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1950's Ranch Home Architecture
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1950's Ranch Home Architecture
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Here at HLP
Architects, our
1950's ranch home architecture
people will strive to provide you with all the details and your
requirements. We take pride in our partnership with you that
is why we place high regard to giving you the best quality service
possible.
You don’t have look for a company to
trust because HLP Architects will help you.
HLP
Architects will work with you to carefully create your unique
dream home with
1950's ranch home architecture
, whether big or small. Our architects have the versatility
and skill to design
1950's ranch home architecture
,
1950s house architecture
, and
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in any, size, or even price range.
We take pride in our commitment to giving the clients aesthetically
pleasing
1950's ranch home architecture
designs that are guaranteed to be delightful and
functional. It is the number one goal of our staff to serve
you by designing homes that can surely meet your needs and exceed
your expectations of
1950's ranch home architecture
.
Looking for the best people to design your home? HLP Architects
will be glad to help you with our designs.HLP Architects is
headed by two talented architects namely Craug Headrick and
Boyd Leyburn, who both have extensive background in residential
design and even
1950's ranch home architecture
.
Having a good designer is a good investment
because through them, your construction or remodeling can be
a smoother one. They always know the solutions to any problems
regarding your home and will be able to steer the clients clear
from the many challenges that may arise.Whether it be a new
construction or just remodeling, HLP’s people will help you
with all your needs.
Architects are always important when building a home because
they know everything there is to know about building your dream
home. Aside from residential homes, HLP Architects also build
the ff: · Hi-rise buildings · Subdivisions ·
Universities
HLP’s
1950's ranch home architecture
architects can also help you with looking for reliable contractors.
Then when a contractor is hired, we will meet with you as often
as needed, see your project, and review the plans and help you
choose the best choice.
With HLP Architects, clients are always
given the opportunity to design and develop their own taste and
style in building their dream home. Our team of
1950's ranch home architecture
designers can create aesthetically pleasing, creative, unique
yet practical designs and even solutions for the clients.
We know very well that there is a great client need for an efficient
architectural firm that is why HLP Architects offer you these
kinds of services. HLP Architects is committed to helping every
client with the best service. By providing you the opportunity
to discuss with us the elements you want in your home.
We will be glad to entertain your questions to the best of our
abilities for a better and more fruitful business with you.
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Facts About Architectural History
This
article is licensed under the GNU
Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia
article "Architectural History".
Architecture first evolved out
of the dynamics between needs (shelter, security, worship, etc.) and means
(available building materials and attendant skills). Prehistoric and primitive
architecture constitute this early stage. As humans progressed and knowledge
began to be formalised through oral traditions and practices, architecture
evolved into a craft. Here there is first a process of trial and error,
and later improvisation or replication of a successful trial. The architect
is not the sole important figure; he is merely part of a continuing tradition.
What is termed as Vernacular architecture today falls under this mode
and still continues to be produced in many parts of the world.
Virupaksha Temple, Hampi, IndiaEarly human
settlements were essentially rural. As surplus of production began to
occur, rural societies transformed into urban ones and cities began to
evolve. In many ancient civilisations such as the Egyptians' and Mesopotamians'
architecture and urbanism reflected the constant engagement with the divine
and the supernatural. However, the architecture and urbanism of the Classical
civilisations such as the Greek and the Roman evolved from more civic
ideas and many new building types emerged. Architectural styles developed
and texts on architecture began to be written. These became canons to
be followed in important works, especially religious architecture. Some
examples of canons are the works of Vitruvius, the Kaogongji of ancient
China and Vaastu Shastra in ancient India. In Europe in the Classical
and Medieval periods, buildings were not attributed to specific individual
architects who remained anonymous. Guilds were formed by craftsmen to
organise their trade. Over time the complexity of buildings and their
types increased. General civil construction such as roads and bridges
began to be built. Many new building types such as schools, hospitals,
and recreational facilities emerged.
With the Renaissance and its
emphasis on the individual and humanity rather than religion, and with
all its attendant progress and achievements, a new chapter began. Buildings
were ascribed to specific architects - Michaelangelo, Brunelleschi, Leonardo
da Vinci - and the cult of the individual had begun. But there was no
dividing line between artist, architect and engineer, or any of the related
vocations. At this stage, it was still possible for an artist to design
a bridge as the level of structural calculations involved were within
the scope of the generalist.
With the consolidation of knowledge
in scientific fields such as engineering and the rise of new materials
and technology, the architect began to lose ground on the technical aspects
of building. He therefore cornered for himself another playing field -
that of aesthetics. There was the rise of the "gentleman architect"
who usually dealt with wealthy clients and concentrated predominantly
on visual qualities derived usually from historical prototypes. In the
19th century Ecole des Beaux Arts in France, the training was toward producing
quick sketch schemes involving beautiful drawings without much emphasis
on context.
Meanwhile, the Industrial Revolution
laid open the door for mass consumption and aesthetics started becoming
a criterion even for the middle class as ornamented products, once within
the province of expensive craftmanship, became cheaper under machine production.
Such products lacked the beauty and honesty associated with the expression
of the process in the product.
Taj Mahal, Agra, IndiaThe dissatisfaction with such a general situation
at the turn of the twentieth century gave rise to many new lines of thought
that in architecture served as precursors to Modern Architecture. Notable
among these is the Deutscher Werkbund, formed in 1907 to produce better
quality machine made objects. The rise of the profession of industrial
design is usually placed here. Following this lead, the Bauhaus school,
founded in Germany in 1919, consciously rejected history and looked at
architecture as a synthesis of art, craft, and technology.
When Modern architecture first
began to be practiced, it was an avant garde movement with moral, philosophical,
and aesthetic underpinnings. Truth was sought by rejecting history and
turning to function as the generator of form. Architects became prominent
figures and were termed masters. Later modern architecture moved into
the realm of mass production due to its simplicity and economy.
However, a reductive quality
began to be perceived in modern architecture by the general public from
the 1960s. Some reasons cited for this are its perceived lack of meaning,
sterility, ugliness, uniformity, and psychological effects.
Chrysler building, New York City, USAThe architectural profession responded
to this partly by attempting a more populist architecture at the visual
level, even if at the expense of sacrificing depth for shallowness, a
direction called Postmodernism. Robert Venturi's contention that a "decorated
shed" (an ordinary building which is functionally designed inside
and embellished on the outside) was better than a "duck" (a
building in which the whole form and its function are considered together)
gives an idea of this approach.
Another part of the profession,
and also some non-architects, responded by going to what they considered
the root of the problem. They felt that architecture was not a personal
philosophical or aesthetic pursuit by individualists; rather it had to
consider everyday needs of people and use technology to give a livable
environment. The Design Methodology Movement involving people such as
Chris Jones, Christopher Alexander started searching for a more inclusive
process of design in order to lead to a better product. Extensive studies
on areas such as behavioural, environmental, and social sciences were
done and started informing the design process.
As many other concerns began
to be recognised and complexity of buildings began to increase in terms
of aspects such as services, architecture started becoming more multi-disciplinary
than ever. Architecture now required a team of professionals in its making,
an architect being one among the many, sometimes the leader, sometimes
not. This is the state of the profession today. However, individuality
is still cherished and sought for in the design of buildings seen as cultural
symbols - the museum or fine arts centre has become a showcase for new
experiments in style: today Deconstructivism, tomorrow maybe something
else.
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