A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Modernist Architecture chronicles the 20th century's most radical design revolution, when architects declared war on Victorian clutter and reimagined buildings as sleek machines for living. From Louis Sullivan's early skyscrapers to the Bauhaus school's glass-box manifestos, this book traces how a handful of visionary architects-Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright-convinced the world that ornament was a crime and "less is more" was the path to utopia. With the smart, snappy tone of "a TED Talk by a design-obsessed comedian," it reveals how Modernism's clean lines and open plans conquered everything from suburban ranch houses to corporate headquarters, fundamentally reshaping how we live and work.

The story doesn't shy away from Modernism's darker chapters-the alienating housing projects, the sterile office towers, and the urban planning disasters that sparked fierce backlash from critics like Jane Jacobs. Yet it also celebrates the movement's remarkable resilience, showing how Modernist principles evolved from Le Corbusier's concrete utopias to Apple's glass spaceship headquarters and the tiny house movement's minimalist rebellion. Perfect for design nerds, urbanists, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that stark glass building is brilliantly honest or just plain boring, this book argues that Modernism never really died-it just learned to adapt, and may even hold keys to solving climate change.

1148468893
A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Modernist Architecture chronicles the 20th century's most radical design revolution, when architects declared war on Victorian clutter and reimagined buildings as sleek machines for living. From Louis Sullivan's early skyscrapers to the Bauhaus school's glass-box manifestos, this book traces how a handful of visionary architects-Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright-convinced the world that ornament was a crime and "less is more" was the path to utopia. With the smart, snappy tone of "a TED Talk by a design-obsessed comedian," it reveals how Modernism's clean lines and open plans conquered everything from suburban ranch houses to corporate headquarters, fundamentally reshaping how we live and work.

The story doesn't shy away from Modernism's darker chapters-the alienating housing projects, the sterile office towers, and the urban planning disasters that sparked fierce backlash from critics like Jane Jacobs. Yet it also celebrates the movement's remarkable resilience, showing how Modernist principles evolved from Le Corbusier's concrete utopias to Apple's glass spaceship headquarters and the tiny house movement's minimalist rebellion. Perfect for design nerds, urbanists, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that stark glass building is brilliantly honest or just plain boring, this book argues that Modernism never really died-it just learned to adapt, and may even hold keys to solving climate change.

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A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

by KJ Smith

Narrated by Digital Voice Madison G

Unabridged — 2 hours, 13 minutes

A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

A Brief History of Post Modern Architecture

by KJ Smith

Narrated by Digital Voice Madison G

Unabridged — 2 hours, 13 minutes

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Overview

This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.


A Brief History of Modernist Architecture chronicles the 20th century's most radical design revolution, when architects declared war on Victorian clutter and reimagined buildings as sleek machines for living. From Louis Sullivan's early skyscrapers to the Bauhaus school's glass-box manifestos, this book traces how a handful of visionary architects-Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright-convinced the world that ornament was a crime and "less is more" was the path to utopia. With the smart, snappy tone of "a TED Talk by a design-obsessed comedian," it reveals how Modernism's clean lines and open plans conquered everything from suburban ranch houses to corporate headquarters, fundamentally reshaping how we live and work.

The story doesn't shy away from Modernism's darker chapters-the alienating housing projects, the sterile office towers, and the urban planning disasters that sparked fierce backlash from critics like Jane Jacobs. Yet it also celebrates the movement's remarkable resilience, showing how Modernist principles evolved from Le Corbusier's concrete utopias to Apple's glass spaceship headquarters and the tiny house movement's minimalist rebellion. Perfect for design nerds, urbanists, and anyone who's ever wondered whether that stark glass building is brilliantly honest or just plain boring, this book argues that Modernism never really died-it just learned to adapt, and may even hold keys to solving climate change.


Product Details

BN ID: 2940203488275
Publisher: Ashleigh Robertson
Publication date: 10/06/2025
Series: A Brief History of - Architecture
Edition description: Unabridged
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