Architecture, STR-WES
Architecture is a sphere of art and design in which functionality and aesthetics can combine to produce visually stunning structures that manage to both catch the eye and serve a functional purpose. The expansive variety of architectural styles that have been employed throughout the ages underscores the fact that not every building need look the same, a principle that is readily apparent when comparing Gothic cathedrals with igloos or pagodas with cliff dwellings. Although architecture is commonly associated first and foremost with the design and construction of buildings, landscape architects may work with gardens, parks, and other planned outdoor areas, aiding in the development and decorative planning of such spaces.
Architecture Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Street-Porter House, house in London that was designed by architect Piers Gough and completed in 1988. It is celebrated......
William Strickland was a U.S. architect and engineer who was one of the leaders of the Greek Revival in the first......
stringcourse, in architecture, decorative horizontal band on the exterior wall of a building. Such a band, either......
Stuart style, visual arts produced during the reign of the British house of Stuart; that is, from 1603 to 1714......
stuccowork, in architecture, fine exterior or interior plasterwork used as three-dimensional ornamentation, as......
stupa, Buddhist commemorative monument usually housing sacred relics associated with the Buddha or other saintly......
Suger was a French abbot and adviser to kings Louis VI and VII whose supervision of the rebuilding of the abbey......
sukiya style, Japanese architectural style developed in the Azuchi-Momoyama (1574–1600) and Tokugawa (1603–1867)......
Louis Sullivan was an American architect, regarded as the spiritual father of modern American architecture and......
summer camp, any combined recreational and educational facility designed to acquaint urban children with outdoor......
Summer Palace, complex of palaces, gardens, and lakes in Beijing, China, that was used as a retreat for members......
superposed order, in Classical architecture, an order, or style, of column placed above another order in the vertical......
Federico Sustris was a court painter and principal architect to Duke William V of Bavaria, and one of the major......
swag, in architecture and decoration, carved ornamental motif consisting of stylized flowers, fruit, foliage, and......
synagogue, in Judaism, a community house of worship that serves as a place not only for liturgical services but......
Sōami was a Japanese painter, art critic, poet, landscape gardener, and master of the tea ceremony, incense ceremony,......
Taj Mahal, mausoleum complex in Agra, western Uttar Pradesh state, northern India. The Taj Mahal was built by the......
tallest buildings in the world, the highest-standing buildings on the globe, as determined by the Council on Tall......
Tange Kenzō was one of the foremost Japanese architects in the decades following World War II. After graduating......
Yoshio Taniguchi is a Japanese architect best known as the designer of the early 21st-century expansion of the......
tap’o style, Korean adaptation of a Chinese architectural style first introduced from China late in the Koryŏ period......
Tempietto, small circular chapel erected in the courtyard of San Pietro in Montorio in Rome on the supposed site......
Tempio Malatestiano, burial chapel in Rimini, Italy, for Sigismondo Pandolfo Malatesta, the lord of the city, together......
temple, edifice constructed for religious worship. Most of Christianity calls its places of worship churches; many......
Tenjiku, (Japanese: “Indian Style”), one of the three main styles of Japanese Buddhist architecture in the Kamakura......
tent, portable shelter, consisting of a rigid framework covered by some flexible substance. Tents are used for......
tepee, conical tent most common to the North American Plains Indians. Although a number of Native American groups......
Nicodemus Tessin, the Elder was the most eminent Swedish architect of his period, whose principal work is the Drottningholm......
Nicodemus Tessin the Younger was a notable Swedish Baroque architect. The son of the architect Nicodemus Tessin......
The Gherkin, skyscraper in London that was designed by the architecture firm Foster and Partners and completed......
The Shard, skyscraper in London that was designed by architect Renzo Piano and completed in 2012. Piano took its......
theatre, in architecture, a building or space in which a performance may be given before an audience. The word......
- Introduction
- Acoustics, Design, Architecture
- Stage Design, Proscenium, Backdrops
- Asian Traditions, Architecture, Performance
- Japanese Architecture, Design, Performance
- Medieval, Architecture, Performance
- Staging, Conventions, Design
- Renaissance, Architecture, Design
- Staging, Design, Performance
- Elizabethan, Stage, Design
- Baroque, Staging, Design
- Technical Advances, Innovations, Evolution
- France, Spain, Developments
- Northern Europe, Design, Performance
- 19th Century, Design, Architecture
- German Romanticism, Naturalism
- Russian Imperial, Architecture, Performance
- American Design, Architecture, Performance
- Evolution, Production, Design
- Realism, Naturalism, Expressionism
- Appia, Craig, Influence
- Movement, Design, Architecture
- Reinhardt, Design, Architecture
- Architecture, Scenery, Performance
- Expressionist, Production, Aspects
- The influence of Piscator
- Russian Futurism, Suprematism
- Political Festivals
- American, Design, Architecture
- Modernization, Design, Architecture
- Grotowski, Polish, Laboratory
Mausoleum of Theodoric, tomb built c. 520 in Ravenna, Italy, by the Arian Ostrogothic emperor Theodoric. The lower......
William Thornton was a British-born American architect, inventor, and public official, best known as the creator......
Stanley Tigerman was a prominent American architect and activist best known for his work in Chicago. Tigerman studied......
Tino Di Camaino was a Sienese sculptor significant for his numerous sepulchral monuments. Tino was a follower,......
Tintern Abbey, ecclesiastical ruin in Monmouthshire, Wales, on the west bank of the River Wye. Founded for Cistercian......
tokonoma, alcove in a Japanese room, used for the display of paintings, pottery, flower arrangements, and other......
Tokyo Sky Tree, broadcasting and telecommunications tower in Tokyo. At a height of 2,080 feet (634 metres), it......
Manuel Tolsá was a Spanish-born sculptor and architect who introduced Neoclassicism to New Spain (Mexico). Tolsá......
tomb, in the strictest sense, a home or house for the dead; the term is applied loosely to all kinds of graves,......
torana, Indian gateway, usually of stone, marking the entrance to a Buddhist shrine or stupa or to a Hindu temple.......
Pietro Torrigiani was a Florentine sculptor and painter who became the first exponent of the Italian Renaissance......
Eduardo Torroja was a Spanish architect and engineer notable as a pioneer in the design of concrete-shell structures.......
tower, any structure that is relatively tall in proportion to the dimensions of its base. It may be either freestanding......
tracery, in architecture, bars, or ribs, used decoratively in windows or other openings; the term also applies......
Transamerica Pyramid, skyscraper in San Francisco that was designed by architect William Pereira and completed......
transept, the area of a cruciform church lying at right angles to the principal axis. The bay at which the transept......
Trevi Fountain, fountain in Rome that is considered a late Baroque masterpiece and is arguably the best known of......
Tribune Tower, Gothic Revival 36-floor office building, located at 435 N. Michigan Ave., in downtown Chicago, which......
triforium, in architecture, space in a church above the nave arcade, below the clerestory, and extending over the......
trullo, conical, stone-roofed building unique to the regione of Puglia (Apulia) in southeastern Italy and especially......
Trump International Hotel and Tower Chicago, commercial and residential skyscraper located at 401 North Wabash......
Trump Tower, mixed-use skyscraper in Manhattan, New York, located on Fifth Avenue at East 56th Street. It opened......
Tudor style, type of British architecture, mainly domestic, that grafted Renaissance decorative elements onto the......
Tuileries Palace, French royal residence adjacent to the Louvre in Paris before it was destroyed by arson in 1871.......
Tuscan order, the simplest of the five orders of Classical Roman architecture, which were codified in the Renaissance.......
Tutankhamun was a king of ancient Egypt (reigned c. 1333–24 bce), known chiefly for his intact tomb, KV 62 (tomb......
türbe, form of mausoleum architecture developed by and popular among the Seljuq Turks in Iran (mid-11th to 13th......
Udaipur City Palace, beautiful, white palace complex built over a period of four centuries in Udaipur, Rajasthan,......
Unité d’Habitation, 18-story residential block in Marseille, France, that expressed Le Corbusier’s ideal of urban......
Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, monumental grave of an unidentifiable military service member who died in wartime.......
Richard Upjohn was a British-American architect who was the most active exponent in his time of the Gothic Revival......
urban planning, design and regulation of the uses of space that focus on the physical form, economic functions,......
Jørn Utzon was a Danish architect best known for his dynamic, imaginative, but problematic design for the Sydney......
Mariana Alley Griswold Van Rensselaer was an American writer and critic who is perhaps best remembered for her......
Sir John Vanbrugh was a British architect who brought the English Baroque style to its culmination in Blenheim......
Luigi Vanvitelli was an Italian architect whose enormous Royal Palace at Caserta (1752–74) was one of the last......
Giorgio Vasari was an Italian painter, architect, and writer who is best known for his important biographies of......
Viktor Mikhaylovich Vasnetsov was a Russian artist, designer, and architect whose monumental works include the......
Vatican Palace, papal residence in Vatican City north of St. Peter’s Basilica. A major site of tourism, the lavish......
Vaux-le-Vicomte, château near Melun, France, designed in 1656 by Louis Le Vau for Nicolas Fouquet, who was finance......
Palazzo Vecchio, most important historic government building in Florence, having been the seat of the Signoria......
Henry van de Velde was a Belgian architect and teacher who ranks with his compatriot Victor Horta as an originator......
vernacular architecture, Common domestic architecture of a region, usually far simpler than what the technology......
Versailles, town and capital of Yvelines département, Île-de-France région, north-central France, 14 miles (22......
Palace of Versailles, former French royal residence and center of government, now a national landmark. It is located......
Victorian architecture, building style of the Gothic Revival that marks the movement from a sentimental phase to......
Giacomo da Vignola was an architect who, with Andrea Palladio and Giulio Romano, dominated Italian Mannerist architectural......
vihara, early type of Buddhist monastery consisting of an open court surrounded by open cells accessible through......
villa, country estate, complete with house, grounds, and subsidiary buildings. The term villa particularly applies......
Villa d’Este, estate in Tivoli, near Rome, with buildings, fountains, and terraced gardens designed (1550) by the......
Carlos Raúl Villanueva was a Venezuelan architect often credited with being the father of modern architecture in......
Villard De Honnecourt was a French architect remembered primarily for the sketchbook compiled while he travelled......
Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc was a French Gothic Revival architect, restorer of French medieval buildings, and......
Louis-Tullius-Joachim Visconti was an Italian-born French designer of the tomb of Napoleon I. Visconti’s father,......
Vitruvius was a Roman architect, engineer, and author of the celebrated treatise De architectura (On Architecture),......
Bernardo Antonio Vittone was one of the most original and creative of late Baroque church architects in all Europe......
Charles Francis Annesley Voysey was a British architect and designer whose work was influential in Europe between......
Konrad Wachsmann was a German-born American architect notable for his contributions to the mass production of building......
Otto Wagner was an Austrian architect and teacher, generally held to be a founder and leader of the modern movement......
Thomas Ustick Walter was an American architect important for the quality and influence of his designs based upon......
Wang Shu is a Chinese architect whose reuse of materials salvaged from demolition sites and thoughtful approach......
Washington National Cathedral, in Washington, D.C., Episcopal cathedral chartered by the U.S. Congress in 1893......
Alfred Waterhouse was an English architect who worked in the style of High Victorian medieval eclecticism. He is......
Philip Speakman Webb was an architect and designer especially known for his unconventional country houses, who......
Harry M. Weese was an American architect of the Chicago school who designed the subway system in Washington, D.C.—considered......
Wembley Stadium, stadium in the borough of Brent in northwestern London, England, built as a replacement for an......
Western architecture, history of Western architecture from prehistoric Mediterranean cultures to the 21st century.......
- Introduction
- Mycenaean Greece
- Roman, Gothic, Renaissance
- Iron Age, Cultures, Styles
- Ancient Greek, Columns, Temples
- Archaic Period, Greek Temples, Doric Order
- Greek, Roman, Temples
- Hellenistic, Greek, Roman
- Roman, Early Christian
- Building, Materials, Styles
- Civic, Religious, Commercial
- Residential, Styles, Design
- Gothic, Baroque, Neoclassical
- Early Christian, Basilicas, Mosaics
- Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance
- Byzantine, Romanesque, Gothic
- Iconoclastic, Carolingian, Byzantine
- Kievan Rus, Russia, Byzantine
- Gothic, Romanesque, Baroque
- Ottonian, Romanesque, Gothic
- Romanesque, Arches, Vaults
- Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque
- Aquitaine, Languedoc, Auvergne
- Iberian, Gothic, Romanesque
- Flying Buttresses, Ribbed Vaults, Pointed Arches
- High Gothic, Flying Buttresses, Ribbed Vaults
- Renaissance, Italy, Gothic
- Early Renaissance, Italy, 1401-95
- High Renaissance, Italy, 1495-1520
- Italian Mannerism, Late Renaissance
- Gothic, Baroque, Neoclassical
- Mannerism, Renaissance, Baroque
- Plateresque, Renaissance, Baroque
- Portugal, Gothic, Baroque
- Eastern Europe, Gothic, Baroque
- Baroque, Rococo, Style
- Roman, Classical, Renaissance
- National, Regional, Variations
- Gothic, Tudor, Baroque
- Colonial America, British Colonies, New World
- Neoclassicism, Baroque, Rococo
- British, Gothic, Baroque
- French Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque
- Italian Renaissance, Baroque, Neoclassical
- German Gothic, Baroque, Renaissance
- Scandinavian, Finnish, Vernacular
- Gothic Revival, Ecclesiastical, Neo-Gothic
- From the 19th to the early 20th century
- Gothic, Baroque, Renaissance
- Scandinavian, Vernacular, Gothic
- Classicism, Revivalism, Eclecticism
- Germany, Austria, Baroque
- Industrialization, Eclecticism, Iron
- Art Nouveau, Ornamentation, Style
- Modernism, Skyscrapers, Urbanism
- US Styles, Materials, & Influences
- Postwar, Modernism, Brutalism
- Postmodernism, Deconstruction, Post-structuralism
- 21st Century, Globalization, Innovation
Westminster Abbey, London church that is the site of coronations and other ceremonies of national significance.......