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Presentation
Presentation
The curricular unit of History of Architecture III focuses on the critical analysis of the role of architecture and urbanism in the international context in response to the broad issues of modernity. We seek to understand the emergence and transformations in modern industrial society and the role that architects and urban planners played in responding to architectural, urban and territorial challenges. This understanding of the modern architectural history is structured based on its determining places and historical moments, summoning the main figures and central works that mark these ideological and material transformations. The knowledge acquired in this unit makes it possible to bring students closer to the modern architectural project and its new fundamental issues and problematics, in the continuity of the previous History of Architecture courses with an international scope.
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Class from course
Class from course
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Degree | Semesters | ECTS
Degree | Semesters | ECTS
Bachelor; Master Degree | Semestral | 5
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Year | Nature | Language
Year | Nature | Language
3 | Mandatory | Português
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Code
Code
ULHT36-11374
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Prerequisites and corequisites
Prerequisites and corequisites
Not applicable
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Professional Internship
Professional Internship
Não
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Syllabus
Syllabus
1. Utopian Socialists' reformist models: J.-B. Godin, Familistere, Guise, 1859. 2. Chicago School's vertical construction: L. Sullivan & D. Adler, Auditorium Building, Chicago, 1889. 3. Art Nouveau's total spatiality: C. R. Mackintosh, Glasgow, School of Arts, 1909. 4. Secession´s exalted racionalism: O. Wagner, Caixa Postal, Vienna, 1906. 5. Modern Movement's functionalist abstraction: W. Gropius, Bauhaus, Dessau, 1926. 6. Modern synthesis between the technical and the aesthetic. Mies van der Rohe. Barcelona Pavilion, 1929. 7. Modernism's experimental organicism: F. L. Wright, Johnson Wax Headquarters, Wisconsin, 1939. 8. Modern Revision's synthesis between racional and symbolic: Le Corbusier, La Tourette Monastery, Éveaux, 1957. 9. Modern Revision's synthesis between modernity and tradition: A. Aalto, Municipality, Saynatsalo, 1952. 10. High-Tech's technnological utopia: R. Piano & R. Rodgers, Georges Pompidou Centre, Paris, 1977.
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Objectives
Objectives
The curricular unit of History of Architecture III aims to give a critical perspective of modern architecture from middle 19th Century to the end of the 20th Century. The objective is to cross the knowledge already acquired from the history of architecture with the modern architectural project. It is intended that students acquire knowledge about the most relevant architects and urban planners and about reference works of architecture and urbanism in modernity. It is sought that students relate the architectural and urban production with the theoretical approaches of architects and the interpretations of reference modern architecture historians. Finally, it presents not only the links between the fields of the profession and t e discipline, but also reveals the connections that are manifested between the problematics of modern and contemporary society and the reconfiguration of architecture as discipline.
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Teaching methodologies
Teaching methodologies
Classes of History of Architecture III will consist mainly of three complementary strands. On the one hand, expository sessions will be held by the teacher of the subjects of the course, duly accompanied by audiovisual material. On the other hand, readings of texts and visualization of documentaries will be carried out selected from the historical and theoretical themes under study, in order to promote the collective critical debate. Finally, the development of the students' work will be monitored throughout the semester, through discussion and guidance with the teacher. The evaluation of this curricular unit consists of three aspects: 1. Presentation in class by groups of Documentary of the "Architectures" series of case study proposed by the teacher (40%). ; 2. Elaboration of individual or group Historical Essay of the case study, to be presented in class in the end of the semester (50%) 3. Attendance and Participation (10%).
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References
References
BANHAM, Reyner. Theory and Design in the First Machine Age. Reed, 1960. BENEVOLO, Leonardo. Storia dell'Architettura Moderna. Gius / Laterza, 1992 [1960]. COHEN, Jean-Louis. The Future of Architecture Since 1889: A Worldwide History. Phaidon, 2011. FRAMPTON, Kenneth. Modern Architecture: A Critical History. Thames & Hudson, 1992 [1980]. GIEDION, Sigfried. Space, Time and Architecture: The Growth of a New Tradition. Harvard University Press, 1969 [1941]. RODRIGUES, José Manuel (ed.). Teoria e Crítica de Arquitectura: Século XX. Ordem dos Arquitectos / Caleidoscópio, 2010. TAFURI, Manfredo; DAL CO, Francesco. Modern Architecture 1/2. Harry N. Abrams / Academy Editions / Electa, 1979-80 [1976]. TOURNIKIOTIS, Panayotis. The Historiography of Modern Architecture. The MIT Press, 1999. ZEVI, Bruno. Storia dell'Architettura Moderna. Einaudi, 1950
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Assessment
Assessment
A avaliação desta unidade curricular é composta por três vertentes:
1. Apresentação em aula por grupos de Documentário da série "Architectures" sobre caso de estudo lançado pelo docente (40%)
2. Elaboração em grupo de Ensaio Histórico sobre caso de estudo baseado nas Histórias da Arquitectura Moderna e nas Antologias Teóricas sobre a modernidade (50%)
3. Assiduidade e Participação (10%).
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Mobility
Mobility
No





