 2018. Accessed December 29, 2018. 99percentinvisible.org/episod....
    Venturi, Robert, Denise Scott Brown, and Steven Izenour. Learning from Las Vegas. Cambridge, Mass: MIT Press, 1972.
    What We Learned: The Yale Las Vegas Studio and the Work of Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates. PDF. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale School of Architecture Gallery, October 29, 2009. art.yale.edu/file_columns/0000...
    Images:
    Unité d'habitation by PROAndré P. Meyer-Vitali Licensed Under CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/andrepm...
    Class of ’57 by Christian Newton Licensed Under CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/cnewton...
    Photo of the downtown Brasília by Limongi Licensed Under CC BY 3.0 commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Lake Point Tower, Chicago by Sharon Mollerus Licensed Under CC BY 2.0 commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Chapel at Thomas Aquinas College by Pgnielsen79 CC BY 3.0 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Th...
    Weissenhof Corbusier 03 by Andreas Praefcke CC BY 3.0 commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    Unité d'habitation by André P. Meyer-Vitali CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/andrepm...
    IBM Plaza - Architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe by jphilipg CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/1570823...
    Dag Hammarskjold outside the UN building by UN/DPI via web.archive.org
    web.archive.org/web/200707011...
    Yale University's Art and Architecture Building by Lauren Manning CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/laurenm...
    Pammakaristos by fusion-of-horizons CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/fusion_...
    Main Street Model by HarshLight CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/7917220...
    Crown Hall, IIT by Daniel X. O'Neil CC BY 2.0 www.flickr.com/photos/juggern...
    Flaticons by Freepik (freepik.com), Icomoon(icomoon.io), Prettycons(flaticon.com/authors/prettycons), Dave Gandy (fontawesome.com) and Egor Rumyantsev (www.behance.net/pio-5) via www.flaticon.com
    Music:
    Candle Power by Chris Zabriskie, Licensed Under CC BY 3.0 chriszabriskie.com
    Super Friendly Kevin MacLeod Licensed Under CC BY 3.0 incompetech.com

Komentáře • 6K

  • @ARTiculations
    @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +172

    Hi everyone I've made a Discord for further discussions: discord.gg/4DWvahY94U. I'm also more likely to respond there as CZcams comments aren't always the most ideal places for conversation. Thank you!

    • @Mr-Prasguerman
      @Mr-Prasguerman Před 3 lety +3

      Porque não presta

    • @ammarch1319
      @ammarch1319 Před 3 lety

      Noice

    • @khangvinh4065
      @khangvinh4065 Před 3 lety +6

      The video’s title is not accurate. Whoever conducted the survey has a very limited point of view. You should travel more to countries such as Dubai or Singapore which is the richest and also the most educated country in the world to see how Singaporeans are building the cleanest country on this planet with modern architecture. Singapore’s infrastructure is clearly central to socio- economic advancement. An efficient infrastructure facilitates delivery of information, goods and services, supports economic growth and assists in achieving social objectives such as raising the living standards and educational levels. In fact, Singapore currently has the highest standard of living. I highly recommend you to travel to different places, and try to see them with different points of view. Do not just sit there and reading those boring books. Life is fun, so we should think outside of the bottle or the box. Architecture should be fun and exciting instead of following the boring principles that defines by people living in the past. Believe me, stop reading so many useless book. Go out there and see the world. That’s the best to learn.

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +7

      @@khangvinh4065 you’re right. I agree. I want to travel but my country has been under mandatory lockdown for over a year and now we are not allowed to leave our house except for emergency reasons. My best friend from childhood now lives in Singapore and I’ve been wanting to visit her for years. I have indeed spent too long reading books. However - this year I worked on the construction of a new, modern hospital clinic and I must say - I think we did a great job and the technology we used will make our patients lives better. I’m working on a follow up video to this one - and I’d love to address this comment and my thoughts about the future for sure. Thank you ❤️

    • @tinkleshartzinpants4221
      @tinkleshartzinpants4221 Před 3 lety +5

      I dislike both modernist and postmodernist architecture.

  • @rylandmalcolm3825
    @rylandmalcolm3825 Před 3 lety +4734

    Humans: Have been decorating things since the dawn of time
    Modernists: Yeah nah that can't be right

    • @ladybluelotus
      @ladybluelotus Před 3 lety +30

      😂

    • @delanor.ristar4863
      @delanor.ristar4863 Před 3 lety +21

      🤣

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +439

      Lmao are you saying my 10 minute video could have been 10 seconds? 🤣

    • @andrewfrankovic6821
      @andrewfrankovic6821 Před 3 lety +29

      @@ARTiculations People are in love with imperialism, war and chaos. Math is simply chaos put to words, putting a smiley-face on iT.

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +101

      @@fenriz2073 lol yes I do really want to say that sometimes. But I just built a brand new modern hospital clinic in a city that really takes historic preservation seriously. But for various reasons this time we decided to do a new modern building with state-of-the art design ideas, technology and very clean geometric lines - except it is not dull and grey, we put splashes of colours and are mixing local art and local cultural designs into it. So far - the clinic staff and patients tell us this is amazing and they are so happy to not have to go into an old building that's a converted Church - because while that's super cool - it was just not functional. Anyway - I think as a designer I do have to take what the local community say into consideration, and as a matter of fact I often value it much more than what I read in books and research. In this case - the end users mostly wanted Modern. So we gave them (mostly) modern and they are so far very happy about it. We'll see what they say in 10 years time though. lol.

  • @jordanreeseyre
    @jordanreeseyre Před 5 lety +5111

    The golden rule of architecture: "People have to live with your creations"

    • @kenlieck7756
      @kenlieck7756 Před 3 lety +250

      And *in* them, for that matter!

    • @lindsaywebb1904
      @lindsaywebb1904 Před 3 lety +15

      There are 3 'golden' rules of architecture, and that's not one of them

    • @archangel4597
      @archangel4597 Před 3 lety +88

      90% of famous architects literally never heard that rule or anything like it in their entire life lol and you can tell

    • @tbaproductions123
      @tbaproductions123 Před 3 lety +14

      @@lindsaywebb1904 rule number 1 is just be yourself :)

    • @sammywatokohom172
      @sammywatokohom172 Před 3 lety +1

      What? No ways!

  • @jonathanstempleton7864
    @jonathanstempleton7864 Před 3 lety +1650

    Architect "I want people to talk about my buildings"
    People "It's crap"
    Architect "Success"

    • @tasmapittock5680
      @tasmapittock5680 Před 3 lety +119

      I think they think their buildings are a success if they are polarizing ie. the other architects love it, the general public hates it.
      "I have succeeded in creating dialogue!"
      No you haven't... You have succeeded in creating a monstrosity

    • @piguy222
      @piguy222 Před 3 lety +35

      Unluckily for the architects, I have no words for their designs. Only the blood falling from my eyes at their gargantuan garbage

    • @Tthemagicman
      @Tthemagicman Před 3 lety +34

      Modern architects are shit now why can’t people learn to build like the Greeks and romans did and actually enjoy looking at their creation

    • @eduardcruceru9004
      @eduardcruceru9004 Před 3 lety +17

      @@Tthemagicman because building nice looking buildings is "too hard"

    • @Dan_Kanerva
      @Dan_Kanerva Před 3 lety +28

      @@eduardcruceru9004 it baffles me when they use that excuse. . . the cathedral of Notre Dame was build in 1200 with local resources and the technology avaliable at the time , without any truck or super crane. . . And you can't build a good looking building with the insane planification we got T O D A Y ? Just be honest and say it comes down to money

  • @taekatanahu635
    @taekatanahu635 Před 3 lety +949

    How modern buildings are designed:
    1. Open Blender
    2. Don't delete the default cube
    3. Done

  • @halneufmille
    @halneufmille Před 3 lety +3312

    "Form follows function." Alright then here's a suggestion for Modern architects: Not depressing people is a useful function for a building.

    • @ernstschmidt4725
      @ernstschmidt4725 Před 3 lety +147

      the function of decoration, emotion

    • @jwenting
      @jwenting Před 3 lety +188

      and that drives the interior as well as the exterior.
      Massive open plan offices or endless rows of cubicles are NOT a good place to work. Sure, they allow you to cram more people into the same floor space, but they're not happy people and will be less productive than if they have rooms for every 2-4 of them.

    • @certaindeath7776
      @certaindeath7776 Před 3 lety +36

      if form would follow function, we would have more round buildings, as they are more efficient in several ways. planing and building rektangles is just easier. a lot of the architects out there really should do something else, and the work of the skilled ones should be built more often instead.

    • @minutenreis
      @minutenreis Před 3 lety +53

      @@certaindeath7776 round buildings are very inefficient space wise, as you cant really put anything near it

    • @certaindeath7776
      @certaindeath7776 Před 3 lety +16

      @@minutenreis i only see a lack of imagination here.

  • @essennagerry
    @essennagerry Před 5 lety +3591

    "Making people feel good by looking at it" and "having a nice atmosphere inside" are also functions.

    • @justthink5854
      @justthink5854 Před 5 lety +101

      not to the developers.

    • @megaswenson
      @megaswenson Před 5 lety +77

      essennagerry, you're absolutely right.

    • @antheajohnson4234
      @antheajohnson4234 Před 5 lety +18

      Experience isn't a function.

    • @fionafiona1146
      @fionafiona1146 Před 5 lety +149

      Facilitating experience is a function and limiting it to venues fails its users.

    • @jakobholgersson4400
      @jakobholgersson4400 Před 5 lety +37

      Modernism exist specifically to make people feel good. To give buildings large windows and put some distance between them to let natural light in and allow the inhabitants to see the outside world. Bright colors to allow them to have a clear mind and give them the appropriate energy.

  • @doger944
    @doger944 Před 3 lety +861

    1071: spend a full century building an epic, intricately designed art work that will stand for a millennia.
    1971: "Make me a big grey rectangle! AND DO IT QUICKLY GOD DAMNIT!

    • @coryc8819
      @coryc8819 Před 3 lety +15

      Yup!

    • @deadlyrobot5179
      @deadlyrobot5179 Před 2 lety +127

      And tear it down after 30 years to replace it with an uglier one.

    • @Maranville
      @Maranville Před 2 lety +44

      You highlight something important when you say do it quickly. It's not the architects alone who got us into this mess, it's the times themselves. If architects hadn't invented modernism, then engineers and bankers would have done it for them.

    • @billolsen4360
      @billolsen4360 Před 2 lety +18

      @@Maranville I don't know about that, lol. It may be the trend in the last 90 years, but bankers & engineers helped build a lot of stupendous works of architectural art between 1880 and 1930.

    • @PradedaCech
      @PradedaCech Před 2 lety +4

      What do you mean, a full century? Quite a lot of the monumental buildings in Europe took (/take) several centuries to complete!

  • @timetravellingtoad
    @timetravellingtoad Před 3 lety +324

    Or more importantly: why does modern architecture hate people so much?

    • @pedroroque8681
      @pedroroque8681 Před rokem +20

      Because it’s defined by greedy developers, not architects

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam Před 10 měsíci +1

      because architects nowadays feels the lazyness curse now

  • @tig3662
    @tig3662 Před 5 lety +3062

    I don't hate modern architecture. I hate the way modern city planners ruin historic cities with it. This is a big problem in Europe in my opinion.

    • @LostShipMate
      @LostShipMate Před 5 lety +124

      @PixelFøx I want to agree with you, but god dam. Use periods, proper comma placement, Italics, correct capitalization, or anything resembling english. You can't just use fuck as a period.

    • @nouveau8073
      @nouveau8073 Před 5 lety +173

      Also demolishing perfectly stable historical architecture to build new structures in its place when they could’ve renovated the old structure and give it a new purpose instead.

    • @LuriTV
      @LuriTV Před 5 lety +14

      I know what you mean. I live in the most inner centre of Hamburg and the problem here is, that we still got lots of patch buildings from the 50s and 60s after the destructions of WW2. And after this came the glass and steel towers people mostly tend to if they talk about Modern architecture which are not awful per se but feel mostly out of place between the restructured collonialism and sometimes historicism buildings that have somehow survived the air raids.
      But over the years and with it's city centre constantly changing the planers try to fit every new building into the look of the actual city centre that has been established in late 19c to early 20c, after a ravenous fire destroyed the whole city in 1842. (A nice example: www.ece.de/fileadmin/_processed_/csm_EPH_050_44_6c7f456d53.jpg the two buildings are about a century apart)
      Also have you ever been to the Hafencity (harbour city) area in Hamburg? It is actually the biggest urban redevelopment project in europe. Also the university of construction art and metropolitan development is located there. Also it is somewhat of a playground for architects because the city didn't made up a lot of major restrictions. So the Hafencity became a bit of a museum for Mordern architecture with every building being an exhibit on it's own. Even if most of them where build mostly with the functuality aspect in mind. (as an example: There is actually a dedicated apartment complex for musicians where every flat contains a floating room detached from the buildings structure)

    • @LostShipMate
      @LostShipMate Před 5 lety +2

      @@CM_CHESS Do you mean you as in a single person, or everyone? Not really sure who your pointing out anyway. The generation that made Modern architecture isn't going to be in a CZcams comment thread.

    • @DarkSunGameplay
      @DarkSunGameplay Před 5 lety +25

      I agree. Back when I lived in the city, they were tearing down every suburban house, every historical building, etc. and replacing them all with flat Modern buildings, sterile mansions, and identical highrises. Even the parks and sports facilities were under attack, again being replaced by "the purest form of architecture".

  • @kal_bewe1837
    @kal_bewe1837 Před 3 lety +2190

    A small village lost in France or in Italy is much more beautiful than the majority of modern big cities

    • @wee7458
      @wee7458 Před 3 lety +130

      Dude you'd get fresh food and air too! A+++

    • @user-xg6zz8qs3q
      @user-xg6zz8qs3q Před 3 lety +13

      Sure! But Paris is a fascinating playground for new buildings.

    • @kal_bewe1837
      @kal_bewe1837 Před 3 lety +48

      @@user-xg6zz8qs3q What is needed for Paris are traditional buildings

    • @user-xg6zz8qs3q
      @user-xg6zz8qs3q Před 3 lety +43

      @@kal_bewe1837 These buildings will always stay until they're unsafe to live in. It's just that Paris is doing a massive gentrification around places where there used to be these ugly appartement blocks. Around older neighborhoods newer buildings adopt a more traditional style. But it kinda feels fake because the level of detail is nowhere the same. I just wanna share my enthusiasm for newer buildings around Paris. They're anything but boring.

    • @elio5105
      @elio5105 Před 3 lety +20

      Or they both are beautiful in their own way so

  • @burgitech8643
    @burgitech8643 Před 3 lety +66

    In Germany, what many people like and really prefer is architecture from 1871 till 1914. These are very solid buildings with decorated facades, which are nowadays professionally modernised. There one has high ceilings (3m+), large windows and one finds artistic details everywhere. The modern buildings, people normally live in nowadays are primarily driven by economic needs, not by artistic wishes.

    • @kiterkun1606
      @kiterkun1606 Před rokem +7

      I see the same as you.
      I myself used to live in a small town where we were surrounded by older buildings and it was always beautiful.
      As a child, I liked big cities, but I found the skyscrapers and concrete blocks rather boring and ugly.
      Now I've moved into one of these buildings in North Rhine-Westphalia to study and I have to admit that just the thought of the endless corridor, every apartment looks like the other and the general fact that the building doesn't have a nice facade pulls me down.
      I very much hope that facades are built on such buildings so that they look like the buildings from the Wilhelmine era.
      am btw himself 19 years old

  • @DaDunge
    @DaDunge Před 3 lety +108

    "In a world of steel and glass
    we bury our past"

    • @danilvanlaethem9463
      @danilvanlaethem9463 Před 2 lety +3

      Best quote I've seen in months!

    • @DaDunge
      @DaDunge Před 2 lety +8

      @@danilvanlaethem9463 It's from the song Born in '58 by Bruce Dickenson.

    • @MusicalMarble
      @MusicalMarble Před rokem +2

      Bruce Dickinson! Dude was a polymath ahead of his time in many ways.

  • @KHJohan
    @KHJohan Před 5 lety +1616

    Modern architecture was invented to make video games more realistic

  • @cifer8070
    @cifer8070 Před 3 lety +875

    Ancient engineering:
    beautiful, colourful, memorable, timeless and perplexing golden or silver ratio formula architecture masterpiece
    Modern engineering:
    Shiny rectangle

    • @jacksonledford6874
      @jacksonledford6874 Před 3 lety +100

      It really makes me mad because with modern tech you could make even more beautiful objects and buildings but somehow we have the ugliest buildings of any century

    • @Mafon2
      @Mafon2 Před 3 lety +55

      @@jacksonledford6874 Think of the future, we will be remembered as "cubic" people :-)

    • @TheNinetySecond
      @TheNinetySecond Před 3 lety +10

      That's small m modern, and you really ought to look at actual Modern buildings. This video is full of shit, and completely misses the point.

    • @nou4898
      @nou4898 Před 3 lety +4

      atleast there is no giant 100 meter tall penis buildings every 100 meters

    • @aaaalol6006
      @aaaalol6006 Před 3 lety +8

      Because Ancient Architectures are built for Royalty whereas modern engineering are built for the public.

  • @sjhoff
    @sjhoff Před 2 lety +158

    Classical architecture seems to draw you, to welcome you in to explore your curiosity. Modern seems not to need you at all, and just wants you to go away.

    • @danilvanlaethem9463
      @danilvanlaethem9463 Před 2 lety +4

      @shanhoff hoffman exactly!

    • @04nbod
      @04nbod Před rokem +13

      A town hall that looks like a Classical building is telling you something. Its communicating stature and ambition. A modern building could be anything.

    • @maegalroammis6020
      @maegalroammis6020 Před rokem

      that's yet how i feel about classic arch' in france.

    • @darassylmoniakam
      @darassylmoniakam Před 10 měsíci

      the modern buildings are more utilitary than artistic. hence their basic looks

    • @davidperry4013
      @davidperry4013 Před 8 měsíci

      In some Modern architecture like a house that has a slanted roof instead of a hip, gable, or flat roof, the exterior walls are recessed from the roof line, large windows, warm colors, and accents can be warm and welcoming.

  • @anthonydelfino6171
    @anthonydelfino6171 Před 3 lety +384

    I'm a digital artist, and for a few years was dating a city planner. We used to argue over this constantly with him being a massive fan of stripped down modernism (you have people like him to thank if you've had any new construction approved with a Modern design) and me arguing that what they were building were effectively blank, lifeless pages, something that many people find intimidating rather than enjoyable.

    • @seneca983
      @seneca983 Před 2 lety +11

      The way I think of that is that both are valid subjective experiences. The one that should matter more is the one which is more common (i.e. most likely yours).

    • @sourisvoleur4854
      @sourisvoleur4854 Před 2 lety +63

      Architects seem to think "Who cares what people want? We will give them what we think they should have." They're like self-appointed parents of wayward children. Except the children are grown adults able to think for themselves, and able to decide what does or doesn't look good to them.

    • @johnborstlap5497
      @johnborstlap5497 Před 2 lety +1

      @@sourisvoleur4854 It's a maffia, claiming that only they see what counts as modern. Basically, it's fascist thinking.

    • @pixelwash9707
      @pixelwash9707 Před rokem +18

      After working some years as an architectural illustrator, it's dawned on me that architects aren't actually designers at all, they are nothing but weaponized bureaucrats using the power of the police state to enforce their aesthetic opinions on an often unwilling clientele and public.
      We as a society need to separate the functional design and requirements of a buildings from aesthetic ones, both in the public approvals process, and within the public accreditation of architectural profession. The government needs to legislate this to make it happen....
      (I think it's actually time we stopped ALL professions being their own gatekeepers, regulators, and policers when the public laws are directly invoked by these professions in their work practice. The recent experience with covid vaccinations is another example of legally weaponized professional corruption and overreach run amok.)
      Most architectural firms are very used to hiring professional engineers in the process of building, it's time the architectural profession itself was split into aesthetic and engineering arms, and architects could specialize in either or both.
      And both designers and the public approvals process would have a very separate and more flexible and with much less restrictive rules for the creation of the aesthetic part of an architectural design, it would not need a formal qualification to make choices, and the engineering side would not be able to overrule the design side on aesthetic reasons alone...

    • @phantomknight7211
      @phantomknight7211 Před rokem +7

      My biggest complaint with modern architecture is that they claim form folows function, but that's not the case. Comie blocks are an example of a building design focusing on function and they somehow look better than the metal and glass cheese wedge a modernist architect would propose while acting like they designed the building version of Mona Lisa.

  • @terrifictomm
    @terrifictomm Před 4 lety +1347

    The word, “Dystopian” always comes to mind when I see “modern” or “modernist”anything. “Destined for Destruction”.

    • @ES-kq5fh
      @ES-kq5fh Před 4 lety +63

      more like, "Destined to destroy us"

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 4 lety +25

      MORE LIKE: DESTINED TO DESTROY OLD-SCHOOLERS!
      Get over it. It's here to stay.

    • @heritageliturgical2257
      @heritageliturgical2257 Před 4 lety +30

      Walkernull long live minecraft - typical throw away comment

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 4 lety +2

      And that is supposed to mean...
      U agree with me or you don't?

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 4 lety +12

      @Dave Cockayne Old buildings need our maintenance to be standing. And back then they didn't consider natural disasters. Now we have earthquake-proof, hurricane-proof, and even fire-proof buildings. Sorry but I still think Modern is better. No offense.

  • @BlindDespair
    @BlindDespair Před 3 lety +2223

    I grew up in Ukraine in a city where all you see is pure concrete socialist blocks, it is not just ugly, I think it's disgusting. As a child I used to play a lot of video games and watch cartoons and TV series/shows, I've learned that there were so many different cultures and styles in architecture, I fell in love with all those different things I could see like those really cool Asian roofs, European castles, domes, and the stained glass in cathedrals, etc. It was not just beautiful, it was gorgeous! Then I would always have to go out in my own city and see all those gray surroundings, concrete, asphalt, metal and glass, I'd be just sad, there was no reason to go anywhere really, there was much more point in staying home and playing video games, where artists actually take time to create details that would, in turn, create an atmosphere of another world of something greater, this is how the historical cities feel, it feels natural yet unearthly, that's the whole point. Nowadays I am a software engineer and live in Budapest, which is of the most beautiful cities on the planet (despite some of its issues), and still, when I leave the city center, I can see all those modern soulless houses made out of glass and concrete, simple shapes and really boring white color, it feels degrading and depressing. Makes me want to change my profession to an urban planner (after some studying) and get some architect friends to create a new company and shape a new (but kind of old) view on how the cities should look like. Sure, maybe Modernism had its purpose in history so that we can conclude it was a mistake and never do it again. :D

    • @mcan-piano4718
      @mcan-piano4718 Před 3 lety +43

      I agree

    • @ArtCorvid
      @ArtCorvid Před 3 lety +160

      Wow i'm also from Ukraine and i agree. I always loved to visit the old part of the city as a kid (and i still do) bacause it's so pretty and atmospheric , while the soviet buildings are ugly as f*ck

    • @andresmarrero8666
      @andresmarrero8666 Před 3 lety +145

      Another issue I have noticed is that they have very little greenery. They don't work with and adapt to the environment around them but instead reshape the landscape to a bunch of squares. People get a bit stir crazy when there isn't a sufficient bit of nature around them. We like our plants and animals as much as we like our bots and cars. There has got to be a way to find a balance between natural environments and convenience.

    • @danhatman3538
      @danhatman3538 Před 3 lety +82

      It would be an excellent choice of career. I hope the anti-modernist movement gains enough traction such that the wealthy of the future appreciate classical architecture, like gothic or Doric. It is an unfortunate circumstance of the world wars that thousands of years of cultural architectural development was destroyed, allowing for a niche, perverted and ugly style to dominate simply out of the need for cheap structures, and domination of capitalism to the point of beauty no-longer being a priority.

    • @ArtCorvid
      @ArtCorvid Před 3 lety +8

      @@danhatman3538 yeah , but make sure not to fall into ✨kitch✨ because then it will look even worse

  • @rinaldoacardi617
    @rinaldoacardi617 Před 3 lety +71

    I hope we look back on our horrid office towers with disgust: nothing but stress factories designed to dehumanize the working class.

    • @yowtfputthemaskbackon9202
      @yowtfputthemaskbackon9202 Před 2 lety

      a style of buildings where it does not take a communist to see the clear malicious intent towards those who have no choice but to reside in it.

  • @Tantacrul
    @Tantacrul Před 3 lety +480

    So much of this crosses over with modernism in music. There are some very similar themes: artist idealism doing away with things that people perceive as humane or emotionally important. There are some big differences too: I can't think of a direct correlation to 'form must always follow function' for example. I'd love to put the histories of both side by side to try and tease all this out.

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +30

      Would love to see you make a video on this!

    • @Tantacrul
      @Tantacrul Před 3 lety +24

      @@ARTiculations I will eventually! Perhaps you might be interested in taking part?

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +20

      @@Tantacrul that would be awesome! I added you on Twitter haha so if you have thoughts feel free to DM me there 😊

    • @Fangornmmc
      @Fangornmmc Před 3 lety +10

      You should design a new city and call it Auda city ^.^

    • @duality4y
      @duality4y Před 3 lety +1

      @@Fangornmmc no way xD

  • @falklumo
    @falklumo Před 3 lety +700

    My father, a retired but renowned architect and city planner, always told me that honoring the human scale is most important for humans to feel good. This is overlooked by most of Modern architecture.

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +37

      That is sort of Jane Jacobs’ argument as well. 😊

    • @SKyrim190
      @SKyrim190 Před 3 lety +46

      YES! I've seen Modernists house where the living room has a crazy high-ceiling and the bedrooms are in the second floor acesses through an interior balcony without divisions. AND the front wall was entirely replaced by a giant window! Of course no one wanted to be seen in their underwear chilling in their living rooms, so the residents put up giant blindfolds in the best cases or simply sticked brown paper all over the windows in the worst case. Also, I can't imagine what a pain it must be to clean that insanely high ceiling...a truly terrible design!

    • @mankepoot9440
      @mankepoot9440 Před 2 lety +9

      @@SKyrim190 I have seen classical and ornamented houses for the rich with absurd high ceilings too. They had chandeliers that were impossible to clean. Walking in your underwear was punishable with fysical abuse. Human stupidity is of all times.

    • @SKyrim190
      @SKyrim190 Před 2 lety +24

      @@mankepoot9440 that is a completely improper comparison. You are comparing kings to the "common man". The house I am speaking of is a house for a regular person, not for royalty

    • @rhalfik
      @rhalfik Před 2 lety +14

      To be frank, that's the problem with all architecture. Every time there is somebody with too much money, they NEED to remind everybody else that they are small. Gothic churches for examples. There are thousands and thousands of those in Poland and every single one is the same and always the biggest thing in town. No one ever needed that, but there was sooo much money that they had to do something with, but of course without poor people profiting from it, no no. That's why architecture is big and inhuman - it's to specifically make people feel meaningless.

  • @trombone_pasha
    @trombone_pasha Před 5 lety +988

    Why modern architects hate people?

    • @i5-4670k
      @i5-4670k Před 5 lety +251

      They really do. They have absolutely no regard for how architecture makes people feel, and only focus on how they can feed their own ego. Making things bland, depressing, boring and ugly is a horrible thing to do. Architecture is about how it makes people feel, not about its own elite club expressing their narcissism.

    • @stonesofvenice
      @stonesofvenice Před 5 lety +26

      HA. Brilliant and true.

    • @lucasmaicelilopes7057
      @lucasmaicelilopes7057 Před 5 lety +73

      Some of them had psycological problems, like autism or PDST, their brains works different, they didn´t like to see windows or another feature that can resemble a face. Le Corbusier for example hated streets with lots of people and ornaments, his brain didn´t like excess of information, soo in their view is much more agradable to see simple forms and streets.(My written english sucks, i hope you understand) commonedge.org/the-mental-disorders-that-gave-us-modern-architecture/, read this link!

    • @mattwolf7698
      @mattwolf7698 Před 5 lety +11

      I actually like modern architecture, historic architecture is nice to though.

    • @TheHylianJuggalo
      @TheHylianJuggalo Před 5 lety

      @@kaldozin9757 please.

  • @doogie1350
    @doogie1350 Před 2 lety +217

    I went to two colleges, one I got booted from, the other I graduated from.
    The one I got booted from was in a new(ish) modern building with white tiled floors, white painted walls and white ceilings. It looked sterile, like a hospital. I got depression within the first semester, couldn't stand being in college, thinking about going there made me wanna throw up, so when I was there I couldn't focus, got crap grades, failed one class and got booted.
    The college I graduated from was in an old damn near critical condition building that had creaky wooden floors, wooden ceilings, huge old wood frame windows and student painted mural walls or plain yellow walls. Every time I was in college I felt like I should get a cup of coffee, put on some slippers and go to class, it felt like home. I was among the top 3 in my class and graduated with no issues or stress.

    • @ellinmara5997
      @ellinmara5997 Před rokem +35

      Your story shows just how much architecture can impact people's mood. I too absolutely hated the university I studied at. An ugly box of glass and concrete, which was ironically quite dysfunctional as there isn't enough space for students to gather, among many other things. The architects got so much praise for it too, which seems preposterous to me. Most students absolutely hate the building. But whether the people you build for like the building doesn't seem to matter, nowadays... :-(

    • @skoplpnews9450
      @skoplpnews9450 Před rokem +3

      100% feel you!

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Před rokem +8

      Amazing! Thanks for sharing. The environment was so harsh to your senses, that it sort of 'bullied' you and deprived you of educational progress. Whereas the other one became your 'friend' and helped you succeed.
      Wish every architect in the world was forced to write an essay based on your - and no doubt millions of other's - experiences. Architects ought to be able to be jailed for causing collective harm!

    • @PjRjHj
      @PjRjHj Před rokem +6

      I had almost the same experience. Lecturers would self deprecatingly joke, "look for the ugliest building on campus to find the Architecture school". Yet the pressure (and sometimes directive) to conform to modernist principles and aesthetics, the hero worship of other students for Modernism, running headlong into my visceral dislike for most of it shattered my confidence and ability to creatively produce at the pace required. At the same time I actually went into psychosis because of an over prescription of relevant medication, I had paranoid delusions about the authoritarian, puritanical nature of broad Modernism. It completely derailed my education. I went back but I never reconcile with it. Nor did i ever finish my masters, thus I never became an Architect.
      Years later i brought it up with a Psychiatrist. When I told him about it and what school of Architecture i attended, he responded with a forceful "Awful, Awful program". At first i thought he was just being facetiously supportive but he was dead serious. He said he'd had many clients/patients come from schools of Architecture, particularly the one I attended.

    • @1marcelo
      @1marcelo Před rokem +2

      I studied in an ugly brutalist building. I graduated fast and with excellent grades as do thousands of people studying in the same building year after year. So, what's your point?

  • @rutledgesander4951
    @rutledgesander4951 Před 2 lety +20

    I don’t understand how anybody thought that making giant cold depressing shoe boxes was a good idea.

  • @pawii111
    @pawii111 Před 5 lety +2019

    If every place on Earth would look the same, what's the purpose of travelling ?

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis Před 5 lety +263

      Yup it feels that traditional architecture just disappeared. We still have some of it left from past centuries and that is it, we no longer build something that could be associated with only particular area. Without those few remaining old buildings there would literally be no reason to visit other cities, only nature tourism would continue to be worthwhile.

    • @gdnygma490
      @gdnygma490 Před 5 lety +88

      i drove around europe last summer and all the gothic buildings kinda looked the same

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis Před 5 lety +143

      @@gdnygma490 there are really large differences between gothic structures in different countries. Maybe you had in mind Neo-gothic that is more or less global.

    • @gdnygma490
      @gdnygma490 Před 5 lety +14

      @@ligametis I see I know little about Architecture so thats probably it

    • @ligametis
      @ligametis Před 5 lety +34

      @@gdnygma490 one is like an original style from medieval times and other is reimagination of it during industrial revolution :)

  • @emilyshmelimy
    @emilyshmelimy Před 5 lety +714

    I think Modern architecture is great…for prisons.

    • @Ratplague707
      @Ratplague707 Před 4 lety +90

      Even prisons of the late 19th century were built to look beautiful.

    • @alanmoon636
      @alanmoon636 Před 3 lety +3

      We need both . but different area

    • @N0rth_Star
      @N0rth_Star Před 3 lety

      lmao

    • @vHindenburg
      @vHindenburg Před 3 lety +8

      @@teamacio9043 My school had 7m tall walls around it, the only reason it wasnt a prison was that it hadnt any bars in front of the windows, but some idiot thought it was a good ideo to have class rooms in the basement....therefore I didnt even get windows, my elementary school though is a beautiful building finished in 1900.

    • @Baraodojaguary
      @Baraodojaguary Před 3 lety +6

      @@teamacio9043 school is kids prison they even have walls to imprison the children inside

  • @willchristie2650
    @willchristie2650 Před 3 lety +83

    Architects realized that no matter what purist ideals such designers may have been taught in schools, most people still want to live in traditional style homes that evoke a sense of warmth, comfort and belonging. Many of the ultra-bleak 50's modernist masterpiece homes in Los Angeles are being torn down. They are being replaced with traditionalist tropes that welcome the person to a HOME rather than some modernist "statement", e.g., an airy impersonal space where even the addition of a book or personal photo would seem very out of place. I have been in many modernist homes as an architectural student. I always feel as if I am in a doctor's waiting room or some other impersonal space like the gate of an airport. I don't know how truly human warm loving people live in such spaces without going mad.

    • @carlosimotti3933
      @carlosimotti3933 Před rokem +3

      In fact it's proven that it leads to depression and psychosis

    • @Ron_Robertson
      @Ron_Robertson Před 3 měsíci +1

      Late to the party here, but one of the interesting things is that many of these modernist architects live in traditional-style homes.

  • @waterloo32594
    @waterloo32594 Před rokem +60

    I’ll be honest, I think Art Deco was the peak of large scale construction design, such as stadiums, skyscrapers, and large public buildings. There’s something I find uplifting about Art Deco architecture and interior design. I’m torn between art deco and neoclassical design. I’m not sure which I like most.

    • @renaen2921
      @renaen2921 Před rokem +8

      Art Deco was created during a time of optimism for the future. I love it too.

    • @JH-lo9ut
      @JH-lo9ut Před rokem +3

      Agree art deco is gorgeous, and some modern designs borrow a lot from art deco.
      Neoclassical is pretty but when you get in to a bit of art history, it starts to become rather ridiculous. I mean,we can't forever stick to one specific design, one that is a pastiche of classic architecture. If I were an architect, I wouln't like the endless reproducing of the same old over and over.
      Modern design and architecture can be really cool. Most of it is not, but some of it is.
      Ugly and poor quality buildings have always been built though. It's just that the old buildings that are still standing often are the ones that were loved enough to be saved.

  • @Desertime
    @Desertime Před 3 lety +894

    I feel like we're on the verge of a great artistic style shift, that would be on the same level as Baroque, Romantism and things like that. There's a resurgence of people wanting to stop the destruction of traditional art and fed up with the idea of "art is just interpretation". I might be wrong, but we need to bring beauty back into functionnality

    • @grapeyard1778
      @grapeyard1778 Před 3 lety +47

      I hope you're right

    • @formulaoneigniti0n994
      @formulaoneigniti0n994 Před 3 lety +29

      >I might be wrong, but
      No you're not.

    • @livanbard
      @livanbard Před 3 lety +16

      There is more people doing traditional art than this interpretative stuff you dislike. Just check your local artists and see for yourself.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Před 3 lety +16

      Modern architecture IS beauty, you should play Mirror's Edge (the original) to truly be inspired by the minimalism, the well lit rooms, and so on. There is nothing better, everything is simply perfect.

    • @formulaoneigniti0n994
      @formulaoneigniti0n994 Před 3 lety +79

      @@Danuxsy You have terrible taste if you think any form of architecture that has to do with modern is beautiful and perfect in any way. Even the best of modern architecture will only resemble an elaborately colored urban slum at best.
      No matter how you defend modern architecture, it will always look and smell as a turd. And the latter part of that isn't just metaphorical.

  • @zk0rned
    @zk0rned Před 3 lety +714

    Tall, grey, skyscrapers are just soul crushing

    • @bluesnail5042
      @bluesnail5042 Před 3 lety +13

      *based

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 3 lety +14

      U are soul crushing. (Jk)
      But seriously u really want them to look like toys with bright colors???

    • @agatazietek9098
      @agatazietek9098 Před 3 lety +46

      @@TheBlueCreeper- depends, but possibly, yes - as long as the colors match.

    • @armelburgess8651
      @armelburgess8651 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Ballum_64 Its a building. Doesn't need to look cute for the two seconds you look at it.

    • @arch455
      @arch455 Před 3 lety +2

      I would say the same but literally

  • @TheBlownapart
    @TheBlownapart Před rokem +13

    The Modern building my parents live in used to be an office space. The architect clearly thought that form should follow function, but failed to realize that function could change.

  • @03.achyuthans39
    @03.achyuthans39 Před 3 lety +26

    I read a comment once that said "One corinthian order column is more appealing than a city block with Modern Architecture"

  • @SwissAvgeek
    @SwissAvgeek Před 3 lety +141

    It makes me sad to look at modern buildings. I live in a Swiss town full of beautiful decorated buildings, and among these, there are some disgusting gray bland concrete "blocks" of equally disgusting shape ready to completely mess up the landscape...
    Inside they are so minimalistic and with endless-looking, empty hallways and it's just unbelievable that someone decided to make something like that in such beautiful areas...

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Před rokem +4

      You are right. Personally, I think it ought to be a criminal offense to force massive ugliness on people and destroy towns and landscapes with their dysfunctional outputs. Many architects and many planners ought to be jailed!

    • @tonycosta3302
      @tonycosta3302 Před rokem

      But they use wood elements inside to make them feel warm and welcoming…. Hahahaha! Swiss architecture can be so cold and formalistic.

    • @G-ra-ha-m
      @G-ra-ha-m Před rokem

      @@gardenjoy5223 If there is a victim, there is a real crime.

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 Před rokem +1

      @@G-ra-ha-m No

  • @georgibanov2916
    @georgibanov2916 Před 5 lety +388

    IMO Modern architecture, by articulating on “function over form” idea, is neglecting the psychological aspect that was pretty clear and important for the architects from the past.
    The buildings are meant to be inhabited, visited and observed by humans that not only have certain physical/functional needs, but also reacts emotionally to the surrounding environment and objects, and architecture that doesn’t take this into account could do a great harm to people’s mental state.

    • @comradecam9530
      @comradecam9530 Před 3 lety +41

      It's also missing the rather significant cultural and artistic components.

    • @barbiefairytopia2803
      @barbiefairytopia2803 Před 3 lety +5

      that's a right take i agree

    • @robert1746
      @robert1746 Před 3 lety +1

      You are right

    • @Kannot2023
      @Kannot2023 Před 3 lety +12

      In 20 century we had 3 totalitarian regimes: communism, fascism and Modern architecture

    • @mcan-piano4718
      @mcan-piano4718 Před 3 lety +6

      @@Kannot2023 it still exist in architects, they keep forcing modern designs and dont respect people who love old

  • @CinHotlanta
    @CinHotlanta Před 3 lety +31

    I've always loved the fluid, functional forms of modernist architecture but have never seen any reason why those forms could not serve as the frame for the comforting, warming aesthetics that make a space comfortable or even enjoyable for people to exist in. I think that's why I enjoy Japanese architecture so much, it's both rooted in functional, efficient forms and maintains its humanity and connection to the natural world around it.

  • @bigman7856
    @bigman7856 Před 3 lety +10

    One thing I also tend to not like is post-Modern architecture. Specifically style commonly encouraged in architecture schools. Though I will admit, this style is very good for students because there’s so much innovation, problem solving, and unique design that goes into it. It still seems to be held up as the ideal and most advanced style of architecture today. I’d like to see it more as a method of learning, than a practical style. It reminds me of high fashion. The best of the best and most elite fashion designers come up with these clothes, but no one would wear them outside of some eccentric celebrity at a Hollywood red carpet event. I’ve seen the work of traditional architects today, and I was actually surprised by what they were making. They weren’t always making classical and gothic buildings, but rather using principles to create modern buildings that seemed so much more beautiful and human. Sometimes even futuristic in aesthetics, yet harmonious and relatable.

  • @syntheticfox_real
    @syntheticfox_real Před 3 lety +926

    Hot take: Modern architecture can be good, but only if it works in tandem to, or in some cases, actively expand, its natural environment. The problem is that most modern structures are boring rectangles and squares that clash against its landscape. Good Modern architecture needs to create bold new lines and contrasts that actively emphasizes the natural landscape. A prime example is Fallingwater by F. L. Wright. It accents the landscape and promotes a feeling of being in tune with the surroundings.

    • @lckyminer_2256
      @lckyminer_2256 Před 3 lety +52

      I would like to say as well that from those box and rectangular shapes of modernized buldings, they still have an opportunity to have creative liberty on them. Take for instance the neon lights of Akihabara, Tokyo, in Japan.

    • @reversal8250
      @reversal8250 Před 3 lety +34

      Modern architecture is great but the problem lies in the fact that we live in an age where we don't have the benefit of a wealthy economy that can Commission Neo-classical building that are made if Marble and handcrafted by artisans with overly-exaggerated backstories. And because we have to produce architecture at in a budget and in a world with a new context, the idea of Modern architecture has become synonymous with cheaply made or souless. It's pretty unfortunate seeing as modern architecture is the reason why marvels such as the Jewel of Singapore can exist. Another thing I think architecture in the 21st century has a benefit that 20th century architecture didn't, that being the 20th century had to live with this edgy teen called modernism that like breaking rules before it grew up and became contemporary architecture and got awesome shit like this: armarchitecture.com.au/projects/macquarie-park-apartments/

    • @the11382
      @the11382 Před 3 lety +15

      When you work in tandem to the natural environment, you are using the natural environment as ornaments and decoration.

    • @fist-of-doom487
      @fist-of-doom487 Před 3 lety +4

      The blindingly bright colors against a more grounded area is an eyesore to say the least. Their is this obnoxious sushi restaurant close by covered almost entirely in glass, very blocky with a large overhead that’s highlighter orange, sitting next to a bargain grocery store on one side, a family owned auto shop on the other and a trailer block a few streets behind it. I get mad every time I pass it on the way to work.

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Před 3 lety +10

      I disagree, The beauty of modern architecture is the emphasize of the future and technology as a whole, it reminds us where we are going. I love the minimalism and brightly lit rooms in Mirror's Edge, everything is just so clean and perfect. That is something past generations couldn't even dream of, their homes had all kinds of imperfections and it was dull and dark, I've been in quite a few old homes from the 1940s or so and it's depressing asf.

  • @hydrangeadragon
    @hydrangeadragon Před 5 lety +692

    modern architecture just feels so cold, faceless and depressing, it has no identity and feels very elitist and uninviting as well, and way too square, I really miss some round softer shapes in architecture

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 5 lety +44

      This is why some architects and designers like Frank Gehry and Zaha Hadid started to experiment with curvilinear shapes in recent decades with the help of computer aided design. Technology definitely has helped with the ability to do more elaborate forms and shapes but unfortunately a lot of projects are still bound by economic limitations where more elaborate designs are difficult to achieve.

    • @henrique-3d
      @henrique-3d Před 5 lety +1

      Residential modern *architectute is great

    • @TheFlash9333
      @TheFlash9333 Před 5 lety +7

      I completely disagree

    • @eddgrs9193
      @eddgrs9193 Před 5 lety +24

      @@ARTiculations Zaha Hadid's work is almost passable, but Frank Gehry's work sucks big time. I don't care what other architects or art critics say, what counts is what most people have to endure on a daily basis, it's not like cities are filled with modern art critics, they are filled with normal people, who hate that style.

    • @kneelesh48
      @kneelesh48 Před 5 lety +6

      Window's has edges. macOS and iOS has curves. This is why I like macOS and curves. Modern design is not intuitive or for humans.

  • @IGNlTlON
    @IGNlTlON Před 2 lety +3

    Stumbled upon your videos by accident, but it almost feels like a throwback to school days. Reminded of familiar concepts and thought-provoking discourses and issues that has been slowly forgotten in practice. Thanks for the awesome content!

  • @dogogamer212
    @dogogamer212 Před 2 lety +42

    Old Architecture: Everything was beautiful and fit perfectly into the atmosphere.
    New Architecture: Giant Glass Box

  • @iamgerg
    @iamgerg Před 5 lety +600

    There is nothing wrong with form following function.
    The problem is that Modernism removed most of a building's function when designing the form. Physical space and how it is utilized is important, but so is emotional, and metaphorical functions.
    Take your ideal kitchen as an example. What descriptors do you use? Sure "ample counter space" and "good work flow" will be there, so will descriptors such as, "bright," "open," "inviting." As well as "gathering place," "family hub," and "heart of the household"
    If Modernism only focuses on the literal, physical functions of a space it will miss key elements, and render itself lacking in the minds of most people.

    • @unvergebeneid
      @unvergebeneid Před 5 lety +26

      Well, I can see "gathering place" actually being considered by Modernists, as well as "bright" and "open." But "inviting" and "heart of the household" are very subjective attributes. To me that means warmth, therefore maybe some wood elements. But what people mean when they say "form follows function" is that wood is inferior in function to PVC, so why should anyone use it. If you start to attribute all the personal preferences people might have to such a "function" then "form follows function" loses all meaning as a catchphrase and you are missing the point of the modernist philosophy. Which is, at its core, a dehumanizing philosophy, so if you bring the human element back into it, you're a postmodernist, not a modernist.

    • @kibrika
      @kibrika Před 5 lety +4

      Yeah, I was thinking along the same lines, "form follows function" can be done well, poorly and everything between. Just like the video about well designed exit signs, I think function should incorporate good aesthetics.

    • @Muronivido
      @Muronivido Před 5 lety +12

      Thank you! The concept in itself makes sense, but how can any one person confidently define the present and future functions of an entire building? Also, modernist architects dislike ornament, but it's not like they make arbitrary decisions. I always said that if you want an example of form purely following function, look at a refinery, the LHC, or the ISS. Not a gram of material is spent on decorative elements, and yet they look as beautiful and intricate as any gothic church. Today's buildings are complex machines, but they tend to hide quite a lot of their functions. Otherwise they'd all look more like the Centre Pompidou in Paris rather than the monolith from 2001.

    • @bengersbootlegs
      @bengersbootlegs Před 5 lety +1

      I was going to say this. I'm a graphic designer and the fundamentals are the same no matter what your designing.

    • @DavidJGillCA
      @DavidJGillCA Před 5 lety

      This statement, that "Modernism removed most of a building's function when designing the form" just doesn't add up.

  • @harrue
    @harrue Před 5 lety +348

    The function of Modern American cities are great. I love sitting in trafic and not being able to walk anywhere!!!

    • @nobrang5146
      @nobrang5146 Před 5 lety +11

      Modern architecture*

    • @ketherga
      @ketherga Před 5 lety +18

      You have no idea how much engineering goes into city streets to make them function at all. The problem isn't the design of the city, its the size and number of people living there.

    • @harrue
      @harrue Před 5 lety +12

      i don't know man, I might know.

    • @trevorclive
      @trevorclive Před 5 lety +3

      You don't think that happens in Europe?

    • @BludSpammd
      @BludSpammd Před 5 lety +43

      @@ketherga Speak for yourself. I live in a big city in Europe and have no issue walking anywhere because it was built to have both places to live in and places to go shopping in within walking distance. Only in America you have to drive anywhere you need to go. Not because Americans are lazy, but because it was constructed in that way.

  • @Anpanator
    @Anpanator Před 3 lety +44

    10 Minutes of great explanations, especially why it isn't just about being ugly.
    Me: Seriously tho, most modern buildings are just plain ugly.
    To elaborate a bit: I see aesthetics as part of the *function*. I will be happier when I can come to a home, or enter some other building, that makes me think: Dang, that's pretty.

    • @vibaj16
      @vibaj16 Před rokem

      Well "ugly" is subjective

  • @lexibyday9504
    @lexibyday9504 Před 3 lety +123

    The World we live in should be livable. We are not machines. We need more for life than just a building.

    • @greatestaxolotl4933
      @greatestaxolotl4933 Před 3 lety +11

      ikr it is just so depressing to look at. What are your opinions of the images you get from a google search of "modern architecture with plants"? honestly that is how I hope modern architecture evolves. It feels less souless to me and is good for the environment.

    • @lexibyday9504
      @lexibyday9504 Před 3 lety +9

      @@greatestaxolotl4933 When I search "greenwall" or "roof garden" or something like that it looks like a bit of nature has been pushed up by a building. "modern architecture with plants" looks overgrown in an unnatural way. It's kinda gross. I preffer "ecotopia" or "utopia garden" where it looks like the city was designed from the begining to be equal parts nature and city.

    • @ahmedzakikhan7639
      @ahmedzakikhan7639 Před 3 lety

      I wish you were more specific by livability. Most places in Western World is livable.

    • @hoangquang4414
      @hoangquang4414 Před 2 lety

      But you spend almost your time in buildings

  • @randolphwilliams2365
    @randolphwilliams2365 Před 3 lety +169

    So much of it doesn't age well and just looks dirty as opposed to aged. Thats why I love the old handmade brick. It just gets better and better.

    • @triplemoyagames4195
      @triplemoyagames4195 Před 3 lety +18

      Am I the only one who likes modern architecture? Like the simplicity of it? I think it has potential with some small additions, like if they added some small diversity to the shapes, keeping with the basic polygons. Also adding some colour to the buildings, could be solid colours or even patterns. Or something nice like a vertical garden would make a difference

    • @whatadayhmm
      @whatadayhmm Před 3 lety +8

      @@triplemoyagames4195 I love it too, kinda hate when they shit like "soul crushing" tf does even mean

    • @triplemoyagames4195
      @triplemoyagames4195 Před 3 lety +11

      @@whatadayhmm Right? Like people forget you can customize the interior as well. Like Modern Architecture combined with nature, would be a madness

    • @Danuxsy
      @Danuxsy Před 3 lety +6

      @@triplemoyagames4195 I think most in the younger generations prefer the modern architecture, just like TESLA it reminds us of the future and how we can be a part of it and I think the future is minimalism and practicality, simpler forms, more light, more perfection.

    • @triplemoyagames4195
      @triplemoyagames4195 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Danuxsy Yes. But I think a lot of ppl dislike it because they forget, that a lot of creativity can take place. Even in simplicity

  • @Nonamearisto
    @Nonamearisto Před rokem +4

    Saying "traditional architecture was associated with evil empires" is like saying "Hitler ate sugar, so eating sugar is bad" or "Hitler was associated with building roads, so building roads is bad."

  • @Labroidas
    @Labroidas Před 3 lety +6

    This is a really good video, very intellectual and interesting, and you present your ideas in a very calm and thought-provoking way. Thanks for educating me on something that has more of an impact on my life than I had thought before I saw this video!

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před 3 lety +1

      Omg thank you so much! I’m so glad you enjoyed the video and found it thought-provoking! What I was going for haha.

  • @seekittycat
    @seekittycat Před 3 lety +293

    In Asia we paint our concrete jungle with bright pastel colours, deco with neon signs, preserve trees and nature, design pedestrian spaces for people gather, and it's still depressing sometimes. In cities where they don't plan for this I can't even imagine.

    • @kekistanihelpdesk8508
      @kekistanihelpdesk8508 Před 3 lety +13

      Maybe east Asia but I haven't seen that in India.

    • @anna-5104
      @anna-5104 Před 3 lety +35

      Asia is the biggest and most diverse continent on our planet... What city in which country do you mean?

    • @wolfenstien13
      @wolfenstien13 Před 3 lety +41

      That's one thing Latin America gets right. They stick to old building methods and go crazy with the paint like some child at daycare. I rather take that over an American home built today.

    • @deepanshu564
      @deepanshu564 Před 3 lety

      @@kekistanihelpdesk8508 yeah

    • @miketacos9034
      @miketacos9034 Před 3 lety +7

      Which country? Here in China they don’t even bother coloring stuff haha

  • @Nebunlina
    @Nebunlina Před 3 lety +529

    Oh, and "form follows function" was coined by Louis Sullivan, known for his beautifully decorated skyscrapers.
    People have ALWAYS produced buildings according to function, with automatic beauty as a result. Castles were built to withstand attacks, towers to spot enemies from far away. Today we view them as fairy tale castles in Disneyland.
    Adding extra decor, whether to a castle or to a simple hut or barn, also filled a function: making it pleasing to the dwellers, signalling status, and creating job opportunities for artisans. This was also sustainable. A house that is loved for its beauty will last longer and be better taken care of, even if its function may change over time.
    So, for Modernists to kidnap Sullivan's saying and twisting it to mean Minimalism I find dishonest and disrespectful to both Sullivan and the rest of society who has to live in architectural starvation.

    • @the11382
      @the11382 Před 3 lety +20

      Its not that form follows function, its that form communicates function. To Aristotle, Art was about gathering the materials to express Purpose or Truth.

    • @lindsaywebb1904
      @lindsaywebb1904 Před 3 lety +2

      Modernists did not promote minimalism, that came later

    • @MuunNii
      @MuunNii Před 3 lety +13

      @@lindsaywebb1904 Have you had the chance to look at the communal Bauhaus buildings? I think it can actually be argued that minimalism in some way was part of the modernist agenda, the reducing of the "unnecessary" in its essence equates to the minimalistic worldview., though i´m sure it remains to be debated.

    • @lindsaywebb1904
      @lindsaywebb1904 Před 3 lety +2

      @@MuunNii Yes, if you mean the ensemble in Dessau, I'm familiar. I'm not sure what you mean by 'minimalistic world view'. The Bauhaus movement though, was not just architecture, it was a movement (across the arts, industrial design, theatre etc) attempting to reclaim authenticity and craft in the machine age. In no way can the architecture (or general artistic output) be regarded as minimalistic - it was mostly a highly wrought, formal response to the socio political issues of the day. I think you could argue that the aesthetics of European modernism might have inspired Minimalism, which appeared in the US in the 60s, but that's it. Minimalism in architecture seems to have developed sometime later (probably as a reaction to postmodernism [historicist] architecture, and with roots in Japanese Zen thinking. (Tadao Ando's House Azuma -1976 is probably a good starting point) and taking off in the 80s with the likes of John Pawson to now, where it is (ironically) just another stylistic plaything.

    • @appa609
      @appa609 Před 3 lety +7

      This is a ridiculous analysis. Cinderella's "castle" is modeled on the royal equivalent of a summer cottage. Its distinctive architectural style was designed mainly to impress Ludwig's nobles and visiting dignitaries. Contemporary military fortifications looked morel like Fort Sumter. Low walls lined with cannons and 30 feet thick of earth and concrete. Completely unrelated.
      Form follows function *sometimes*. Fighter jets tend to follow this statement. Suspension bridges. Bicycles. Sports cars. It tends to be true when every competing design is intended to maximize a specific function and people learn to like the look of the ones that perform better.

  • @harrisond8132
    @harrisond8132 Před rokem +4

    A leading hotel corporation wanted to build in a our quintessential New England resort town. They went to the zoning board with a very modern, clean looking building. The zoning board members were appalled and told the hotel to come back with a more fitting proposal. The developers came back with a new design. Basically all that was changed was that a faux mansard roof was attached to the top floor along with a couple other decorative elements. The board loved it.

  • @starrynight1165
    @starrynight1165 Před 3 lety +8

    i think Modern architecture has potential but only if they get rid of the "no decorations" rule. i personally like the square and clean look but you can have a place that looks clean but still feels nice to be around. I also hate big empty rooms. there should be color in and around modern style buildings, im sure theres a way to make it work. Surround the place with nature, put colorful flowers all around it (possibly in it if the flowers you chose can live indoors) because nature is a great way to make a place less uninviting, but still keep a nice sofisticated look if thats what the place is going for. Colorful murals, warm lights... there are so many possibilities, and its a shame that a style of building that i find so appealing has this restriction because it would look so NICE with decorations and color

    • @starrynight1165
      @starrynight1165 Před 3 lety +1

      another thing is that i personally dont mind glossy or boring exteriors on tall buildings. I think it has a certain beauty to it because its so reflective and the size certainly helps, but a lot of people here hate it, so maybe i have strange taste on this whole thing

  • @user-jb9dr8qz7o
    @user-jb9dr8qz7o Před 5 lety +553

    I think some people hate modern architecture because it's so repetitive and boring, there's no character in it. But with more detailed and old buildings I think we can relate to them better than a block of concrete with huge windows. It isn't cozy and it can make you feel small.

    • @chrom0xide123
      @chrom0xide123 Před 5 lety +37

      Maybe it is compareable with human anatomy: The anatomy of a person is symmetrical, but never 100%. This would look "uncanny". Also different people look different. Modern Buildings look more, like buildungs for robots of the same type and model.
      But: If you put a Modern Building in a place, where other nonmodern buildings or landmarks exist, it may still look okay because of the contrast.
      Maybe also the design was nice, when it was just theorie. As people began to build more and more this way, it went from "art/design object" to "ordinary object".

    • @trispectre8366
      @trispectre8366 Před 5 lety

      @melancholistics Form follows function and not vice versa.

    • @wildeheide6230
      @wildeheide6230 Před 5 lety +27

      If you are a robot and have no sense of beauty then modern architecture will do. It's sterile, barren, dead. No beauty crushes your spirits.

    • @rosebud4387
      @rosebud4387 Před 5 lety

      Modern architecture I find hard to relate to or live in on a human level its like a fish bowl or unrealistic lifestyle, especially the idea of living in a western minimalist house, the Japanese and Koreans captured a better more authentic spirt and closeness of the human living in/and environment with natural materials, simplicity and function, even for the ordinary folk, etc better than any western minimalist building could capture.

    • @Flyingdutchy33
      @Flyingdutchy33 Před 5 lety +16

      @@trispectre8366 One of the functions could be: Do not depress everybody.

  • @LC-zi8jw
    @LC-zi8jw Před 3 lety +578

    I thought that the art deco movement of both Classic Art Deco & Streamline Moderne was a nice mix between the classical and modern architecture styles.

    • @NoVisionGuy
      @NoVisionGuy Před 3 lety +35

      Neo-classical is the best, it just look so elegant and respectful. But design and construction costs made it obsolete in these modern times.

    • @tony_sheppard165
      @tony_sheppard165 Před 3 lety +23

      honestly think art deco is the pinacol of architecture a mix indeed of old and new, they really should build more art deco buildings

    • @Karmy.
      @Karmy. Před 3 lety +22

      We need an Art Deco Revival

    • @jesseleeward2359
      @jesseleeward2359 Před 3 lety +9

      Love art deco

    • @HalNordmann
      @HalNordmann Před 3 lety +7

      I also like Art Deco. Simple and clean lines, yet not boring.

  • @federicov.8685
    @federicov.8685 Před 3 lety +19

    I like old buildings because they are overcomplex and that makes them, I don't know, feel more unique

    • @javierpacheco8234
      @javierpacheco8234 Před 3 lety +6

      I like old buildings too becuase they are more colorful and more decorative than modern. When I look at the traditional houses they have interesting things to look at.

    • @aaelr.740
      @aaelr.740 Před 2 lety

      Old style houses had a personality. Whenever you looked at someone's house you could also guess something about the owner's personality. Now we all live in buildings that look exactly the same. They're cold and lifeless, and lack originality. It makes me feel more like I'm part of the mass and not like I'm an individual...Also I would like to feel sadness when leaving my cozy home and feel relief when I come back, rather than feeling relief in leaving it and sadness when I return 😅

  • @Polygarden
    @Polygarden Před 2 lety +2

    I like the little streets where you can stroll around. It's things like comfy little cafes, shops, lots of greenery and little parks inside a back-allay which very often don't fit into the Modern architectural concept or got "rationalized" for some reason. For most people a home has to feel comfy and not cool.
    I personally grew up in one of these eastern block housing areas. There are no spaces with tables outside where people could meet for a coffee. There are no squares with a little weekly market. The "parks" are just plain grass and you see concrete everywhere. Fortunately I moved away and it's nothing which I would miss. Sometimes you only get the melancholic feeling of how terrible it actually was.

  • @er9696
    @er9696 Před 3 lety +168

    After this I quickly thought how most people are liking cottagecore or many people want to opt for countryside after retirement

    • @ageamiu8923
      @ageamiu8923 Před 3 lety +40

      And dark academia too. I love these aesthetics, there are so much more beautiful than the minimalistic modernism.

    • @iakinose
      @iakinose Před 3 lety +8

      Personally would enjoy living in a villa near the mediterranean coast.

    • @TheSilverwing999
      @TheSilverwing999 Před 3 lety +4

      I would love to do that too someday. The only thing keeping me in cities is that I have to be close to my job.

  • @bradwalton8373
    @bradwalton8373 Před 4 lety +121

    "Unnecessary ornamentation." "Superfluous ornamentation." What pig-headed ideas.

    • @GrumpyStormtrooper
      @GrumpyStormtrooper Před 3 lety +9

      Those statements are context appropriate. This was right after massive world wars, when many were homeless and money was scarce. Why waste resources in making decorations when you can just repeat the same plain house 3000 times with prefabricated materials? It isn't very pretty but it was needed and it gave people what they needed.
      Nowadays those are dated concepts, architects don't follow Le Corbusier's teachings anymore. There's laws protecting historical areas, or forcing new buildings to adhere to the architectural context around it.

    • @bradwalton8373
      @bradwalton8373 Před 3 lety +24

      @@GrumpyStormtrooper The oldest implements surviving from the stone age -- 20, 30, 40 thousand years old, are covered with beautiful, painstakingly carved ornaments. Those people had even less than the people you are referring to.

    • @GrumpyStormtrooper
      @GrumpyStormtrooper Před 3 lety +1

      @@bradwalton8373 But we have standards of living now, and a system of welfare to help the less fortunate. Modern architecture answers the need they had after the world wars. Is your house fully decorated? I doubt it. My house is from the 1800s, basically no decorations either here.

    • @sirmount2636
      @sirmount2636 Před 3 lety +2

      @@GrumpyStormtrooper I would add that austere Protestantism contributed to austere architecture. The ancient gothic cathedrals were seen as decadent, opulent. Protestant Europe, Protestant USA are far more plain than Catholic & Orthodox settlements.

    • @GrumpyStormtrooper
      @GrumpyStormtrooper Před 3 lety +2

      @@sirmount2636 You're right, but my own house I'm talking about is in Tuscany. It's middle class worker's architecture. The most decorative element are the cotto floors tiles.

  • @jbidwell605
    @jbidwell605 Před 2 lety +1

    Wonderful video!! I adore both forms of architecture and think they should both be preserved. I just saw Eileen Gray's Villa E-1027 last month and it was so extraordinary to see.

    • @TheItalianoAssassino
      @TheItalianoAssassino Před 2 lety +1

      preserved to a certain extent for historical study: yes
      but nobody is gonna need a thousand commie blocks in the future

  • @kwidevidsb8127
    @kwidevidsb8127 Před 3 lety +1

    I'm at 2:50 you should mention that American architect were designing for military. When war finished there was initiative to keep military factories going but instead of building planes they started making flat packed architecture. Great book that discusses the subject - Domesticity at War by Beatriz Colomina

  • @mkuc6951
    @mkuc6951 Před 5 lety +675

    Currently live in a European city and i grew up in a modern city in Australia. No contest. modern cities are uglier.

    • @Coolsomeone234
      @Coolsomeone234 Před 5 lety +1

      Which city did you used to live in

    • @mkuc6951
      @mkuc6951 Před 5 lety +20

      @@Coolsomeone234 Melbourne, great city!

    • @Coolsomeone234
      @Coolsomeone234 Před 5 lety

      @@mkuc6951 thanks

    • @420fedoras
      @420fedoras Před 5 lety +4

      @@mkuc6951 id hardly call melbourne a modern city, at least the city around the tram line area

    • @mkuc6951
      @mkuc6951 Před 5 lety +63

      ​@@420fedoras ????? Grid layout, founded in 1835, few remaining old buildings, many sky scrapers, metro, suburban sprawl.
      VS
      Medieval layout founded in 956 AD with origins from the 7th century, with a world heritage listed town square, no metro, and a castle.
      There's some pretty 'subtle' differences.

  • @andrewhanson1180
    @andrewhanson1180 Před 5 lety +470

    I think art deco was the last beautiful style of architecture.

    • @MegaZsolti
      @MegaZsolti Před 5 lety +30

      Yes, and streamline moderne, I agree.

    • @SimonRaahauge1973
      @SimonRaahauge1973 Před 5 lety +15

      The danish (and others around us) post 1970'ies low height dense built urban style is nice and liveable.. learning from the best things from the small town past of Denmark. I have lived in such a part of town, and it was very nice, kids playing in the streets, people saying hello to each others, organized events and all sorts of friendly co-existing.
      THAT style of course was a rebellion against the tower blocks of the 1960'ies and 1970'ies.

    • @robertdoucet1207
      @robertdoucet1207 Před 5 lety

      I think that too

    • @spaghettimeatballs6352
      @spaghettimeatballs6352 Před 5 lety

      I agree

    • @pauldrake1858
      @pauldrake1858 Před 4 lety +1

      I also agree.

  • @mikeletaurus4728
    @mikeletaurus4728 Před 2 lety

    Your charming sense of presentation helps this video to be engaging. More importantly, you present the information in an easily understandable format accessible even to the lay architectural enthusiast. Thank you.

  • @sergeigen1
    @sergeigen1 Před 2 lety

    reallly cool video, the pacing and the script was very well thought out, i enjoyed it very much

  • @zaxarispetixos8728
    @zaxarispetixos8728 Před 5 lety +88

    Modern is a bag of squares, circles and glass with a bomb

  • @WoLpH
    @WoLpH Před 5 lety +137

    I don't particularly hate modern architecture but I still prefer old architecture for the simple reason that design and looks are features by themselves. Where ornaments might not always have a direct function, they do add distinction which is useful enough. I've more than once found myself lost in a neighborhood where all houses look identical for blocks. I'm aware that part of the reason for that design is cost, but distinctiveness is important and need not be expensive.
    Regardless, great video!

    • @marcowen1506
      @marcowen1506 Před 5 lety +7

      you raise an interesting point about the identity of an area.Going to more progressive countries is disorientating: block after block of identical nondescript boxes. It is less of a problem in some British cities: we have everything from victorian to Deco and modernist/blandist housing so it's possible to navigate your way without knowing exactly where you are. Distinctiveness need not cost a fortune, and would be easy to do but I doubt it would happen. If it did, it would be an architect's "vision" of distinctive and once again we'd be stuck with top-down imposition of something that relates not one bit to the people in an area.

    • @WoLpH
      @WoLpH Před 5 lety +1

      To combat this issue in the Netherlands, several architects have included colors in the houses/streets so at least some distinctiveness is available. Obviously the issue is most apparent with newly built houses/blocks, the longer an area exists the more it will start to differentiate through different colours of paint, plants, etc.

    • @Chameleon1616
      @Chameleon1616 Před 5 lety +8

      I reject the argument that decoration has no function, aesthetics would not exist if they did not please people, and don’t all physical functions not in the end aim to please us by satisfying our needs? So why persecute something which does that directly?

    • @shadowranger937
      @shadowranger937 Před 5 lety +4

      when you follow form follows function, nobody buys your shit building and then vandals come in, but they're actually not the first ones the vandalize the area, they're just completing your work. Your building that was built for function then has no function because nobody wants to fucking use it.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 5 lety +2

      @@shadowranger937 I know this is a very popular theory but it honestly has no grounding whatsoever. Neighborhoods designed in modernists styles end up poor for the same reasons neighborhoods designed in other styles do and pretending otherwise is idealist bullshit. People are happily paying millions for apartments in Manhattan built in modernist styles while poor areas remain poor. The fact that the most expensive real estate in the world is found in modernist high rises shows that this theory has no grounding. The fact is that it doesn't matter how nice looking your building is, if it's built poorly, is in a bad location, and underfunded it will still be unpopular. It has never been proven that design has any direct affect on crime, income or any other social markers.

  • @Ancaryvan
    @Ancaryvan Před 3 lety +3

    One city comes to my mind when I hear the word Modern: Tokyo. You should do another video about Modern buildings in Tokyo. Especially the 80's era.

  • @davidtraugot1405
    @davidtraugot1405 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for this thoughtful analysis and critique of Modernist architecture. I appreciate functionality but not devoid of aesthetic sense. Beauty can be found in pleasing shape and proportion as well as in ornamentation. Thanks also for placing Modernism in its historical context in the post-World-War-II era. I'm slowly making my way through your online offerings since I found your channel. Best wishes to you!

    • @ARTiculations
      @ARTiculations  Před rokem

      Thank you David! Best wishes to you too 😊 and let me know if there are any other topics you’d like me to cover!

  • @FredrikHaugen
    @FredrikHaugen Před 3 lety +72

    There's a movement in Sweden called Arkitekturupproret(the architectural uprising) where people vote for the most ugly buildings recently built around Sweden. There is also the taunting of architects who, while designing these awful monstrosities, lives in picturesque old houses.
    As the late Terry Pratchett wrote: "Innovative", in this context, might come from the same lexicon as "daring" or "novel" to a career civil servant: it denotes "totally untried and untested, and we reserve judgement on how soon that flat roof is going to leak or those flimsy windows are going to fall out in a light breeze. Even though the building might end up as totally unfit for the purpose, by the time anyone notices we can put it down to normal structural deterioration. Or else we can make veiled suggestions that because the design was so new and innovative, the fault is really with the builders who put it up, or the buyer who uses the building. It's so radical a concept that they aren't able to look after it properly. Either way, it's not our fault if they persist in using it. In any case, anyone worrying about such petty things as whether or not the roof leaks on an award-winning building is self-evidently not a creative professional, and we don't need to waste any breath on non-creative garbage of that sort."

  • @Corporis
    @Corporis Před 5 lety +614

    Living in Silicon Valley, I see so many of these brands that supposedly have such strong internal cultures and identities, but exist in these lifeless buildings. PayPal is in the plainest glass cube ever and the Facebook campus is surrounded by boring walls of solitude. I feel like the exception miiiight be the Apple campus since their building reflects their product design?
    And then there’s the Google building which is the opposite and for the most part seems like a rainbow unicorn tornado ran through the circus

    • @sevensolaris
      @sevensolaris Před 5 lety +61

      Great point. The inside of Facebook has ugly, exposed AC vents on its ceiling. With their money, they could have frescos painted in every office, beautiful columns, etc. But Zuck wants everyone there to live in a dull, soulless building.

    • @Corporis
      @Corporis Před 5 lety +3

      Lindon Lamont I know that’s what they’re going for, but it’s not for me. Plus, no way I can get any work done with constant social interaction

    • @Kanal7Indonesia
      @Kanal7Indonesia Před 5 lety +5

      @@sevensolaris he's a Jew. :p

    • @spaceowl5957
      @spaceowl5957 Před 5 lety +23

      Apple's architecture seems very "polished", and "high quality", but I think it feels to sterile. I just don't like the interiors of apple stores, I think their campus is kept in a very similar style. Might communicate their brand well or whatever, but I just don't find it very appealing..

    • @scorpioninpink
      @scorpioninpink Před 5 lety +7

      @@sevensolaris Because he is dull and soulless.

  • @gaborjurina2839
    @gaborjurina2839 Před rokem +1

    I'm lucky to live in NYC, I reside in an amazing Brutalist building designed by I.M. Pei, we have a beautiful garden in the middle of the two buildings, there is a real sense of community here, I'm just a few block from some gorgeous Browns Stones and I often go to the West Village and admire Turn of the Century Architecture in the neighbourhood, I then go up Park Avenue and I'm astounded by the beauty of Mies van der Rohe's Seagrams Building and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill's Lever House, I can continue up and marvel at the Beauty of the Post Modern AT&T building by Phillip Johnson, There is beauty and value in all great architecture, we don't have to discount and teardown what has come before but rather learn and appreciate them in context as we move forward to a more sustainable form of architecture.

  • @mehornyasfk
    @mehornyasfk Před rokem +4

    They say a building is a physical representation of its architect's soul, which couldn't be more true in the case of Modernist architects: empty, hideous, inhuman, and devoid of emotions.

  • @filipposrafailkaripidis4203
    @filipposrafailkaripidis4203 Před 3 lety +218

    We slowly face an increase in Modern architecture in Germany which is obviously functional but boring. But I'm still happy that we have all these ancient cities and small towns which, when I compare them to most towns in the States, look like open air museums and let me breathe hundreds of years of history.

    • @epiclamp44
      @epiclamp44 Před 3 lety +4

      To be fair, the us only has like 300 years worth of architecture

    • @filipposrafailkaripidis4203
      @filipposrafailkaripidis4203 Před 3 lety +21

      @@epiclamp44 They could have even preserved 300 year old buildings, which honestly would be great when you look at 18th century Boston or New York. All these narrow streets of red brickhouses would have looked gorgeous nowadays.

    • @odetoajar
      @odetoajar Před 3 lety +2

      @@filipposrafailkaripidis4203 but even this way of thinking about European cities is a fallacy. Napoleon III tore down most of medieval Paris because he was inspired by the "modern" architectural style of London he encountered while in exile. London itself was rebuilt in this style after the fire of 1666, adhering not to the traditions of what had existed before, but what was the popular style of architecture of the time. What you talk about as somehow a practice that has only been taking place in the States has been taking place for as long as architecture has existed. Different generations continuously build, pull down, rebuild, burn down, remodel, reinterpret, or choose to preserve architecture.

    • @Arcaryon
      @Arcaryon Před 3 lety +9

      @@odetoajar There is a large difference between changing a style to something that seems more "inspiring" and creating one more grey glass box because it’s simply the most cost efficient way to maximize space for human settlements. Just like there is a "too much" in architecture, there is certainly a "too little".

    • @triplemoyagames4195
      @triplemoyagames4195 Před 3 lety +2

      I think a major issue is the colors. Guaranteed if the paint jobs were bright, it would look better. Or simply adding vertical foresta

  • @themore-you-know
    @themore-you-know Před 3 lety +168

    "Form Follows Function" was always flawed from its very inception, because...
    Form IS a function.
    People seek beauty in their environment just as much as in the clothing and food they eat.
    Not recognizing this simple truth would otherwise lead us to the conclusion that prisons, with their 4 straight walls and stale food, are the models to achieve in all things.

    • @claudiadarling9441
      @claudiadarling9441 Před 2 lety +2

      It makes more sense in the context of Louis Sullivan's original conception. Clearly he was not a man afraid of ornament. I think he was talking more about how space is used, how it can aid the function of a building. So for example, the proscenium arches of the Auditorium Building help focus the eye on the stage, they aren't distracting. Yet they are also beautiful in their own right. Same can be said for the windows of the Carson, Scott, Pirie building. They allow light to poor in, and even have some of the function uniformity of later office buildings. Yet there is also a turret to break up the box, and the street level is delightfully encrusted in Sullivan's trademark geometric flower designs.

    • @taeganh
      @taeganh Před 2 lety +7

      Modern architecture is the soylent green of architecture. Pure nutritional supplement and nothing more at the cost of our humanity

  • @quatschk0pfr.w.676
    @quatschk0pfr.w.676 Před 3 lety +4

    I feel like it lacks heart, it feels soulless and cold.

  • @joshuaridgway3230
    @joshuaridgway3230 Před 2 lety +2

    When I hear form follows function , I interpret it as “Make it work/function first, since if it doesn’t do what it was designed to do, it is worthless and ugly no matter how many frills it gets. Then you can worry about making it pretty. But by all means make it pretty.” I might be alone in that, but it’s what I think.

    • @gardenjoy5223
      @gardenjoy5223 Před rokem

      Seems the way things look outside, you stand rather alone. There is a full stop made at function. The pretty seems of no consequence. At least not pretty by the standards of the vast majority of humans.
      How do people get accepted into a college for architecture anyway? They answer this: "Which of the following psychiatric diseases do you display? Cross at least two." ?

  • @padraicloingsigh421
    @padraicloingsigh421 Před 5 lety +237

    I'm so sick of unnatural color transitions and hard edges. I live in Seattle and they are turning this place into multicolored lego towers and reflective shit that looks like something the borg would build.

    • @kal6118
      @kal6118 Před 3 lety +2

      Nice insult. 😂

    • @ata5855
      @ata5855 Před 3 lety +5

      Sounds like insane toddlers are in control

    • @rossgossman6530
      @rossgossman6530 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ata5855 they are

    • @ovh992
      @ovh992 Před 3 lety +3

      There is no such thing as "unnatural color". Actually you have been taught what is a natural color in architecture and what is not.

    • @BuizelCream
      @BuizelCream Před 3 lety +2

      Reminds me how shocked and disgusted I felt when the traditional Ninjago city in the series was transformed into a bustling techno-city just immediately after the finale of a season.

  • @OmegaWolf747
    @OmegaWolf747 Před 4 lety +243

    I love the old elements! Bring them back!

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 4 lety +19

      What about mix'em together with the new ones (Art Deco)?

    • @brandonluker3660
      @brandonluker3660 Před 3 lety +3

      @@TheBlueCreeper- exactly!

    • @xavierdomenico
      @xavierdomenico Před 3 lety +1

      I will!

    • @LebaneseBaron
      @LebaneseBaron Před 3 lety +6

      @@TheBlueCreeper- I am not particularly very bothered by modernism if cities remain walkable and have good public transportation (this american car-owner mentality NEEDS to be vanished asap), the really soulless part of new cities is the lack of human scale in them. About the style, I am staunchly against destroying neoclassical building to give room to modern ones and I think cities function as cohese places: styles should remain uniformized inside them to maintain a sense of identity and not put a 200 year old pub next to a giant tower. Art Deco does look nice, don't get this reply wrong, its just about creating streets which don't have this insane disparity of styles inside themselves. Simple neoclassical or art deco houses/buildings, with colorful façades and a good ammount of trees (important!) around them. City planning needs to be local, scaled to human proportions and beautiful (also not overcrowded).

    • @TheBlueCreeper-
      @TheBlueCreeper- Před 3 lety +3

      @@LebaneseBaron Yeah yeah I get your point. I personally like to see new buildings next to old ones but I understand what you mean. And the car thing is a thing I also kinda dislike.

  • @dannyeckerd9324
    @dannyeckerd9324 Před 3 lety +2

    Imagine a cathedral the height of your average skyscraper... Let that sink in.

  • @CasualPhilosophy
    @CasualPhilosophy Před 2 lety

    Thanks for this video! I'm really interested in the ideas, values and (ahem) philosophy behind architecture.
    As for modern architecture, hasn't it become it's own kind of style, together in history with things like Victorian or neo-classical architecture? It even has its own vernacular forms, like Sarasota or Miami Modern?
    I think the "form follows function" ideal was a kind of false consciousness. They *thought* they were pursuing pure, unadorned function...but many of the design choices were clearly deliberate and contingent efforts to achieve a certain "look". The whole thing was shot through with pretence and an undercover aesthetic which we can appreciate just like any other.

  • @jonathanng2390
    @jonathanng2390 Před 3 lety +74

    When I was a little kid, I used my mom's Tupperware to have modern buildings incorporated in my model railroad layout. Note to self.. To design modern buildings, just buy Tupperware and trace it out onto a blueprint. Done

  • @rolandxb3581
    @rolandxb3581 Před 3 lety +182

    It's really messed up when the only acceptable architecture must be "revolutionary." A lot of implicit elitism as well.

    • @karlik4861
      @karlik4861 Před 2 lety +40

      "revolutionary" bc the millions of people throughout the millennias where just all wrong... I cant imagine modern Architects aren't just arrogant dolts.

    • @anotheryoutubeaccount5259
      @anotheryoutubeaccount5259 Před 2 lety

      Wrong.

    • @ROCKSTAR3291
      @ROCKSTAR3291 Před 2 lety +7

      They care more about status and recognition among their peers, not the public who will have to live with their revolutionary architecture for decades to come

  • @Mima_the_vengeful_spirit
    @Mima_the_vengeful_spirit Před 3 lety +3

    depressing to look at..and when you gotta work within all infrastructure system (electric wireing; piping; etc)...it becomes hell.
    I'm an electric worker and I really hate modern buildings due to how hellish it is behind the scenes

  • @caissafrass6631
    @caissafrass6631 Před 3 lety +2

    In my opinion, a well designed modernist or brutalist building that reflects its environment can be beautiful and lovely to live in. The issue is that the vast majority of them as mediocrely designed and only making superficial passes at what makes the styles they’re referencing distinct, and in doing so miss out on what makes them beautiful. There are (particularly brutalist) buildings in stark, modern styles I love, and I think it’s a beautiful style of architecture, but that doesn’t deny the fact that modern cities are full of ill-designed boxes that block the natural light and present as cold, imposing, and ugly.

  • @juanpablocorreiaecheverria2857

    I don’t hate modern architecture, I hate giant simple boxes in the middle of our downtowns. There are awesome modern homes here in Brasilia, Brazil.

  • @Mrlaiobrum
    @Mrlaiobrum Před 3 lety +59

    Talk about modern urban planning. I live in a new modern city that it's streets have no names, just numbers and it's sooooo depressing

    • @cactusman1771
      @cactusman1771 Před 3 lety +3

      I prefer the numbers makes it easier to navigate.

    • @Mrlaiobrum
      @Mrlaiobrum Před 3 lety +6

      @@cactusman1771 Yes! It's great to navigate when you don't know the city. But when you live in it, don't you agree that it feels like the places don't even have a name? That you start using the name of stores, churches, schools, hospitals to refer to places, because no one can relate to numbers?
      I was born and raised in a city that only 2 avenues have names and when I ask where someone lives and they say numbers I can't figure out immediately where it is. I have to look at a map. Basically 110 north, street 23, number 31, means nothing to the human brain, even though it means a lot to a computer lol

    • @cactusman1771
      @cactusman1771 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Mrlaiobrum I grew up in a city with only numbers. So the street names were just the number ( nineteen hundred for example). I find street names to be more confusing because there is no information in the name. like I can't determine where cherry St. Is from willow St. Without already knowing ,asking or looking it up. With number I can think of the city like a cartesian grid and get a rough idea where to go.
      I also prefer people to give me an address to somewhere rather than landmark navigation.

  • @tmnt3998
    @tmnt3998 Před rokem +4

    I absolutely love when they cut down all the trees in the area and pave everything with snow bright tiles. The sun then warms up my eyes so nicely from the top and from the bottom too, and I can't forget how much I love getting natural sweat showers, I love being drenched in sweat and don't have take showers all the time. Thank you architects.

  • @animehuntress9018
    @animehuntress9018 Před 3 lety

    A form of defining a society and culture is to look at their art. Art can be many different things, including buildings, or more especially buildings for they are where we live and breathe. Looking at some of the ancient ruins that attract so many tourists both in modern times and even when they were built, you can see that older cultures were aware of this.

  • @Kodeb8
    @Kodeb8 Před 3 lety +2

    It's actually kinda funny to see the hatred for Modernism. Between the 70s to around the 90s, big cities, tall sky scrapers, and flashy lights, were heavily romanticized by movies and pop culture, but now I've noticed that we're heading towards the opposite direction.

  • @ashwadhwani
    @ashwadhwani Před 5 lety +71

    Building huge boxes on our streets is NOT 'architecture' it's engineering at it's ugliest

  • @FannomacritaireSuomi
    @FannomacritaireSuomi Před 3 lety +47

    Because architecture is a piece of "art" that is present in everyone's everyday life. No-one forces you to watch certain genre of movies, read certain books, listen to some music or go to an art exhibition. But seeing and experiencing architecture is unavoidable, and it should thus be created and maintained with a specific set of rules that forbid any insane move being taken.

  • @jackkilman8726
    @jackkilman8726 Před rokem +1

    It's not the glass skyscrapers I hate but the generic concrete boxes that now dominate our shopping and eating districts. When every store and restaurant, regardless of its size, resembles a warehouse, it sucks the soul out of every community.

  • @Jay-jq6bl
    @Jay-jq6bl Před 2 lety +1

    On a positive note, everyone can feel a sigh of relief that the tower on the left at 3:50 is being torn down.

  • @CityBeautiful
    @CityBeautiful Před 5 lety +1332

    Excellent video! I really dislike Modernism's lack of concern for the human scale. We went from bricks and divided lite windows to concrete slabs and plate glass. Boo.

    • @aston-s
      @aston-s Před 5 lety +47

      Ah see Modern architects have clearly planned for when us puny humans have been crushed by a superior robot up rising. Which is not being planned currently fellow human.

    • @JarrodBaniqued
      @JarrodBaniqued Před 5 lety +13

      Plate glass isn’t bad, really, as long as that and Modernist principles are used *sparingly*, and only serve certain sections of developments with overall concern for human scale. I love the cozy, energy-saving designs of Village Homes and the wonderful fusion of color, corrugation, concern, and glass of West Village, both in Davis, California. There’s also the subtle incorporation of references to the surrounding wood- and masonry-based 12th-century and Victorian architecture into the Modernist design of London Bridge station.

    • @subversivelysurreal3645
      @subversivelysurreal3645 Před 5 lety +2

      City Beautiful : I agree! ☝🏾It’s a pity War has destroyed so much!

    • @thepedrothethethe6151
      @thepedrothethethe6151 Před 5 lety +4

      And the “Modelur”?

    • @rfldss89
      @rfldss89 Před 5 lety +15

      Yes! This a 1000 times! I dont dislike Modern architecture, but how can we justify giant atriums in this age of eco-consciousness? I'm not saying ceilings higher than 3 feet should be abolished, and I don't dislike the look of a giant open space, but most implementations of atria just seem like a huge waste of space and ressources after the first 5 seconds of awe.

  • @professorkeroessaphdinbage8236

    Making people feel safe and happy or content IS a function of architecture.

  • @JK23111
    @JK23111 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Architects spending 4+ years and tens of thousands of dollars at university to learn how to make big boxes of glass and steel

  • @Sakuyamon
    @Sakuyamon Před 3 lety +1

    I think that both are important, everything has a time and place. I dont particularly like modern architecture, but it doesnt mean that you cant do something nice with it. I wish we could build more classical stuff, but I do realize we cant really go off and build a Versailles every time we need a building.

  • @herrboeing
    @herrboeing Před 5 lety +290

    look a Victorian building and compare with a modern box of glass and steel, what looks better?
    Classic Architecture is awesome

    • @gabimilea6140
      @gabimilea6140 Před 3 lety +25

      i think the modern box of glass and steel does :p

    • @jerrymartin7019
      @jerrymartin7019 Před 3 lety +4

      METAL B A W X E S

    • @diatoniclemonade3687
      @diatoniclemonade3687 Před 3 lety +11

      I think there can be beauty in both!

    • @athunderbolth9646
      @athunderbolth9646 Před 3 lety +15

      The Victorian bldg is a piece of unplanned chaos in the inside while putting up a facade on the outside. Thats why we term it Victorian..it is dishonest, a facade that lies to you....like make up. I suggest you think beyond just looks because architecture isnt about pretty pictures. It has to be wholesome inside and out. There are many modern buildings that serve that purpose.

    • @ericksecev
      @ericksecev Před 3 lety +4

      Victorian is not Classic Architecture

  • @Jeff1999100
    @Jeff1999100 Před 5 lety +484

    Because old imperialist architecture looks good. Simple as that.

    • @hedgehog3180
      @hedgehog3180 Před 5 lety +12

      I would dread to live in a city that's just the Imperial war ministry copied and pasted all over.

    • @samsulh314
      @samsulh314 Před 5 lety +12

      Nah fam. If I was a billionaire, I'd want a modern mansion made of glass and steel. Not some old creepy castle.

    • @Jeff1999100
      @Jeff1999100 Před 5 lety +38

      @@samsulh314 well, renaisance or baroque mansions are not that disappointing, no? If you are talking about those old medieval buildings than yeah, I concur 😀

    • @yalkn2073
      @yalkn2073 Před 5 lety +1

      Nope

    • @gunarsmiezis9321
      @gunarsmiezis9321 Před 5 lety +6

      @@samsulh314 If I was incredibly rich my home would look like this.
      www.google.com/search?q=jelgavas+pils&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwityOPJ4ZXgAhWIfywKHUrRDvgQ_AUIDigB&biw=1920&bih=969#imgrc=NRgRcWJOgfrG3M:

  • @MatildaHinanawi
    @MatildaHinanawi Před rokem

    The way I usually distinguish between style names and everyday wording is to use the word "style". So if "Modern" is insufficient, then "Modern style" is even clearer, as "style" implies it is clearly different from just *being* modern. Maybe there's an even better word but it's still better than not using any word, whenever there is a need to distinguish the two.