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@Sohave2 ай бұрын
This video is gold for me! I have long been looking for a school that taught classical architecture, had this existed two decades earlier I would have gone that way with my career.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa2 ай бұрын
😂The main problem is always cost. want to be as crazy as architectural design. Construction and maintenance costs always add up to its beauty
@Novusod2 ай бұрын
Have you ever heard of "Tartaria" theory? I think you should make a video on the so called Qanon of Architecture. It is not the merits of the theory that are important but they way it has spread by feeding off the latent backlash against modernism. The public is so fed up with modernism at this point that they will entertain any nonsense that can possibly save them from the dystopian hell hole that is our modern built environment.
@rocketman10582 ай бұрын
I agree with the concept of architectural "brainwashing", I've used this term before and it truly describes well the modern teaching process. Another problem is that cities are designed by the architects, and they don't manage well what's built and what's not, hence modern public spaces suck!
@Sam-wq9qo2 ай бұрын
Yo make a video on indian architecture of its temple carvings and steeless and cementless construction style
@AlexanderofMiletus2 ай бұрын
“What I wanted to learn, isn’t being taught” I feel you bro
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
It’s sad - but much can all be found in books!
@gabrielg.240116 күн бұрын
pretty much everything these days has gone to shit
@JM-hf9bl15 күн бұрын
@@gabrielg.2401yes, the degeneracy is real and everywhere. On a good note, I'll take beautiful buildings designed with the help of AI over human ego driven ugly ones
@DeltaXrayCharlie13 күн бұрын
Feels like everything
@todorkovacevic3 күн бұрын
Happened to me when I came to art school wanting to learn how to draw and paint
@lyndonarana94082 ай бұрын
As an Architect myself, it's not the modernist designs that irks me. It's getting to that design mentality directly WITHOUT studying or even appreciating the classical designs. We should be masters of BOTH, it's never too late to study. Great video!
@raconteur51952 ай бұрын
City and state government employees are the biggest problem. They approve and even require ugly modern buildings.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
So, no studying classical designs? Why not learn from it? An architect doesn't necessarily need to use it directly, only learn - that is the point of this video! Thank you for replying :)
@lykuned2 ай бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city His point was that every architect should know classical architecture even if you are going to design modernist works.
@mrkeogh9 күн бұрын
Architects don't understand why (some) classical architecture works so well. PoMo demonstrated this failure. They've thought that stripping classicism down to it's "essence" and embarking on political polemics that were completely irrelevant to ordinary people was somehow a way out of the dead-end that the International Style lead them to. Subitizing and visual processing efficency are probably the two most important aspects of why classical designs "work" but contemporary architects have convinced themselves ideologically that (early 20th century) science cannot shed light on how a building affects a human being.
@paolomasone37548 күн бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city I don't think that Lyndonarana said not to study classical design; just the opposite. I read that lyndonarana said to also study modern and other examples of good design.
@thebreadbringer2 ай бұрын
I'm very glad to hear someone say it. It's infuriating how anti-common people a lot of the artistic academic world is. They keep forcing works into public spaces that people without an art history education can not appreciate because it hinges entirely on external context rather than the work itself being appealing.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Absolutely - the 'ivory tower' problem is a huge one and artists need to take this into account somehow.
@bobtaylor1702 ай бұрын
I'm 72, and consider that much of my life has been compromised by the grotesque ugliness of contemporary architecture. It seems like a horrible joke, but The Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health may be the epitome of outrageousness. I don't know much about what The Lou Ruvo Center does, but suspect that much of it has to do with treatment of traumatic brain injury patients. It's dreadful that the building was designed as it was. However, as a TBI survivor, I can't help seeing the bleak humor in it. In America, The National Civic Arts Society is fighting the good fight for a return of beauty to design. I urge everyone who reads this to go to their website. President Trump had signed an executive order which authorized that in the future, government buildings were to be designed according to classical standards. Of course, Biden reversed this. Is anyone surprised?
@mitchellcouchman14442 ай бұрын
All of the academic world has become anti-common people not just the artistic side
@sheridansherr89742 ай бұрын
Yes!👍
@kaasmeester59032 ай бұрын
Very well said. To me, it’s not about doing away with concepts like “form follows function”, but about accepting that a building’s beauty - as appreciated by common people - is very much a function of a building. I’m so glad that this new architectural movement seems to be gaining traction.
@jelsner50772 ай бұрын
I have been crying for another Renaissance in Architecture for years. So wonderful to see it happening. I dearly hope this goes "mainstream."
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
It's up to the new generation of architects! If they demand change, it can happen
@matswessling66002 ай бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_citybeware us from thousands of museal copies of old styles. Do domething new! Dont be lazy and just copy! Find out the real reason people like old bulldings and create new styles from these basic pronciples!
@adrienm19642 ай бұрын
Imagine if we called it a "Neorenaissance" Era in this search for regaining tradition.
@matswessling66002 ай бұрын
@@adrienm1964 ? regaining tradition? no-thanks. We can do houses more beautiful but there is really no need to rectrate old styles.
@jelsner50772 ай бұрын
@@matswessling6600 The original Renaissance architecture was a "rebirth" in interest of the Classical era. The Baroque continued on that theme, making it its own unique style. The Beaux Arts school freshened classical architecture once again to fit a new century. What they all have in common is the base understanding of the original Classical style, harkening back to ancient Greece and Rome, but tweaking it a little to fit the then contemporary time. We could do that again for the 21st century. But we have to first teach the basics: Proportion. The Classic Orders. Perspective. The importance of light and shadow...Play with the basics and make them relevant to today. But don't toss them out completely. They WORK. They can still work. Instead of "Neo-Renaissance" or "Renaissance Revival" (which the Victorians have already taken) I would prefer to call this movement something original.
@ivanarchit2 ай бұрын
I studied architecture in Ukraine in Lviv Polythechnic University and in the first 2 courses of study we studied how people used to build before in 15-17 cent., we made drawings of historical buildings, plans, sections, painted with watercolors, it was studing of classical architefcture the same as in the University of Notre Dame, and at the same time we studied how to design modern architecture. For me it was a big surprise that in the German universities where I finished my master's degree, students did not study this, and 99% of students could not create correct technical sketches by hand, in addition, to enter the faculty of architecture in Ukraine, you have to take a creative exam - draw an antique column, an abstract composition and solve an architectural task, in Germany you just submit your school grades and that's it, so many people in this profession are amateurs here
@mike_teals2 ай бұрын
Закончил второй курс программы архитектуры в одном из московских вузов... Действительно, поначалу изучали класич. архи, но теперь, когда пришла пора делать свои проекты, преподы с ума сходят когда предлагаешь им поработать в традиционной стилистике... Начинают тараторить что-то про цыганщину( Очень не хочется думать, что оставшиеся 3 года бакалавриата буду проектировать хлам с параметрическими фасадами...
@ivanarchit2 ай бұрын
@@mike_teals sorry, I don't understand bulgarian, can you speak normall language, like English for example?
@o.38252 ай бұрын
We also not making fire with wooden sticks we use a lighter. Using the computer is no issue it's only how you use it. As an architect myself who did the long way from technical school to Uni i think that's what most architects miss. Knowledge of how you make/build it not just drawing with a pencil.
@allermenchenaufder2 ай бұрын
@@o.3825. Modernist who broke away from traditional curriculum were very creative. Disappointing how the 21st century stepped into the wrong path. . .
@adaslesniak2 ай бұрын
@@o.3825 If you can't draw a shape by hand... it's not about hand, it's about not seeing clearly in your imagination. So drawing by hand is training your imagination, not let the computer drop ideas on me and I'll merge them.
@lochlansmith66112 ай бұрын
I just graduated from college and it was this channel, right as it started, that introduced me to traditional architecture and urbanism. My last year of college, my architecture professors didn’t like my work because it wasn’t modern. My professors were always trying to get me to design modern things. I'm so excited to keep learning about traditional architecture and urbanism and practice it in my career.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
That is fantastic to read - thank you for watching and I hope you find everything on your journey!
@iamsoogi2 ай бұрын
I know! they hated my work too because I was trying to design primitive huts and circular plans which was supposed to be about community. Modern architecture is for the modern dystopia we live in today- isolated and in despair.
@Novusod2 ай бұрын
Your professors are a bunch of old farts who have their heads stuck up their ass. They don't realize how much their skit is hated by the general public.
@awakening88872 ай бұрын
We need a million more of you. Don’t ever give up. Your work is badly needed.
@futureradius2 ай бұрын
I think i was like you in the first years of college, but at some point i tried to open up to their ideas and understand what they really want. I found that they cared just as much and were excited about materiality and beauty. They were just searching it beyond what is already known, which tbh complicates the search a lot haha :D Nothing wrong with dusting off the books about ornamentation from the different points in time in the past
@tomybartok992 ай бұрын
It's not just architecture. Everything is turning soo boring. Cost saving and minimalisim has seeped into everything and has gone too far
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
I feel something is fundamentally wrong with our economy. As I’m not an economist, I cannot exactly explain what though… Maybe the ‘Bitcoin Urbanists’ are on to something?
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
I feel something is fundamentally wrong with our economy. As I’m not an economist, I cannot exactly explain what though… Maybe the ‘Bitcoin Urbanists’ are on to something?
@tomybartok992 ай бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city I believe unrestricted consumerism is catching up with us. Infinite growth within a finite system is not sustainable long term. But businessmen still value quantity over quality, which is a shame.
@vmoses19792 ай бұрын
I think the impact of the allure of money and fame is missing from the video. To become a starchitect - a term invented in the last 40 years or so - you have to design something different and outlandish. Something that really sticks out so that your friends in the academy can pronounce you the new new thing. And then clients will flock to you and then each time you have to design something even more different and outlandish to keep the new clients happy and keep the rigamarole going. Architecture now is not about designing useful structures for all stakeholders - it's about maximizing one's own income and reputation.
@royalecrafts62522 ай бұрын
Well....people dont have money or want to take risks to design something different or special, is not a problem of architectural design, thats just a sympton
@maxsch.77432 ай бұрын
Saying we don't need old materials and ideas because we have new ones is like to say we don't need teeth because we have blenders.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
😂 brilliant way to put it!
@sorbabaric12 ай бұрын
And now a lot of problems with teeth are attributed to our modern soft diet . . . Along with the receding weak jaw. Which is also perceived as less attractive. Chewing food helps develop strong even well placed teeth, in well developed jaws that provide space and foundation for the teeth.
@johnd.21142 ай бұрын
Basically the equivalent of replacing all food with slop because they can. A truly revolting mentality.
@ladycactus11012 күн бұрын
@@sorbabaric1Humans need MEAT!
@paolomasone37548 күн бұрын
there are plenty of modern buildings that use traditional masonry, wood, concrete, glass, ceramics, metals, and other materials found in historical architecture.
@30035XD2 ай бұрын
I dropped my dream of becoming an architect for reasons shared here. Now at 40, it feels too late for me. I feel personally robbed, along with others who prefer living in beautiful spaces instead of brutalistic nightmares. Thank you for the beautiful work you do, sir.
@damiano_ferraro2 ай бұрын
You don't need a degree to be an architect, and is never too late if you have talent.
@Huma_RS2 ай бұрын
Seconding that it's never too late, best wishes!
@glazedbeachbro39262 ай бұрын
Yes understandable
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
It's never too late. Start drawing every day, read a number of great books and you can become very good still
@30035XD2 ай бұрын
Thanks to all for the support. I have a dream and it might still be worth fighting for it.
@ReyneArturiaPenededragon2 ай бұрын
What I hate most about postmodern architecture is the hypocrisy, especially its terms like "false historical". With this false idea they impose a bad reconstruction of a part of the building, if they are not rebuilding it, they are ruining it. The other term that I hate the most is historicism, but modern architects have been copying Bauhaus for more than 100 years. Modern architects contradict themselves, or are hypocrites, because when they imitate a style they are modern and original, but if an architect wants to build a building with a traditional design is treated as average. The other problem is eclecticism, modern architects criticize eclectisism, but they have been mixing concepts of modern architecture, in themselves they are eclepticists, but when they do it it is fine, if an architect wants to mix concepts of human history they treat him as If you are doing something wrong. The last point is that modern architecture goes against the concepts of the Bauhaus, since many buildings are useless, roofs that retain water, unnecessary shapes that increase the cost of the building, above all they are narcissistic because they design only for their own. ego, the monsters they create are just to draw attention to themselves that's fine. These people are the ones who criticized and demonized as "useless and banal" the sumptuous and beautiful facades of beauty arts architecture. When beauty attracts attention they criticize it, but attracting attention is good if it is to inflate the ego of a mediocre postmodern architect.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Absolutely true, the hypocrisy is what bothers me most as well. If architects are supposed to have total design freedom, then why isn’t it allowed to design traditionally? Etc, etc.. And referring to Bauhaus is by now also referring to a design tradition, but apparently that is allowed
@gingi4532 ай бұрын
technological advances like a good flat roof or glass window are good, but do not replace the human intellect that can also create sensual art..with details, shapes and even colors, that the modern cannot even recognize as part of a public communication about space and architecture..we need our cultural routes back..the modern is for a money-slave society not for intelligent and creative people..
@Novusod2 ай бұрын
We need to stop calling Modernist architecture "modern." There is nothing modern about it. It is just a bunch of stale ideas from the 1930s and '40s that have been rehashed over and over again. Calling 80 year old ideas modern is absurd and we need to stop calling it that. These styles should be called Mid-Century Simplicity and Abstraction or MCSA for short. This is the first step in making this crap go away. Rename it, can it, and dump it in the trash bin of history under failed ideas.
@unternehme2 ай бұрын
The current minimalist dullness is the result of the denigration of historicism and eclectism, which instead I find the most fascinating cultural and architectural movements ever. Instead of "loving to hate" anything before modernism (while hypocritically and mindlessly replicating the same instructions from the 1940s), I believe we should strip away the modernist dogmatism that sees anything historicist and eclectic as intrinsically evil and cherish the beauty and playfulness it has created and that most people around the world appreciate.
@thebreadbringer2 ай бұрын
I couldn't agree more. As much as I personally dislike modernist architecture, I only hate it for the way that it has become dogmatic, elitist, and intolerant of other artistic movements.
@tjbren5762 ай бұрын
I was very disappointed when I started my college career in architecture. I was already restoring old buildings and had design philosophies shoved at me that I did not agree with or want to have any part in. It eventually ended my desire to be an architect. I spent the next 40 years restoring and designing historically inspired spaces, including my own homes.
@paolomasone37548 күн бұрын
Good for you! I agree that architecture school faculties are full of a$$h@les! I taught at one for a few years and regret being one of those despicables a few times. I did teach studios on classical design, however...
@Demi-Son2 ай бұрын
I just came back from Austria and I met an Austrian student who is studying Architecture in Vienna. I asked him about his thoughts on modern architecture and why there are no beautiful buildings anymore, he said "A part of the reason is that whenever we (the students) draft old style buildings for our lecturer, it is immediately dismissed on the grounds of it being seen as "copying" or not "nothing new". Then when we draft something Modern, it's approved". Shame, especially since Vienna has some beautiful buildings, as well as all of Austria.
@daxisperry76442 ай бұрын
Sounds like the stereotypical idea of New = Better Old = Bad Change = Progress But there’s no thought to bad change or good change. SOMETIMES the people in the past got it right. Why not keep the good parts (like the beautiful architecture)?
@Demi-Son2 ай бұрын
@@daxisperry7644 It's real conservatism. You would think: "Why not combine the beauty and majesty of the old architecture, with the convenience and efficiency of modern technology". If the lecturer wanted something "new", why not try that?
@daxisperry76442 ай бұрын
@@Demi-Son amen
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
An interesting case is the Luftwaffe headquarters built during the Third Reich. It truly is a classic case of brutalist architecture. When one considers how the Luftwaffe destroyed massive sections of beautiful and historic European architectural and cultural history, it seems an apt style for their HQ. The retaliation in carpet bombing by the Allies then led to a vicious circle. The loser was Europe as a whole. The controlling elite at Western architectural schools would do well to study the Luftwaffe HQ and reflect on the destructive implications (on aesthetic, cultural and spiritual levels) of their policy misdirection.
@productivitywithphilipp2 ай бұрын
Unfortunately, most of the new buildings in Vienna look like they were built in Minecraft
@Admre2 ай бұрын
Modernist buildings get worse with age. Traditional buildings get better with age as they begin to look more “lived in”
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Agree!
@bensonboys66092 ай бұрын
Absolutely! The more fringe/new something is, the faster it goes out of style. I love the looks of the city blocks shown in the video! They are gorgeous! They looked good the day they were made and look good now. I wonder if it will ever be in style to intentionally weather a building/new development to make it look established.
@FranceFloorball1Ай бұрын
I live in an European city, where we have huge amounts of old buildings. By the look of them, they most of them were built in the 18th and 19th century. They are still in use and are maintained. How sustainable is that? They look very nice and especially so after they get cleaned off the 100 years of muck on them. They of course have their own problems like ridiculous room height: something like 4 meters, where a front door can be 2 by 3 meters. That height wastes huge amount of energy in winter and it also wastes vertical space. The waste of space can be limited a little by making a loft, but you can't have a loft in every room. Also staircases don't often have space for an elevator, which makes life in upper floors difficult. Adding the room height with that and fourth floor is in modern terms sixth floor apartment without an elevator. Not very convenient.
@MajasDadАй бұрын
That depends entirely on the quality of materials used.
@fulippuannaghiti1965Ай бұрын
How would you stop an unstoppable trend such as mass production and globalization? Inaccessibility, strong values, affinity with nature and slow pace are what helped us to get the best art in the world. Once we started industrialization, automation, accessibility and even worse AI and 3D printers, we have access to a cheap fast product so industrial minimalism is what we get. Whenever a new aesthetic trend similar to the classical one will come back it will not be less mass produced, industrialised, made affordable and accessible than any minimalistic design. A big reset is what we need, we are already a saturated society.
@YoJesusMorales2 ай бұрын
I like how the student was talking about it, the challenges old architects faced and their solutions for it informed their design, that's how it should be. I don't particularly care if it's replicating a classical historical design, just make it look good while tackling the local challenges and give it that local aesthetic touch.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Couldn’t agree more!
@hedzerroodenburgvermaat50082 ай бұрын
So recognizable! During my time at university I remember a student who was told by a teacher that he could better leave architecture school after he had shown his traditional design. During my first design studio, a student in my group who designed a traditional house got the lowest grade of the group; and guess what the others designed? A modernist house of course, because this is what the teacher seemed to appreciate. This has to change!
@Art-is-craft2 ай бұрын
That’s because many do not understand there is a philosophy behind all this hideous design.
@miguel310512 күн бұрын
What you call modernist was probably about fluid space, clean interiors, clever insertion on the context and multipurpose solutions. What you call traditional was probably about rigid schemes, outdated decoration, building understood as an isolated composition and fake historic look. Here you are some possible reasons for the grades. It's not about styles. It's about contemporary answers to contemporary problems...
@Art-is-craft11 күн бұрын
@@miguel3105 Traditional or classical design is a philosophy of natural design. It is based on human creation.
@SirThomasHarber2 ай бұрын
This is spot on. I grew up thinking I'd become an architect. I went to the University of Minnesota for Architecture and lost my love for it because it was a brainwashing factory for modernism and sustainability. I ended up in marketing.
@user-yk1cw8im4h2 ай бұрын
That’s even worst then lmao
@o.38252 ай бұрын
Thank god marketing is no brainwashing factory ;)
@futureradius2 ай бұрын
Sounds like you see sustainability as something negative, what do you mean with that?
@raconteur51952 ай бұрын
Let's force our cities to stop building modernism. Isn't that the best solution?
@SirThomasHarber2 ай бұрын
@@futureradiusnot per se, but it was overemphasized in my opinion compared to other critical factors in design.
@Ooopsiedazi2 ай бұрын
As a interior design student, I feel rather drained as my love for ornate classical and humane design are at conflict with most of my peers prefer for minimalism.
@andybrice27112 ай бұрын
Get good at both, it's all about context. You wouldn't want a minimalist pub, and you wouldn't want an ornate dental surgery.
@tristanthamm5052 ай бұрын
I actually prefer minimalism for interior design, because it allows for more space which I think is what is most important for the most amount of people. However exterior design operates under a different paradigm and should be focused on beauty.
@andybrice27112 ай бұрын
@@tristanthamm505 Yeah, I know what you mean, there is something cool about classical building with clean modern interiors. Like St Pancras Station. Or National Trust tearooms.
@CharlesKruger1942Ай бұрын
You can do that with modern design. This video is worthless. Bad design is bad design. It’s not about modern vs traditional
@lagringa7518Ай бұрын
Because they've either never traveled, think it will be easier to keep clean (not) or that's all they see being pushed by interior designers... and frankly most people are sheep and think they have to follow 'trends' because they have no taste or style of their own. For example I lived in Italy for 25 years, when I first got there pointy witches toe shoes were all the rage... thank god that finally ended, then the last 15 years everything was grey inside and out, tile, paint, furniture... but in northern Italy it's grey all winter long, why the hell would you want that in your home on a cold, freezing winter night???!! Actually the Italians (not all but most of the youngsters) are worse at following trends than Americans are, it's just dumb. Baa. Be yourself and embrace what makes you happy in your nest, and your job as a future Interior Designer is to lead them to the warmth of an eclectic interior with some character that doesn't look like they could efficiently dissect a neighbor on their kitchen island. 🤣
@toniderdon2 ай бұрын
I'm planning on building my own traditional neighborhood in the future. Pray for me that I get enough money to start that project :D
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
That sounds like an awesome project!
@nt32642 ай бұрын
GOOD LUCK!!!
@Sohave2 ай бұрын
That is ambitious but the best of luck to you!
@bradmakesgains87792 ай бұрын
How will we know if you succeed? Do you have a site scoped out or a name for it? I already want to live there.
@lolajl2 ай бұрын
Have you looked at Andrew Gould? He has interesting concepts for traditional neighborhoods.
@Rahshu2 ай бұрын
I hope a renaissance is occurring! It'd be nice to see new things going up and not feel either indifferent or grossed out, especially when it's amidst beautiful classical stuff. It'd be nice to look forward to something for a change.
@Connor_Roush2 ай бұрын
Modern architecture aesthetics was a massive mistake.
@ehjo49042 ай бұрын
do you wear the same way like one century ago . Nope .
@Connor_Roush2 ай бұрын
@@ehjo4904 good design aesthetics will last centuries. Modern design will be out dated in 20 years. Cope and seethe. lol.
@TheMastaRob2 ай бұрын
Does modern architecture even have aesthetics? The word means the study or appreciation of beauty - something modern architecture actively frowns upon.
@celdur46352 ай бұрын
@@ehjo4904 Buildings have to stand beautiful for centuries, clothes not so much. Having said that, luxury clothes from millenia past still looks nice.
@ehjo49042 ай бұрын
@@celdur4635 Pretty sure like most you do not make the same effort to dress like people did one hundred years ago. Time change
@colbystearns52382 ай бұрын
Frank Lloyd Wright actually used quite a bit of ornament in his buildings. The Hollyhock House in LA for example has abstract, stylized depictions of the hollyhock flower throughout the property.
@2mains2342 ай бұрын
The thing I hated most about architects when I was working in the construction industry was their lack of technical ability. I was witness to several incidents where drawings were returned. Reasons included missing information, conflicting dimensions and materials needing to be formed in a way that is impossible (and there was me thinking it obvious that granite is inflexible). Bering in mind that having to delay work to wait on the architect to fix a design problem generally doesn't go down well with the client as well as making the contractor look incompetent. It was always preferable to do everything possible to build as per original design, even if it was a massive hassle.
@Art-is-craft2 ай бұрын
Classical architects were versed in both design and building. The orders in classic design were not stylistic but practical in nature.
@treinenliefde2 ай бұрын
@Art-is-craft Here in the Netherlands architecture is only possible as a master programme, after three or four years of building engineering. You start out with the history, the materials, detailing, constructions and all that stuff, and only after that you can start a pure architecture study. Having studied with students from across the globe this is so different. I remember class mates from Asia for example who had never drawn a single technical drawing or something, being completely shocked by the Dutch way of combining technical and esthetic qualities.
@Art-is-craft2 ай бұрын
@@treinenliefde Classical architects first trained in the building process. Their apprenticeship started with building. They understood through experience the process of building. Today’s architects are designers.
@treinenliefde2 ай бұрын
@@Art-is-craft indeed, and that's the way it should be everywhere. You can't design something without understanding it.
@Fessel342 ай бұрын
The dream of a modern architect is an engineer’s nightmare.
@Vixth142 ай бұрын
The only diversity that truly matters is the diversity of thought
@jirislavicek99542 ай бұрын
Which is desperately missing in the current western society
@michaelepp62122 ай бұрын
Cities worldwide, before 1900, were humanity's 'old growth forests', and were devastated (clearcut) in the 20th century, mainly because of cars. But restoration of some kind is still possible.
@RonRobertson-lafrance2 ай бұрын
That's a pretty good analogy, actually.
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
As well as cars I would say the origins of this mindless destruction had roots in a form of cultural and spiritual nihilism. It was a suicidal tendency that is revealed in the nightmares of post WW II architectural exteriors. These exteriors reflect the inner bankruptcy.
@screwstatists732426 күн бұрын
These cities grew up under federalism and monarchy as free and private cities are property to be developed into beautiful places, not a canvass for shallow demagouges
@VeritasIncrebresco2 ай бұрын
NYC here, I'm getting real tired of seeing giant glass rectangles with zero character. Hudson yards is a perfect example, it's depressing.
@jonaw.21532 ай бұрын
The lack of proper architecture programs (read: programs that actually teach architecture rather than modernist politics in an architecture package) is what drove me away from studying architecture. I can definitely understand your experience at seeing the students' works at Nôtre Dame.
@elliaka61962 ай бұрын
Oh my god this video encompass every thought i have so far in architecture school to the smallest details, even my thought that ornamentation and other older techniques are locked on the past only for existing buildings.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Happy to hear that!
@ludekz.7732 ай бұрын
This is like a delicious meal for soul. Especially in Modernity and Bauhaus obsessed Czech Republic. We will be late to join this positive revolution, as we always are, with everything. PS Im too old to study now but boy if there was a school like Notre dame in Czech republic...Damn this hurts
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
That is great to hear - we need schools like this in every country
@jirislavicek99542 ай бұрын
Exactly!!! The Czech Republic has some of the world's finest cultural heritage: gothic, renaissance, baroque, Czech, Austro-Hungarian, German. Even pre-WWII industrial architecture like factory halls or railway infrastructure has some aesthetic value. Everything built after WWII, during the communist era or after 1990 is just plain ugly. With extremely rare exceptions. We absolutely need New Renaissance and start building beautiful houses again! 👍
@notteilsaggioАй бұрын
@@jirislavicek9954 Never been in CR, but have often visited Bulgaria, I suppose that the 1940/1980 part is really similar. As an Italian Architect I had no knowledge of the socialist buildings and ,after a deep observation, I think there's lot to learn from them, not only from the technical part, but even for the aestethics. They are part of the global history, as well as the Golden Gate, the Eiffel tower, Saint Denis or the Pisa tower. Each journey is made of single steps.
@TheImmortalArt2 ай бұрын
Dude! So happy that this is the only KZbin channel that speaks about the real art of architecture and city planning! Great work, great job, as usual!
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you!! 🙏🏼
@eazydee57572 ай бұрын
Classical/traditional architectural styles in the United States still exist in the many cities and towns of the East Coast north of Florida, and in the city of Chicago, but is increasingly uncommon everywhere else in the United States. And unlike all the boxy or cube-shaped urban-located buildings commonly associated with modern architecture, it’s usually office parks, strip malls, warehouses, grade schools which take much more space than they normally should, and cookie-cutter tract homes. Sometimes, you will see buildings that look traditionally-designed, but are designed in a way that heavily favors automobiles over pedestrians, which leads to a lot of places that genuinely feel artificial and unnatural despite having a traditionally-designed facade.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Indeed, the US needs good urbanism in addition to good architecture… thank you for replying 🙏🏼
@deepoole8202 ай бұрын
Yes please! Our cities are so ugly. The only beautiful bits are hundreds of years old.
@vladvladislav43352 ай бұрын
You may want to take a look at the German island of Sylt, where some of the Germany's richest people build their holiday homes. Just look up the town of Kampen (Sylt) on Google Street View, and you will instantly understand why. Almost all new houses there are built in traditional style of that region, to the point that sometimes it is impossible to tell, which houses are over a century old, and which are brand new. Even some very modern buildings try to pay homage to the traditional style, for example the newly built "Lanserhof Sylt". Sadly, for a short time in the sixties they managed to build quite a few "modernist boxes" in the town of Westerland, for example the "Kurzentrum Westerland" or "Hanseatenhaus", and these are still considered the ugliest buildings on the whole island to this day. I think the architecture of Sylt would be a great topic for a future video. It perfectly illustrates the point: when it comes to rich people, they often prefer traditional architecture for their own homes. Sylt also demonstrates, that there is literally nothing preventing us from building traditionally, and there are enough architects who are willing to design such buildings if that's what the customer wants to pay for.
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
The City of Savannah, Georgia is doing some excellent work compatible to the traditional architecture,
@BamberdittoPingpong2 ай бұрын
Many people imagine the 2100s or 2200s as this glass utopia full of neo-futurism style buildings, but I like to imagine it having transferred to building traditional and classical styles of architecture, with modernist/contemporary/futurist architecture having just been an edgy phase of the architectural field.
@MrToradragon2 ай бұрын
I think it is due to extrapolation from one point, or very short period, and then we all are influenced by sci-fi of 1950-1970's and then we just tend to iterate over those tropes and features. Like, flying cars, like superwide highways, sleek space ships or touchscreen interface that we are slowly starting to hate. Everything is delivered by air or by some gimmick at the edge of physics. And we do not see, or not often, a train or ships used for transport, it still feels like those posters and ideas from 50's, yes the design, clothes and so had changed, but in the core, it is still the same concepts of mid 20th century. Another problem IMHO is that in the past architecture went in spiral and iterated over itself (classical, classicism, neoclassicism) and those took like century after which it went for inspiration back a century or two, but today we iterate over decades instead of centuries. Another thing to consider is that dictatorships of the 20th century loved those "traditional" buildings so the free world perhaps felt need to distance itself from those dictatorships. I am not sure that in the future we would be building in some neoneogothic style, unless we will seriously mess something up, but I think that we will see some revival of more classical designs, maybe in form of layouts or in form of some ornamentation or materials (but that depends on whether we would be talking about houses or public buildings). Maybe we will go back to ornamented columns first? Or maybe frieze will return as it should be easy to produce with our modern machinery? I don't know, but I would say hat this is the way how classical elements can return into current and future architecture.
@ReyneArturiaPenededragon2 ай бұрын
For me the worst is: eco futurism, they believe that by putting plants the building is "ecological", or they make it less ugly, when it is appearances and without practicality, they never question the humidity problems that a building full of plants would have, The cost of doing this would create more CO2 than making a normal building, ecofuturism is dystopian and polluting. But a traditional brick building of 5 to 7 floors, endure 100 years or more, this is truly ecological.
@cazaresjulian142 ай бұрын
@@ReyneArturiaPenededragon That is spot on! Imagine how quickly plant buildings degrade due to humidity! They would fall apart so quickly and produce more pollution in maintenance or just the destruction of the building in the end, and are also a waste of money.
@daxisperry76442 ай бұрын
I do NOT want to learn minimalism. I want to make Beautiful and functional buildings.
@paolomasone37548 күн бұрын
Then study how to do it in the most beautiful, economical and appropriate way! This may be modern or it may be traditional. You are cutting off one of your hands by denying the reality of the requirements for getting to build these days.
@SisterSunny2 ай бұрын
As much as my father tried pressuring me into an architecture degree, I refused on the basis that I hated all new modern buildings. I'd heard of Notre-Dame, but didn't really want to go all the way to America just to be able to make nice buildings. I'm studying urbanism now in UCL, but the fact that the resurgence in new traditional is even reaching some European schools _(finally)_ is heartening!
@franklynyadaicela20102 ай бұрын
As a current student in a top modernist school this video is spot on and change must and will happen.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you - I hope students will find this and get in action!
@Sohave2 ай бұрын
I hope that you will somehow also be able to learn some classical principles so you can branch out to that and ride both winds as times change.
@paolomasone37548 күн бұрын
change will happen. then that will change too.
@jdoe27372 ай бұрын
The thing about flat roofs in rainy (and snowy) climates kills me. There are places in Europe that built buildings with flat roofs despite the fact that they have heavy snow and rain each winter, and this results in them having to waste thousands of Euros in maintenance that they wouldn't have had to waste if the roofs were just built in a traditional way (which originally wasn't created for esthetics but for the very practical reason of not allowing the snow to accumulate and damage the roof). That in itself proves that the claim of being "practical" and "sustainable" is pure BS.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Yup, exactly… it’s so common, yet we don’t hear about it very often. One of the many symptoms of this problem
@RextheRebel2 ай бұрын
I love how architects and urban designers are encouraged to be artistic and creative yet all they create is mundane, conformist drivel that is unoriginal and lifeless. Traditional architecture was artful and beautiful. Modern/post modern society supposedly values creativity but they destroyed beauty in the process.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@balzacq2 ай бұрын
My criteria for an architect, from my retirement house to city hall, is: "If you could go back in time, would you strangle Le Corbusier in his cradle, or not?"
@sheridansherr89742 ай бұрын
Yes!
@balzacq2 ай бұрын
@@sheridansherr8974 Okay you're in.
@gingi4532 ай бұрын
no, he was an experimental architect who created the modern too, but not forced it on the world, the "Ronchamp Cathedral" is a sensual project that he could also do..and his Villa Savoy is a liveable place..respecting natural space..Turning back to the barrock is not the answer, we need to design our new world based on our classical inheritance but using modern technologies..so not an easy task..
@Ryan969132 ай бұрын
lamo you speak what I thought
@ReyneArturiaPenededragon2 ай бұрын
hahahahaha yes
@crazyguy_12332 ай бұрын
A building can stand out while still looking beautiful. The Art Deco style balanced having new bold ideas while keeping some traditional elements. When you take a closer look at Art Deco buildings you see that they aren’t just flat walls they have details. They look drastically different from what came before you could even argue Art Nouveau looked drastically different. A building can be bold and stand out while having beauty in its design. Art Deco buildings often have motifs based on the building’s use. An electric building may have electric bolts or a motif of Zeus. Art Nouveau buildings implement natural shapes and motifs of nature. Today’s buildings are bold but they lack that extra flair that past bold buildings had with their motifs.
@screwstatists732426 күн бұрын
Modernism isn't a very high form, but art deco is perhaps the least appalling version of it
@samuelphillips73912 ай бұрын
In Charleston, SC, there’s a mixed use apartment complex going up that takes inspiration from the history of the city and utilizes traditional architectural design that’s seeking to beautify the city and its skyline while also being a place people can actually live in. It’s a breath of fresh air after seeing two identical postmodern buildings go up on an adjacent street.
@RestingMoose2 ай бұрын
Your video rings true in my case. From a very young age I was in awe of these classical buildings throughout Europe being so harmonious and beautiful as well as full of historical and cultural identity that I've always dreamt of being an architect so that I could design buildings and urban areas to be admired for ages to come. When I was finally able to study architecture at university I was so surprised to find that there was indeed zero focus on pre-WWI architecture. Building traditionally was considered old-fashioned from day one and in as some times even considered evil (often comparing traditional ideas to radical national ideals during WWII Germany). You were always pushed to think outside the box and come up with crazy, and frankly, very unappealing models. Feeling like an outsider among most of my peers in class I became completely demotivated and quit architecture school. To this day it saddens me deeply that I had to give up that dream of making the world a more beautiful place through architecture and instead watch it diminish to the same modernistic ideals that I came to hate during those years at university..
@alexsmith-ob3lu2 ай бұрын
Here in America, I would love to see a renaissance of Richardsonian Romanesque, Art Deco and Neo Classical architecture!
@ajkandy2 ай бұрын
You’d like the work of HBRA, they’re the firm that did the Harold Washington Library in Chicago. They’ve done lots of classical extensions to campus buildings, and also do (nice) modern stuff.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Absolutely!
@bobtaylor1702 ай бұрын
The National Civic Arts Society. Go to their website. You'll like what you find there.
@JohnFromAccounting2 ай бұрын
There are Art Deco revival buildings happening across New York and Chicago. They're not usually publicised. The Brooklyn Tower is a recent one that got some attention.
@HickoryDickory862 ай бұрын
@alexsmith-ob3lu Don't forget Gothic Revival! 🥰
@user-so8pe2qm7n2 ай бұрын
There are many buildings in Japan with terrible designs. The few historical buildings remaining after the war have been demolished due to the Japanese belief in new construction, maintenance costs, natural disasters, and other reasons. In addition, ordinary Japanese citizens have no interest in architectural design, and designs by famous architects are praised and built. There is no continuity in the streetscape and it is in a miserable state, which is very unfortunate.😢
@gingi4532 ай бұрын
they were destroyed in WWII by atomic bombs culturally too..
@user-so8pe2qm7n2 ай бұрын
That is true, but in modern Japan, there are many demolition projects due to redevelopment or scrap-and-build construction.
@joenuts51672 ай бұрын
@@gingi453what?😂
@sarahdias77792 ай бұрын
I seen this video of architects praising this building in Japan talking about how wonderful it is but it was so inconvenient for the locals it was such an inconvenient structure and people were having troubles finding their way.
@mborder84282 ай бұрын
Some of the ugliest streetscapes I've seen in a developed country were in Japan, surprisingly.
@HenryB353Ай бұрын
I'm a civil engineering student, and when I asked my teacher why we didn't learn how to build and design in styles like neoclassical, Victorian... She told me that it was all outdated. That it is expensive to build, and that if we build like we used to, this would be a "cultural" appropriation from another time, something that can no longer be built, as this building would not have a history.
@gingererer7806Ай бұрын
how silly because one day we will be the history!
@Mr_X7532 ай бұрын
Thank you for making this video. I graduated from Architecture school 18 years ago, and I found parts of it frustrating for many of the reasons mentioned. There was way too much emphasis and time placed on avant garde design theories, rather than studying the past and proven design + construction practices. Now that I’m well into a profession career and in a position where I have to hire new graduates, I often find myself looking for qualities in candidates that schools do not emphasize at all. Design is important, but most Architects spend very little time doing design. In my opinion, students would be better served if they received more instruction on material qualities, construction methods, effective written + verbal communication, and presentation skills. Many would also benefit from some business courses that involve marketing, finance, and project management. I personally love traditional architecture. Although I regret that I didn’t get to study it in school, I enjoy learning about it in my spare time. It is truly fascinating to study something that has continued in some form for thousands of years.
@lamebubblesflysohighАй бұрын
The problem with beautiful classical design is the price tag. If public sector doesn't start ordering timeless designs, private sector oriented on quick return of the investment will certainly not.
@atamija2 ай бұрын
My boyfriend is a fan of the modern architecture - he's like oh yeah, skyscrapers, and im there in the corner appreciating wooden huts in a village and old churches... Let's just say getting a home together will be tough. Also what you mentioned, about sustainability being about the longevity of the building, is such an important and often overlooked aspect of it, and so is the knowledge of the material. I do hope change is on its way.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you for reacting - yes that does sound like a challenge! Maybe you can convince him ;) and indeed, the longevity of buildings should be nr 1
@coemgeincraobhach236Ай бұрын
I 100% agree with this. I left architecture school after 4 years because value was placed on pretty pictures that boost the reputation of the school. Practical considerations basically didn't exist, we were taught next to nothing. I spent so long arguing against this, an endless battle that they had no interest in. It got to the point that the head of the college said that we teach a certain type of approach, your approach is more aligned to other colleges. I transferred over to engineering, and learnt more in a month than the whole four years in architecture. Now I make pharmaceuticals, and draw and build things for fun, not to align to some preconceived idea of what we should be designing.
@P_NG2 ай бұрын
As an ex-architecture student, I can say this is quite true. However, this discourse needs to be nuanced : architecture is part of a larger building industry. This industry immensely prefers modern architecture : cheaper, easier, simpler. My professors' main argument against ornamentation were concerns about cost more than style/doctrine. Students are very much left to figure things by themselves however...
@magnushultgrenhtc2 ай бұрын
Sustainability is key, and using less concrete saves CO2. Not to mention keeping the building for more than 40-50 years. In Stockholm (home to the parodically horrible architecture school at the start of the video), the garbage 1970s architecture that replaced the 1700s historic city centre has already had to be torn down and "reimagined" with at least some slight thought of the people using it.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
100%!
@screwstatists732426 күн бұрын
China and India produce 80% of all global pollution and co2 pollution. Don't worry about it
@antoniescargo152918 күн бұрын
Save CO2? What are you talking about? Plants need CO2. Green plants produce O2.
@magnushultgrenhtc18 күн бұрын
@@antoniescargo1529 And concrete production costs energy that is currently emitting fossil CO2 adding to the CO2 already in circulation. Keep up.
@shiveerramphal18022 ай бұрын
This video summed up my whole education thus far. I am in honours, one year away from completing my masters degree and i am yet to still be taught core design principles. I have been trying to learn on the side though. I want to become a developer that builds new housing but with traditional values as we have a massive problem with housing in South Africa.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
I’m sad to hear that - I hope your colleagues / co students on university see this and act! Thanks for replying 🙏🏼
@adamclabaugh19452 ай бұрын
It does not shock me at all that these are all very well-known catholic schools in the states. There has been a huge shift in the catholic world back towards tradition.
@adamclabaugh19452 ай бұрын
Well not Utah valley but the point stands.
@stephenbenderplusАй бұрын
Utah Valley is located near Provo, which is near Salt Lake City, a religious conservative area, not Catholic but similarly backward looking.
@gwyn.2 ай бұрын
Not just architectures are like this but also the things in them, furniture, items people use day to day as well.
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
As was the goal of the Arts and Crafts movement at the turn of the 20th Century.
@Sohave2 ай бұрын
Thanks for making this video! This is exactly what we need right now!!! I live in Denmark and had been writing to a couple of architect schools asking if they offered classes in classical architecture. Had this been around 20 years ago I would perhaps have picked a different path! I still want to learn about classical architecture but perhaps not take a full architect education.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
There are only two options: or they change their curriculum, or we circumvent the universities and start new educational institutions
@Sohave2 ай бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city So far I made the Aarhus school of architecture aware of the video and gave them a hint once more that I was interested in taking up the subject. Months earlier I have asked Arkitektur Oprøret, if they were capable of recommending a classical course in architecture, they had no recomendations. This is just a speculation but I believe we lack a network of classical architects in Denmark to pick up the challenge. Danish architects has otherwise previously been open to setting up new movements, the most successful being "Bedre Byggeskik" that rebelled against what it saw as a generic international form of classicism in the late 1800's putting a Danish vernacular style in its place and helped empower local craftsmen. Alas this movement was also conquered by modernism and closed its doors in 1965, despite having a profound impact decades earlier.
@nikolai_nik9734Ай бұрын
I fully agree there's too much channeling in architecture schools now, we are groomed to design what our lecturers/school system approve of. but one thing I love about my school? It's very leaned on model building and practicals to get us used to the spaces and feel and experince how our desgins actually come together, instead of some renders and 3d printing everything.
@RoberttheWise2 ай бұрын
A great example of modernist building that ages horribly is brutalism. In cold and rainy North-Eastern Europe it quickly gets this nasty black grime all over it. And it looks horribly depressing against a backdrop of a gray, rainy sky. The only pictures of appealing brutalist architecture I've ever seen were of perfectly clean buildings in some warm and sunny places like Australia.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Great example - it really doesn’t work well in rainy climates
@thesermontis2 ай бұрын
Bravo !! righto to the hart,, I'm over 20 years in a stone business and it started from seeing buildings build out of stone, but unfortunately, until this day I find very little work that requires STONE work for the buildings that as you mention homely and beautiful that everybody loves,, that's why whole tourism sector is happening,, not because people are traveling to places to see the French Italian or English people,, they go to see the places where architecture is something to be seen,, something to be enjoyed and wondering through the streets of Verona, Rome or Amsterdam makes you wanna be there makes you want to spend time there.. that means something was done right.. Wish you all the best with the channel I will keep following will keep watching and sharing.. THANK YOU VERY MUCH.
@Dggb234523 күн бұрын
So obviously true yet ignored by our “betters.”
@pietervoogt2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your hard work, this gives me hope.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you Pieter!
@pietervoogt2 ай бұрын
@@the_aesthetic_city What about reaching out to the sculpture departments of art academies and try to engage them. Because I think wat is missing in a lot of new traditional buildings is the original ornament and creative details, while at the same time a lot of art school students can't find a job after leaving school. I have an idea for a video about that.
@eldinsmajlovic15542 ай бұрын
Woohoo! Great video man! And I'm happy for you that you found your own path! Also, this video gives me hope!
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you - it was a long path for sure!
@humphreylyle30412 ай бұрын
This video as well as all the others on this channel are masterpieces. Way to completely deconstruct the modernist consensus and use actual science. these videos are so unbelievably informative and interesting. This is the most high quality content I have ever seen on KZbin. The argument is so well presented and perfectly articulates what we all sense of the bs of the modernist consensus. Thank you.
@lawrenceholden57162 ай бұрын
This is such an uplifting and true video and gives hope for a better built environment in the future. As most architecture is a commercial process, clients need also to take this on board, not just a functional fast track, minimal cost solution to make money from rental, sale or whatever. In the past people and organisations had pride in their locality and wanted their buildings to be well designed, and be a lasting legacy to them. People appreciate stability, good design, quality and permanence, things lacking in the recent decades.
@Duacar2 ай бұрын
Tout mon soutien à cette chaîne. En France, nos magnifiques bâtiments de style classique cohabitent maintenant avec nombre de bâtiments "modernes" s'inscrivant mal dans l'environnement et vieillissant très mal avec le temps. Quel gâchis !
@omegaroyal2 ай бұрын
THANK YOU for this video. I am not an architect but I love architecture and the creative process, and my dream is to create an international association of architecture to work on projects that counter the modern/postmodern ideals. This is shared with my architects and saved for future reference. The world is about to change. This video is exactly what I needed. Thank you thank you thank you!
@robertozeladarodriguez53212 ай бұрын
For me, this is the best video on the channel. It touches on very valid points with a critical view of current teaching. Experimenting and creating with new materials is good too, but it’s important to change the way traditional architecture is viewed. The rejection of this design approach in universities needs to end, and its foundations should be learned since they are essential for creating more beautiful cities.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you Roberto - and yes, the focus just needs to shift! Not only one view, but multiple views at the same time
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
Beaux Arts disciplines need to be restored throughout the Western academic institutions. Julia Morgan achieved miracles of beauty in the U.S. and she received her training in Paris at the Beaux Arts architecture school.
@tompommerel21362 ай бұрын
Another offering from this fabulous channel is ALWAYS WELCOME. As a retired classical musician, I ALSO see many similarities resulting from the opening of university music department after WWII as they suffer from similar ideological problems which were so logically and clearly discussed here. I also hope that the dissatisfaction outlined here will grow so as to lead to changes in assumptions of curriculum design in architecture education.
@Dggb234523 күн бұрын
Tone row composition is the musical equivalent of modern architecture. Just hideous rubbish. There’s a reason Sting studies Bach and not Schoenberg.
@robertn29512 ай бұрын
I salute your commitment to change the way architechture is done.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you - we’re just beginning!
@EugenssonАй бұрын
What is this building with the tower at 0:12? It has a very similar layout to the gemeentehuis Sint-Pieters-Woluwe in Brussels, Belgium.
@papaguro27 күн бұрын
Ah hello fellow Belgian
@jimfus68332 ай бұрын
And don't even get me started on how most "news" outlets parrot the Saudi talking points about NEOM being a model of sustainability.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Exactly, a nice topic for an entire video
@markegan97212 ай бұрын
Great video. It does make me angry how architecture has thrown away all the inherited knowledge from the past. It's really not that hard to make a building that is beautiful and functional. We don't need to reinvent the wheel.
@mirkogerrits12002 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this video. I feel like some things you pointed out here are also true for other types of education. Keep doing what you are doing! Informing makes an actual impact.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Thank you!! Doing my best
@Hakaze2 ай бұрын
So happy that we finaly are startibg to move in the right direction. As a citicen of Trondheim, I'm allso proud of our new classical architects
@userofthetube27012 ай бұрын
This Renaissance of traditional architecture is fantastic, but it's only half of the solution. Up until the early 20th century there existed an incredible infrastructure, with highly skilled artisans, to provide architectural ornamentation and decoration on a truly industrial scale. The rise of modernism virtually wiped this out. Which means that we need to start training the stonemasons, carpenters, plasterers, painters, etc. in traditional techniques. Otherwise, with the exception of a few high-profile buildings, there will be no one to actually realize the awesome designs these students are making.
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Fully agree - we need both the knowledge and a revival of the crafts, and the second one will be much harder. But it’s also a chicken & egg problem: without architects who design ornament let’s say, there is no need for craftsmanship. Demand will lead to supply, and more supply will bring costs down. It will be hard but I do see a way
@caradjaflaviuАй бұрын
I wholeheartedly agree with all points and feel that your experience is identical to my own. It is for these reasons that I have transitioned to Digital Product Design after having graduated Architecture School.
@scrappmutt22 ай бұрын
I went to the Danish Architecture Museum in Copenhagen sponsored by the WEF. It was just a bunch of exhibits highlighting modular block, eco friendly buildings all the while toting them as the present and future of architecture. If that is what these schools are pushing towards the future is bleak, but the good news is that they have turned the job "architect" into a job that can be done by nearly anyone and makes them just as much like replaceable cogs in the wheel as any given assembly line worker.
@Sohave2 ай бұрын
Are you located in Denmark? If you have interest in studying or promoting classical architecture here perhaps we should connect?
@scrappmutt22 ай бұрын
@@Sohave No, sorry, was just passing through as a tourist, but definitely wish you luck. Denmark needs a Renaissance.
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
Ironically, green principles can be incorporated with traditional exterior designs. 💡
@ReyneArturiaPenededragon2 ай бұрын
Everything that comes from the WEF should be rejected, they are selfish people with a dictator complex.
@sotirissoukeras509Ай бұрын
It's happening and I'm so happy that finally there are people, who are willing to reviel the secrets of the past architecture for more human life and certainly unleash the beauty, this harmonious architecture can offer us again! Keep going the great job!! It's really working!
@Tedmader-fp3vb2 ай бұрын
It not just in architecture that universities have failed, the whole culture in the US is on very shallow grounds. Basic integrity and decency is being lost. If you look at what’s happening in the major universities in the US, it will take generations if ever to return to a civil society. Imagine Harvard and MIT becoming a joke with billions in the bank.
@jjj83172 ай бұрын
I am an econ major, and face a similar issue. I ahev pretty much graduated, except for 3 more classes. But I feel like dont know anything. There is a lack of professors teaching the practical basis. The focus in our field is rather on what you need to succeed as a PHD applicant.
@HickoryDickory862 ай бұрын
When the one student was talking about studying the prevailing style of a given place (because buildings are designed in context), I was reminded of Andrew Gould. He is an architect who specializes in designing Orthodox churches here in America. His principles are to remain true to human scale and the traditional Byzantine style (or Romanesque, if it is applicable), but always tries to incorporate whatever is the prevailing traditional vernacular and/or materials of the area where the church is being built. If it's in Appalachia, there's going to be lots of timber; in Florida or Texas, plenty of Spanish Mission; etc. And he prefers to build the structure out of concrete and masonry so that it lasts, but will make concessions for timber frame if concrete and masonry are prohibitive with the client church's budget. Anyway, his work is beautiful! Please look into his work and also various talks and interviews he has done. I think you would greatly enjoy and appreciate a lot of what he says.
2 ай бұрын
I'm mechanical engineer / product architect. This material is something I was hoping and waiting for. Although I'm not building architect, the mission you carry is very important to me. Thank you!
@nice_challenge2 ай бұрын
What is the additional initial cost of building like that, plus what is the effect of it on the value over time of such buildings and towards its environment/neighborhood? Many houses are built by investment firms, that are just looking at the (short time) ROI they can get from the building through sales, rent etc. By building cheap, they try to maximize ROI. To create a real renaissance, those that decide need to be convinced. And those that decide are normally the ones with money. Just to democratize the renaissance: if local governments prescribe the rules for building permits, investors could be forced to build more sustainable and for 1000 years, instead of for 10 years. And, thanks for another great video
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
Ironically by making the buildings aesthetically attractive and human scale these investors would attract more people to the retail establishments and would also be able to request higher rents.
@TheWampam2 ай бұрын
@@lecaprice2572 Nah, its a well known problem that those investors try to be as inoffensive as possible. This means building as boring as possible. For the same reasons most cars are black or grey nowadays.
@richardnz552 ай бұрын
Thank you for your vision and being a catalyst for positive change. There is so much that is negative and challenging for all the world's peoples. .. so human centered designed public spaces, homes and cities based on real sustainable values can contribute to positivity and survival.
@pedrocaceresbrun6212 ай бұрын
Modern architecture ages horribly. I believe the most important thing in architecture is not the building… it is what happens in it: LIFE, Love, family, friends. I agree with almost everything but I don’t think Frank Lloyd Wright rejected ornaments, elaborated facades or slope roofs. The others you mention, yes, but definitively Wright didn’t do that.
@majorfallacy59262 ай бұрын
Very happy to see students from my university speaking out. I'm not an architect but from what I've seen from our architecture program it's truly terrible, which is reflected in new constructions in our city.
@pierreecrepont44332 ай бұрын
Il y a un lien fort entre le totalitarisme du 20éme et les fondateurs du "modernisme". Un personnage comme Le Corbusier avait des affinités avec le 3eme Reich et les soviétiques. Il n'est pas étonnant que leur architecture est était extrémiste et dans la négation ou la réfutation de l'histoire des arts et techniques formants l'architecture. Le Corbusier n'as pas d'argument objectif contre les toits à mansardes, il voulait simplement supprimer les chambres de bonnes dans les greniers en supprimant les toitures. C'était une fournaise dans le Paris Haussmannienne et jusqu'à récemment avec l'ardoise noire et l'absence d'isolation. Toutes les justifications idéologiques de Le Corbusier n'empêche pas d'avoir construit vers 1970 des logements insalubres pour les plus modestes et possédant une toiture plate qui fuie davantage. Les quartiers populaires en France, des grands ensembles à la Le Corbusier croule sous les charges, notamment les réfections de toitures terrasses, tandis que les maisons ou les immeubles de toitures plus classiques, souvent occupé par des gens pourtant plus fortuné, finissent pas payer moins de charges d'entretiens… Qui est pauvre doit il entretenir plus et payer plus, à travers son bailleur social, une surface réduite moins couteuse et son loyer. Les toitures sont plates à Marrakech et à forte pente pour les églises Viking ; la pente des toitures est forte à travers le monde contre la pluie pour augmenter l'étanchéité.
@Dggb234523 күн бұрын
Well stated even in translation
@edi98927 күн бұрын
Speaking of the restoration of old buildings: it seems that many still don't understand how to do it despite being officially licensed 1) Collapses of buildings such as the Reichsschenke: Removing structural beams in order to make rooms bigger and remove horizontal beams to have no step, but these beams prevent the wall from leaning! Adding a lot of modern materials which in the end increases the weight way above what the builders ever planned it for. 2) Covering wood and thus causing it to rot due to accumulated moisture 3) Adding insulation to meet modern regulations, but not taking into account that this affects how moisture accumulates. If windows are colder than the walls, you will get water condensation there and you can simply wipe them, but when the wall is colder, then you get a problem! Also, many old buildings had deliberately open spots for ventilation. They all get sealed up to prevent heat loss! Similarly, people have managed to destroy a historical site by putting cement into the drainage system, as they thought that it was merely defects in the floor, where stones are missing, but these spots filled with gravel were there for a very important reason!
@brucepwalker2 ай бұрын
This is a great video. Two of my final two student designs were completed in the Classical language, under Branko Mitrovic when he was teaching in New Zealand. I was almost failed before I even started presenting my final design because the other tutors hated Classical...not because of the merits of my design. I can relate to what you present 100%.
@mapr10492 ай бұрын
that's crazy, glad you didn't fail :)
@the_aesthetic_city2 ай бұрын
Man.. there are so many stories like this - I’m shocked but not surprised. You sure were lucky to study under Branko though!
@Axel_Andersen2 ай бұрын
Hear! Hear! One of the most important videos I've watched in KZbin. This should be compulsory watching to any budding architect.
@TimSlee12 ай бұрын
I find Europe a strange place for the fact that they have both classical and modern architecture built side-by-side so that they can clearly see the differences yet they just keep building modern slop without any consideration for aesthetic.
@skyworm80062 ай бұрын
The flat roof thing was basically my gateway into this. So mindlessly applied. It generally looks bad or at best a nonfactor, removes the chunk of the house that epitomises the combination of function and beauty, few climates are suitable for it without ultimately inadequate solutions to deal with the obvious problems and even where you can get away with it, it won't last as long and isn't practical to maintain (so much for sustainability, another meaningless buzzword).
@HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva2 ай бұрын
Sometimes, not even via studying you can change things for the better. In my free time I create new Wiki articles of Rotterdam's long forgotten past. The result? What essentially was history lost to time got found and put back for everyone to read and it worked. Channels on social media picked it up and shared it, showing people what they're missing. Sometimes photo's and some info can really do more than 1000 words ever can!
@lecaprice25722 ай бұрын
I retired from international shipping and visited Rotterdam on business. I accidentally learned about the horrific destruction of old Rotterdam during WW II. I saw some old black and white and sepia photos from the turn of the century and “it blew my mind” with the magical historic character. Similarly I learned about the destruction of old Antwerp and LeHavre during the War. Other European historic coastal towns and cities were flattened by bombing. The more I study what was lost the heartbreaking it is. If only there would be a popular movement to restore what was lost as a matter of European cultural urgency - it had been done with the Ypres cloth hall after WW I …😢
@zoegopar2 ай бұрын
It makes me so happy to hear this. My heart shatters every time I see a beautiful old building being demolished because I know it will be replaced by a bland paper-walled one. Hearing this does not make the destruction of our heritage less upsetting, but it brings me hope for the future. That maybe one day I will be here to see the cities repopulated with gorgeous and inspiried architecture that will last the test of time so our descendants will too know and enjoy true architectural beauty and quality. I'm sorry you didn't have the chance to learn what you desired. I too wanted to study architecture to create more classical buildings in this modernised world, but realised I wouldn't even get that chance so gave up on that. I'm still glad that others can take that mission on their hands and their work even as students is absolutely stunning. Thank you for making this video, I makes me hopeful.
@TheGrace0202 ай бұрын
Returning to tradition that works 😻
@dianaespinosa16819 күн бұрын
Absolutely agree, but after working many years as an architect the issue is also based on cost. There is a disconnect between the value of architecture and cost. Most construction projects are dependent on budget if it cost too much it is too expensive so minimalist projects cost less. Only when the investment is high then architects can make meaningful investment on the building’s architecture. Sustainability is also a factor.. are we building for sustainability or to get certificate that will improve sales ? Urban planning is the next factor is practically forgotten.
@akirathedog7772 ай бұрын
absolutely priviledged take. Only a norwegian person could worry so much about how buildings are not to his liking when theres people who have electricity for less than a third of the day
@jirislavicek99542 ай бұрын
Maybe there is a reason why these people have no electricity for most of the day. If you build and run things properly the last long time and perform well. If you do a lousy job you get lousy results.
@akirathedog7772 ай бұрын
@@jirislavicek9954 totally agree bro-jo, its all about who is superior, not about the rich being able to afford complex infrastructure, you're totally right, McDonalds is absolutely the best culture in the world omg
@goliathsteinbeisser3547Ай бұрын
I checked out the books section on your website. Consider adding affiliate links to stores where people could buy those books so they can support you while indulging their interests, because I am absolutely going to buy some of the books you have listed there. :)
@the_aesthetic_cityАй бұрын
Thank you - that’s a great tip! I’m not the best affiliate marketer yet I guess haha
@rocketman10582 ай бұрын
I agree with the concept of architectural "brainwashing", I've used this term before and it truly describes well the modern teaching process.
@Incognito1871-u7nАй бұрын
I must thank you for spreading informations about Renesainse and propagating this. It's magnificent to hear about clasical, incredibly beautiful architecture rebirth. If clasical poetry, painting and music, for example like in belle epoque also revives and again be reborn, it will be something gorgeous! Pardon me my english, I'm still learning.
@who2u3332 ай бұрын
This episode fits with the channel 'Brent Hull', who is evangelizing for classic design and architecture in todays builds.