James Stirling. Regionalism and Modernity

Javier de Esteban Garbayo

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Abstract

Thirties, modern architecture had percolated into remote corners of the world, encountering the infinite idiosyncrasies of locality, and, at the same time, Architects, feelings the limitations of their style and becoming intent upon extending their vocabulary, embarked upon a process of diffusion, assimilation and personalitation.
The idea of a renewed period after British postwar, was shared for a new young architects generationto find a new way of modernity.
While in his mid fifties housing projects, James Stirling approached to 'regionalism' and 'the functional tradition' to renew the modern language, he wouldn't reject the programmatic idea to understand architecture from a logic and formal consistency that combine 'a common synthesis of the recent past and a certain attitude toward the future'.


Palabras clave


Review; Regionalism; 'The Functional Tradition'; Modernity

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