This highly acclaimed survey of modern architecture and its origins has become a classic since it first appeared in 1980, and has helped to shape architectural practice and discourse worldwide. For this extensively revised and updated fifth edition, Kenneth Frampton has added a new section that explores in detail the modernist tradition in architecture across the globe in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. He examines the varied ways in which architects are not only responding to the geographical, climatic, material and cultural contexts of their buildings, but also pursuing distinct lines of approach that emphasize topography, morphology, sustainability, materiality habitat and civic form. It remains an essential book for all students of architecture and architectural history.
Table of Contents
Introduction Part I: Cultural developments and predisposing techniques 1750 1939 Part II: A critical history 1836 1967 Part III: Critical transformations 1925 90 Part IV: World Architecture and the Modern Movement Afterword: Architecture in the Age of Globalization