6. ORIGIN OF GOOGIE ARCHITECTURE
• Style of architecture and design
first popular in the United
States in the 1950s, typified by
roadside buildings such as
coffee shops, motels, gas
stations, and signs.
6
7. • Origin of the term is speculated to
have come from Googie's
Coffee Shop in Los Angeles,
California, and has since been
used to describe similar designs.
7
8. • Popular in the United States from roughly 1945 to
the early 1970s.
• The style later became widely known as part of
the mid-century modern style, elements of
which represent the Populuxe aesthetic.
8
9. • Populuxe was a consumer
culture and aesthetic in the
United States popular in the
1950s and 1960s. The term
comes from a combination
of popular and luxury.
9
10. • With the increasing prosperity of the
United States during the 1950s, American
designers celebrated this new affluence with
optimistic designs.
• The development of nuclear power and the
reality of spaceflight captivated the public's
imagination of the future.
• Googie architecture exploited this trend
by incorporating energy into its design
with elements such as the boomerang,
diagonals, atomic bursts and bright colors.
10
ORIGIN OF GOOGIE ARCHITECTURE
Cinema Cesar Pelli
11. • Googie became less valued as
time passed, and many
buildings in this style have
been destroyed.
• Some examples have been
preserved, though, such as the
oldest McDonald's stand
(located in Downey, California).
11
ORIGIN OF GOOGIE ARCHITECTURE
37. • Brutalist architecture is an architectural
style that emerged during the 1950s in
the United Kingdom, among the
reconstruction projects of the post world
war II era.
37
ORIGIN OF BRUTALIST ARCHITECTURE
Balfron Tower (1963), designed by Ernő Goldfinger in London, England
38. • The term Brutalism came from the
French word “beton brut” meaning
raw concrete.
• Brutalism is said to be a reaction
against the nostalgia of architecture
in the 1940s.
38
39. • Concrete was the primary common material used in brutalism. This is because
of concrete was relatively cheap and abundant material for the post war
reconstruction effort.
39
40. 40
• Widely used for public and intuitional
buildings such as:
• Government
• Libraries
• Universities
• Museums
• Social housing
• The popularity of the movement began to
decline in the late 1970s, with some
associating the style with urban decay and
totalitarianism.
Western City Gate (1979), Belgrade, Serbia
41. 41
The Robarts Library (1973) - Toronto
CHARACTERISTICS
• Heavy and closed building envelope
43. • Limited (less) glazing
43
Palace of Justice, Lisbon, Portugal (1970)
44. 44
Halls of residence at the University of East Anglia (completed 1966), designed by Denys Lasdun
• However, there are some exceptions like Halls of residence at the University of East
Anglia, which uses more glazing than other brutalist buildings.