STRUCTURAL DESIGN FOR ARCHITECTURE

(Ben Green) #1
Steel structures

tension and compression. Its deficiencies -

poor durability, poor performance in fire, the

difficulty of shaping it into useful components,

the high weight of the components - were not

significant, and would be overcome by employ-

ing other technologies. The large ecological

cost, in terms of transportation of raw materi-

als and of the high energy consumption and

pollution associated with its manufacture,

were not an issue at the time. So far as the

modernists were concerned, here was a new

and exciting material whose expressive possi-

bilities, if explored, might lead to a truly

appropriate architectural vocabulary for the

twentieth century.

The technology of the steel framework

contributed to the aesthetics of architecture in

the 1920s and 1930s in two quite separate

ways. Firstly, it was crucial to the development

of the glass-clad building; secondly, it made

tenable the overt use of structural elements as

constituents of a modern visual vocabulary.

These two aspects of the aesthetics of

Modernism were, and still are, often combined

by architects and confused by critics. They are,

however, different and distinct aspects of the

relationship between architecture and the

structural technology of steel frameworks.

The aesthetic programme of the glass-clad

framework is concerned with 'transparency'.

This, and the use of 'crystalline' form, were

given symbolic meaning in the 1920s by the

Expressionists, notably Bruno Taut. One of the

most striking images to be published by this

group, however, was the well-known glass

skyscraper project of Mies van der Rohe (Fig.

3.4). Despite its Expressionist genesis this

building form survived the gradual triumph of

Rationalism - the Rationalists could regard the

glass-clad frame as a logical and honest reduc-

tion of the elements of a tall building to its

bare essentials - and was used at every scale

in the architecture of Modernism, from small

domestic buildings to the corporate sky-

scrapers which dominate the skylines of most

capital cities.

Among the visual sources of this architec-

tural vocabulary of glass and steel were the

iron-framed warehouses, factories and railway

Fig. 3.4 Glass skyscraper project, 1922, model. Mies van
der Rohe, architect. In the early twentieth century many
visionary architects considered mass-produced high
quality glass to be the ultimate modern building material,
principally because it allowed the exterior of a building to
be 'dematerialised'. The almost featureless high-rise struc-
ture faced in glass was an important architectural innov-
ation of the early modern period.

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