
Parametry
Kategorie
Více o knize
The ten private residences showcased in this monograph have been designed by Garegin Yeghoyan (Professor of the International Academy of Architecture) and are testimony to the International Style set within the context of ancient Armenian architecture. These buildings can be seen as analogous to islands of contemporary architecture amidst an ocean of bland structures. They may be viewed against a backdrop of the natural environment and the ‘structured chaos’ of the vernacular fabric. Garegin Yeghoyan thus draws on the long tradition of Armenian architecture, which bears the hallmark of the simplicity and homogeneity offered by the rock-type known as tuff, with all its nuances of colour. This surface of natural stone constituting the ultimate Armenian building material offers an antithesis to modernist forms in concrete and metal and thus embodies the unique feature of this architecture. Softcover inside a decorated slipcase
Nákup knihy
Contemporary villas in Armenia, Garegin Yeghoyan
- Jazyk
- Rok vydání
- 2017
Doručení
Platební metody
Navrhnout úpravu
- Titul
- Contemporary villas in Armenia
- Jazyk
- anglicky
- Autoři
- Garegin Yeghoyan
- Vydavatel
- DOM Publishers
- Rok vydání
- 2017
- ISBN10
- 3869224959
- ISBN13
- 9783869224954
- Kategorie
- Architektura a urbanismus
- Anotace
- The ten private residences showcased in this monograph have been designed by Garegin Yeghoyan (Professor of the International Academy of Architecture) and are testimony to the International Style set within the context of ancient Armenian architecture. These buildings can be seen as analogous to islands of contemporary architecture amidst an ocean of bland structures. They may be viewed against a backdrop of the natural environment and the ‘structured chaos’ of the vernacular fabric. Garegin Yeghoyan thus draws on the long tradition of Armenian architecture, which bears the hallmark of the simplicity and homogeneity offered by the rock-type known as tuff, with all its nuances of colour. This surface of natural stone constituting the ultimate Armenian building material offers an antithesis to modernist forms in concrete and metal and thus embodies the unique feature of this architecture. Softcover inside a decorated slipcase