HOA2 FINALS
23. The architect who designed the Rookery Building (1885
87) - Daniel H Burnham and John Wellborn Root
7. The architect who designed the Monadnock Building (Monadnock Block) (1889
91) - Daniel H Burnham and John Wellborn Root
2. The structure was to house the production of steam turbines—engines that use pressurized steam to generate electricity—a rapidly growing industry in early 20th century Germany, as the country's maritime power developed in rivalry with that of Britain. It was quintessentially linked to the rise of modernism. Founded in Berlin in 1883, it pioneered modern, largescale industrial development
AEG Turbine Factory
10. The architect who designed the Chicago Stock Exchange Building (1893 to 94)
Adler and Sullivan
28. The architect who designed the Prudential Building (Guaranty Building)
Adler and Sullivan
42. The architect who designed the Auditorium Building (1889)
Adler and Sullivan
62. The architect who designed the Wainwright Building, St. Louis, Missouri (1890 to 1891).
Adler and Sullivan
64. Designed by Hector Guimard, it was built in 1913 and has an exterior motif inspired by the Ten Commandments.
Agoudas Hakehilos Synagogue, Paris
52. One of its most prolific designers was Russian born Mikhail Osipovich Eisenstein, who devised a number of these structures, including many of the highly ornamented apartment buildings.
Albert Street, Riga
18. It was designed by Raymond Hood and André Fouilhoux in the Gothic and Art Deco styles. The original section of the building, a 338 ft tall (103 m), 23 story tower, was completed in 1924. A five story annex, to the west of the original tower, was built from 1936 to 1937. This landmark skyscraper features black bricks, symbolizing coal, and gold bricks, symbolizing fire.
American Radiator Building
20. A correct statement.
Among the formative influences on Art Deco were Art Nouveau, the Bauhaus, Cubism, and Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. Decorative ideas came from American Indian, Egyptian, and early classical sources as well as from nature. Characteristic motifs included nude female figures, animals, foliage, and sun rays, all in conventionalized forms.
36. Catalan architect, whose distinctive style is characterized by freedom of form, voluptuous color and texture, and organic unity. Known for his works such as La Sagrada Familia, Casa Mila, and Casa Baglo.
Antonio Gaudi
65. An ornamental style of art that flourished between about 1890 and 1910 throughout Europe and the United States. Characterized by its use of a long, sinuous, organic line and was employed most often in architecture, interior design, jewelry, and glass design, posters, and illustrations.
Art Nouveau
32. English aesthetic movement of the second half of the 19th century represented the beginning of a new appreciation of the decorative arts throughout Europe.
Arts and Crafts Movement
14. School of design, architecture, and applied arts that existed in Germany from 1919 to 1933. Founded by the architect Walter Gropius, who combined two schools, the Weimar Academy of Arts and the Weimar School of Arts and Crafts.
Bauhaus
75. This building was described with a calculated rhythm and reduced number of architectural motifs, is in the tradition of "simple" Rational Classicism.
Biblioteka Raczyńskich
8. This building was described with a calculated rhythm and reduced number of architectural motifs, is in the tradition of "simple" Rational Classicism.
Biblioteka Raczyńskich
13. Built in 1929, is a former department store - now a law school - that is situated in Los Angeles. Designed in collaboration with his son Donald, architect Lancashire born John Parkinson (a distant relative), was responsible for the design of much of Los Angeles' iconic structures of the 1920 and 30s, including Los Angeles City Hall, Union Station, and the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.
Bullocks Wilshire, Department Store
39. The front facade reveals striking textures, colors, and imagery that work together to conjure thoughts of fairytales and phantasmal dreams. The larger sculptural pieces that create the boundaries of the balconies and that frame the entrance resemble bones, suggesting a septum, eyebrows, or clavicles, which keep to the anthropomorphic tone. As eyes wander up to the top of this building, they are greeted by the dominating reptilian surface of the roof.
Casa Batlo
59. Known as La Pedera, the quarry, the building was inspired by the Modernista movement, Spain's version of Art Nouveau.
Casa Mila
3. Designed mostly by John Dobson, has an arcaded portico set in front of curved iron roofs over the platforms, and forms part of the Victorian development of central Newcastle with its handsome Classical streets
Central Station Newcastle
54. Commonly refers to the groundbreaking skyscraper architecture developed during the period (1879 to 1910) by the designer and engineer William Le Baron Jenney (1832 to 1907), along with several other innovative American architects including William Holabird (1854 to 1923), Martin Roche (1853 to 1927), Daniel Hudson Burnham (1846 to 1912), John Wellborn Root (1850 to 1891), Dankmar Adler (1844 to 1900), Louis Sullivan (1856 to 1924).
Chicago School
9. Is a ten story office building in Hamburg, Germany designed by the architect Fritz Höger for the shipping magnate Henry B. Sloman, who made his fortune trading saltpeter. It is an exceptional example of the 1920s Brick Expressionism style of architecture. This large angular building is located on a site of approximately 6,000m² spanning Fischertwiete Street in Hamburg.
Chileshaus
10. The office building in New York City, designed by William Van Alen and is often cited as the epitome of the Art Deco skyscraper. Its sunburst patterned stainless steel spire remains one of the most striking features of the Manhattan skyline.
Chrysler Building
18. Designed by Paul Abadie and was largely completed by the end of the century but not wholly finished until 1919. It stands with its cluster of white domes on the heights of Montmartre and is one of the landmarks of Paris. The design reflects Byzantine influence by way of the medieval cathedral of St. Front, Periguex.
Church of the Sacre Coeur, Paris
22. Opening in March of 1933, the station's Art Deco ornamentation was designed by Paul Phillipe Cret and Roland Wank.
Cincinnati Union Terminal
60. The architect who designed the Flatiron Building, New York (1901 to 3)
D.H. Burnham & Company
26. The architect who designed The Montauk Building (Montauk Block) (1882 to 83)
Daniel Burnham and John Wellborn Root
57. He led the movement to license architects, with the result that the first registration act was passed in Illinois in 1897.
Dankmar Adler
12. Designed by architects Cassiano Branco and Carlo Florencio Dias, the building's stone frieze facade is ornamented with a series of tableaus depicting actors performing before a film crew and camera.
Eden Theatro
16. It consists of three blocks of housing in the Spaarndammerbuurt, a residential district for workers that occupies approximately 54 acres in the northwest part of Amsterdam. Designed by Michel de Klerk (1884-1923) between 1914 and 1920, this complex has been recognized as his finest achievement in the field of housing, depicting his Expressionist style and ultimately becoming one of the symbolic structures of the Amsterdam School.
Eigen Haard Housing Estate
14. Invented the safety elevator which led to the construction of skyscrapers.
Elisha Otis
55. Designed by Hector Guimard (1867 to 1942), it is very similar to the other surviving metro entrances build by the artist at Porte Dauphine (line 2). It has a glass roof with green wrought iron arches and amber lights.
Entrance to the Place des Abbesses Metro Station, Paris, France
15. A correct statement.
Expressing emotion through distorted forms, Emphasis on symbolic or stylistic expression over realism, an attempt to achieve new and original designs, natural themes such as mountains, lightning, rock formations, caves, and so on, the influence of Moorish, Egyptian, Indian, and other eastern architectural styles, and the romantic appreciation of architecture as an art form.
25. Architect and writer, an abundantly creative master of American architecture. His "Prairie style" became the basis of 20th century residential design in the United States. He became famous as the creator and expounder of "organic architecture," his phrase indicating buildings that harmonize both with their inhabitants and with their environment. The boldness and fertility of his invention and his command of space are probably his greatest achievements.
Frank Lloyd Wright
33. Designed by Jacques Ignace Hittorf, replaced a small station of (1843 to 7). The gable of the broad façade follows the line of the train shed's pitched iron and glass roof, and the outer pavilions distinguish the arrival and departure of sides of the station. The architectural detail is of Neo Classical character but with some disparities of scale. The façade is crowned by the figure of Paris and eight others representing northern European cities.
Gare du Nord, Paris
5. The structure was designed by Rudolf Steiner and based on an architectural concept in which each element, shape, and color have an inner relationship to the whole, and the whole flows organically into its individual elements in a process of metamorphosis.
Goetheanum II Building
3. American architect and co recipient (with Oscar Niemeyer) of the prestigious Pritzker Prize in 1988. His design of the Lever House skyscraper in New York City (1952) exerted a strong influence on American architecture.
Gordon Bunshaft
21. Designed by Anthony Salvin, is a prodigious building. Its boldly modeled façade and ebullient skyline cupolas, gables, and chimney stacks are quite as extraordinary as the Elizabethan houses, such as Burghley, which inspired Salvin.
Harlaxton Hall, Lincolnshire
6. Favored lithic structures with load bearing walls like his Trinity Church, Boston (1873) rather than Jenney's steel frame. Even so, his masterpiece the Marshall Field Wholesale Store (1885-1887, demolished 1930) had a huge influence on the development of Chicago School building facades, notably those of Daniel Burnham and Louis Sullivan.
Henry Hobson Richardson
68. The architect who designed the Marshall Field Warehouse (Chicago)
Henry Hobson Richardson
37. The architect who designed the Tacoma Building (Chicago) (1889)
Holabird and Roche
61. The architect who designed the Chicago Building (Chicago Savings Bank Building) (1904 to 1905)
Holabird and Roche
25. Designed by J. D. Sedding, is built in a free version of the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, with an elaborate west front of red brick with stone dressings. The church is decorated with furnishings and fittings by notable members of the Arts and Crafts Movement, including stained glass ny Burne Jones and metal work by Sedding's assistant, Henry Wilson.
Holy Trinity, Chelsea, London
63. Designed by Victor Horta in Brussels, in which the façade is more plastic and incorporates attenuated iron columns.
Hotel Solvay
50. Designed by Victor Horta, is often regarded as the first complete building in the fully pledged Art Nouveau style. It is a narrow fronted house and the main element of its generally unobstructed façade is a segmental oriel window with steel lintels and mullions.
Hotel Tassel
74. Designed by Victor Horta, where steel stanchions are boldly employed externally. In the latter, the interior is arranged around a superb octagonal space which is ringed with slender iron columns flowing into elliptical arches and supporting a shallow glass dome.
Hotel Van Eetvelde
4. Its most identifiable element is the dendriform columns, the name used by Wright because of their treelike shape. Wright's ability to effortlessly incorporate the organic metaphor into his architecture is revealed in the building via a tall slender mushroom column that tapers to a base of a mere 9 inch diameter. They rise 30 feet and terminate at the roof level as broad circular lily pads of concrete 18 1/2 feet wide. Wright's imagination led to creating these hollow cored columns that serve as stormwater drains and which feature hinged bases with pin jointed bronze shoes.
Johnson Wax Company Building
71. The Art Nouveau Movement in Germany.
Jugendstil
11. Designed by Lewis Cubitt, consists of two arched sheds expressed in the vast stock brick arches of the façade. An Italianate clock tower rises from the center, and triple arcaded porticoes originally stood below the great arches, giving a Roman scale and dignity to the unpretentious composition. The iron and glass sheds, each of which has a span of 32m.
King's Cross Station, London
19. Designed by Antoni Gaudi, is still largely unfinished and was seen by Gaudi as the work of generations, a building that would evolve painstakingly rather than a design that was fully thought out from the beginning. The façade of the Nativity has three steeply gabled, deeply recessed porches, the outer ones corresponding to the transept aisles, dominated by four skittle shaped openwork spires. The porches are profusely ornamented with naturalistic sculpture beneath stonework which gives the impression of soft, melting snow.
La Sagrada Familia
23. The artist of the figure "Atlas" is in front of the Rockefeller Center.
Lee Lawrie
17. It was one of the first glass International style office buildings in the United States. Located in midtown Manhattan, it was originally the American corporate headquarters of the soap company Lever Brothers. The design of this building offsets the tall office tower from the horizontal base. The horizontal base is lifted off the ground plane by pilotis except for a small, enclosed portion, providing a public plaza underneath and a threshold between the exterior and interior of the building. Here, the ground floor has space for displays, waiting for visitors, an auditorium, and a demonstration kitchen.
Lever House
2. The first American architect to produce a modern style of architecture and the first architect anywhere to revolutionize skyscraper aesthetics and give a stylish unity to the tall building
Louis Sullivan
27. The architect who designed the Sullivan Center (Carson, Pirie, Scott & Company Building)
Louis Sullivan
43. Designed by Otto Wagner at the turn of the 20th century emanates some of the most classic details of the Art Nouveau style and is decorated with vibrant floral motifs. In Vienna, this was referred to as the Secession style, with the same connotations of Art Nouveau but in a more specific context of their country.
Majolikahaus, Vienna
35. The Art Nouveau Movement in Spain.
Modernismo
6. A concept, a scale of harmonic measures that set architectural elements in proportion to human stature. This theory was finally perfected in 1950, and Le Corbusier used it in designing all his subsequent buildings, wishing them to incorporate "a human scale."
Modulor Concept
12. The buildings are the embodiment of the Second French Empire style, incorporating Late Renaissance details in the facades punctuated by grand pavilions with distinctive mansard roofs.
New Louvre, Paris
46. Designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott, was a cruciform Gothic church, much more enriched with tracery and pinnacles. Its Germanic openwork spire, 147m (482 ft) high, is almost that survives, following an air raid in 1943.
Nikolaikirche
31. Designed by Louis Pierre Baltard, it exemplifies the kind of Rational Classicism which was promoted at the Ecole des Beaux Artes in Paris. Its giant colonnade of 24 Corinthian columns is punctuated only by a slightly wider central intercolumniation.
Palais De Justice, Lyon
22. The plan is a noteworthy example of the application of Beaux Arts principles, its elements and space related and held together by a strongly controlled axial system. An enormous foyer, sumptuously enriched with brightly gilded sculpture and Baroque architectural elements, with a vaulted painted ceiling from which hang candelabra, leads to the magnificent escalier d'honneur, beyond which lie the auditorium and extensive stage area.
Palais Garnier
17. Designed by Joseph Poelaert, stands on a height overlooking the city and builds up pyramidally to a domed tower above the central great hall. It is a gargantuan building, and although its Classical details are suitably monumental, they are generally overcrowded and suggest a straining after effect which compares unfavorably with the fluent brilliance of Opera in Paris.
Palais de Justice, Brussels
53. It has an unusual trapezoidal plan, and the exhibition rooms are arranged around a semicircular courtyard. In two corners of the building, staircases of reinforced concrete by Francois Hennebique spiral down from cantilevered galleries, their daring construction now concealed by subsequent enclosures.
Petit Palais, Paris
49. Designed by Paul Wallot, was built on a scale suitable for its role as a symbol of the second Reich. Its Baroque Classicism, handled with assurance, is a little ponderous in some of the details.
Riechstag Building, Berlin
7. Designed as two large rectangles that seem to slide past one another, the long, horizontal residence that Wright created, boldly established a new form of domestic design: the Prairie style. As the first uniquely American architectural style, it responded to the expansive American plains by emphasizing the horizontal over the vertical. A dramatic twenty foot cantilevered roof shades ribbons of art glass windows below creates privacy and seamlessly connects the interior and exterior. Inside, the typical warren of rooms is discarded for a light filled open plan, centered around the main hearth. Wright responded not only to the openness of the American landscape but also to the more informal quality of the modern American lifestyle.
Robie House
44. Designed by J. F. Bently, is the one major English building based on the revival of Byzantine Architecture. The three pendentive domes cover the length of the spacious nave and a slightly smaller dome is set over the sanctuary, beyond which lies the apse of the choir.
Roman Catholic Cathedral, Westminster
72. The architect who designed the Reliance Building (1890 to 95)
Root and Charles B. Atwood
58. Designed by George Edmund Street, one of the last important buildings to be erected in the High Victorian Gothic Style, is a vast, vigorously modeled composition, planned with considerable ingenuity to meet complex requirements: the courts are arranged about a huge, vaulted Gothic concourse. The design is highly personal to Street, who executed 3000 drawings by his own hand, in the face of dogged official parsimony, only to die before it was completed.
Royal Courts of Justice, London
1. The concrete building contains 100 cells and features many of the structural and decorative motifs that Le Corbusier developed over his career. The structure was also added to the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites.
Sainte Marie de La Tourette
4. Designed by Georg von Dollmann, was built for Ludwig II of Bavaria in South German Rococo style. It is superbly sited with delightful formal gardens and sumptuous and finely executed Rococo interiors
Schloss Linderhof
20. Designed by Charles Rennie Mackintosh, is the architect's most famous work. The main building was constructed between 1897 and 1899, and its long ashlar façade is dominated by huge, north facing studio windows disposed of with subtle variations of rhythm around a more obviously asymmetrical entrance bay. Thus, the direct expression of function is combined with echoes of Scottish vernacular architecture and the influence of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
School of Art, Glasgow
1. The Art Nouveau Movement in Austria
Sezessione
41. The architect who designed the Pullman Building (1883)
Solon S. Beman
45. Designed by Harvey Lonsdale Elmes, is one of the most magnificent Neo Classical monuments in Britain. The planning is strongly axial but satisfies the complex requirements ingeniously, and the different elements are freely expressed externally. The exterior reveals Elme's knowledge of Schinkel's work, while the great hall takes its inspiration from the Baths of Caracalla in Rome.
St. George's Hall, Liverpool
40. Designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott and W.B. Moffatt, won in a competition. It's a large stone church of cruciform plan, with a tall crossing tower and spire. Designed in the geometrical Gothic style of the 13th century.
St. Giles, Chamberwell, London
48. Designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott, stands in front of the huge train shed off 1864 to8. It was a showpiece for the Midland Railway Company, providing extensive hotel accommodation as well as the usual booking hall and offices. It is an outstanding example of Scott's secular Gothic style, blending Italian, French, and Flemish elements in a high Victorian way.
St. Pancras Hotel and Station Block, London
34. The Art Nouveau Movement in Italy.
Stile Florleale
19. Designed by architects Sir Owen Williams with Ellis and Clarke, the building's main lobby's east and west walls sport two gilded murals, "Great Britain" and "The Empire", by sculptor Eric Aumonier. It has a black vitrolite glass façade of Lord Beaverbrook's' 1930 to 32 Fleet Street newspaper headquarters.
The Daily Express Building
47. Designed by architect Paul Saintenoy, the Old England building was constructed in 1899 and is considered one of Brussels's Art Nouveau gems. The former department store now houses the Museum of Musical Instruments.
The Old England Building
56. Designed by architect Joseph Maria Olbrich, the white cubic building was constructed as an exhibition hall for the artists and designers of the Secessionist movement. The structure, which opened in 1898, is topped with a distinctive dome of 2,500 gilt wrought iron laurel leaves.
The Secession Building
21. A correct statement.
The building's decorative neo-Gothic program only adds to this sense of monumentality. On the exterior, ornate sculptural arches, finials, and gargoyles over-scaled enough to be read from streetlevel, refer directly to European medieval architecture and draw the eye towards the heavens in the same manner as a High Gothic cathedral.
9. Designed by M. G. B. Bindesboll, was built to house the works of the Danish sculptor Bertil (Alberto) Thorswalden. Greek Revival in spirit and to some extent Egyptian Architecture, especially in the internal courtyards.
Thorwaldsen Musuem, Copenhagen
13. Designed by Martin Nyrop, is a suavely eclectic design, blending medieval and Renaissance elements in a composition whose symmetry is counteracted by a refined belltower.
Town Hall, Copenhagen
38. Designed by Cuthbert Brodrick, is a masterpiece of High Victorian Classicism. Grandiose in conception, rugged and massive in outline and opulent in detail, it asserts the independence and pride of a prosperous industrial city. The plan consists of a large public hall, rivalling that of St. George's Hall, Liverpool, and four corner pavilions containing the law courts and council chambers.
Town Hall, Leeds
16. Designed by Alfred Waterhouse, is ingeniously planned on a difficult triangular site, and resolves the awkward central angles by skillful devices of projecting bays and blocks. The council chamber and main reception rooms occupy the front of the building, offices and committee rooms taking up the other two sides; all are reached from ring corridor. Open arcades and different levels produce constantly changing vistas and spatial relationships.
Town Hall, Manchester
30. Designed by Sir Charles Barry, is one of the designs he initiated during the Renaissance Revival and the "Palazzo" mode in England. The two story stuccoed façade of five regular bays is made asymmetrical by the location of the main entrance in an end bay.
Traveller's Club, Pall Mall, London
24. Designed by J. L. Pearson, was incomplete at his death and was continued by his son. It exemplifies the architect's refined Early Gothic style, with lancet windows and sharp spires rising from square towers to give a powerful vertical emphasis. It is of granite, and the interior spaces are unified by stone vaulting, not often used in churches at this time.
Truro Cathedral, Cornwall
69. Designed by Giuseppe Sacconi, was built on the slopes of the Capitol to commemorate the unification of Italy and the nation's first king. It consists of an enormous, terraced platform on which stands an equestrian statue of the king, backed by an even larger, slightly concave Corinthian colonnade, supporting an elaborately decorated attic, and terminated at each end by pavilions bearing great bronze sculptural groups. The monument houses a museum of the Risorgimento.
Victor Emmanuel II Monument, Rome
8. Designed by Le Corbusier in 1929, represents the culmination of a decade during which the architect worked to articulate the essence of modern architecture. Throughout the 1920s, via his writings and designs, Le Corbusier considered the nature of modern life and architecture's role in the new machine age. His famous dictum, that "The house should be a machine for living in," is perfectly realized within the forms, layout, materials, and siting of the structure.
Villa Savoye
70. Designed by Heinrich von Fertsel, was built as a thank offering when an attempt on Emperor Franz Josef's life was foiled. It is an elaborate essay in Gothic, heralded by tall, slender western towers with open belfries and crocketed steeples, and its richness is akin to Scott's Nikolaikirche in Hamburg.
Votivkirche, Vienna
11. German American architect and educator who, particularly as director of the Bauhaus (1919 to 28), exerted a major influence on the development of modern architecture. Created prototype of modern architecture: free standing glass sheath suspended on a structural framework aka curtain wall.
Walter Gropius
29. The architect who designed the Second Leiter Building (1889 to 91)
William Le Baron Jenney
5. The architect who designed the First Leiter Building (1879)
William Le Baron Jenney
51. The architect who designed the Chamber of Commerce Building (1888 to 9)
William Le Baron Jenney
66. The architect who designed the Home Insurance Building (1884)
William Le Baron Jenney
67. The architect who designed the First Leiter Building (1879)
William Le Baron Jenney
73. A highly successful architect and the first Professor of Architecture (1876 to 77) at the University of Michigan, he influenced a generation of pupils and apprentices, some of whom became famous across America, including Daniel Burnham, Louis Sullivan, William Holabird, and Martin Roche. He is best known for designing the 10 story Home Insurance Building in Chicago (1884 to 85), the first high rise in America to use a metal frame rather than stone and brick.
William Le Baron Jenney
15. The pioneers of the Arts and Crafts Movement.
William Morris, -Faulkner -Marshall -Philip Webb and the painters Ford Madox Brown and Edward Burne-Jones
24. The building towers around 60 stories and 792 feet above Broadway between Park Place and Barclay Street in downtown Manhattan, was the tallest building in the world when it was completed, in 1913. It was designed by architect Cass Gilbert, the building won widespread acclaim for its pioneering steel frame structure and stunning interior and exterior appearance.
Woolworth Building