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Copy and paste architecture

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3 Stars from 2 Votes

Copy and paste architecture

Uploaded By: Mr GG

Mon, Sep 6, 2004

Description: Most architecture my I sees as just copy and paste. Common people - not architects - know the name of one architect - Gaudi - but his architecture has not inspired other architects. Why? He could not be copied and pasted!

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Tue, Sep 7, 2004 at 9:45:38 AM

#1

Mr GG

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Joined Thu, May 13, 2004
3.5 Stars from 9 Votes

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I tried to search on Google for - ";inspired-by-Gaudi";. ----- Well, I found 202 links so there is someones who have tried make something inspired by the one you can not only copy and paste. ----- Take a look on this one: http://www.architectureweek.com/2000/0802/building_1-1.html ----- They are no skyscraper romantics. And I think it will be hard to do the drawings in Revit. I tried but someone told me it was not serious. Perhaps he was right. Perhaps not. --------- But listen to this romantic or rational story. And you can begin to wonder what your own copy and paste architectural I(ego) has got its values from on good and bad taste ----------- It all began on a beach in Carmel, California, during their honeymoon in 1966, when the newlyweds found themselves shaping piles of wet sand into ethereal elevations with rooflines that undulated like waves, inspired by their favorite architect, the Spanish master of the avant-garde, Antonio Gaudi. ------------------ From that point on, there were two givens: Will and Beth Hathaway were going to build a house, and it wasn't going to look like anything anyone had ever seen before. ----------------------- ";It would be hard to do this in your typical Arts-and-Crafts-style bungalow,"; observes Will, an industrial designer who recently retired as the director of the Multnomah Arts Center. He rounds his back into the horseshoe-shaped archway between the kitchen and family room in a luxurious demonstration of his affinity for curves. ";The whole structure wants to caress you. This is a sculpture, this is a living form.";

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