Modern Architectures of North AmericaMain MenuHelp! Help! Help!SuburbiaArchitecture Relating to the Natural EnvironmentPatients, Prisoners, PoliticsIdentity: What Lies Beneath Style and FormChange and AdaptationErica Morawski - The Hotel Nacional de Cuba: Making Meanings and Negotiating NationalismsAmanda - Organic Architecture/F.L. WrightSteph - Moorish Revival ArchitectureBrittney - Sustainable Urban DesignsThe Shift: Art Deco & Modernismby Bayleigh BoganTransition to Streamline ModerneSydney - The Coppelia Ice Cream Shop in Havana, Cuba: A Cultural Moment ManifestedKatie - LevittownGenevieve - The Multifaceted Development of Creole ArchitectureThe Former Church of the Holy Communion: A Specific Example of Change and Adaptation of a Single Building Over TimeRe-Purposing a Religious BuildingZarah Ferrari: Tule Lake Segregation Center: Rising Above an Unjust SystemZarah FerrariLaura - The Suburban Kitchen in Levittown, PABy Laura Krok-HortonMarianna Mapes, Disease and the Body Politic: The National Leprosarium at Carville, LouisianaLiz - Eichler, Neutra, and the mid-century Californian SuburbV. Nash- Berkeley City Women's Club (1929), Berkeley, CA, Julia MorganJulia Morgan was a West Coast architect.Metropolitan Museum of Art: A Transition to ModernismBrendan - Academy of Music
1media/green.jpgmedia/green.jpg2016-04-07T08:04:43-07:00Architecture Relating to the Natural Environment13vispath2016-04-17T12:25:14-07:00 As humans on living on Earth, the natural environment cannot be circumvented. Any type of building inherently interferes with the natural systems it is built within, so architects have had to factor in these surrounding natural environments (often times they have even found ways to reflect the environment within their designs). With major technological advancements and society moving in a more tech-savvy direction as a whole more innovative designs became possible. However, even with these new and popular notions of modernity within design the environment could not be forgotten, and people still desired a connection to nature for spiritual and physical benefits. Our projects all relate to the environment yet focus on various types of architecture in various climates, regions, and locations. They are organized to start with Brittney's project, which looks at sustainable architecture in North American cities. Next, is Genevieve's, which describes the development of Creole Architecture out of the whether of New Orleans, Louisiana. Finally, Amanda's project, that looks at Frank Lloyd Wright's architecture who's home designs integrate with the natural environment in which they are built. As you go through our page, looking at our projects from most broad to specific, you will get a wide range of examples of, and reasons why, and how the environment is brought into architectural design.