Quote:
Originally Posted by VancouverOfTheFuture
i don't get why people don't like this building. it is finally some different, and it brings in an elegant design seen in some of the most famous, large metropolitan cities. these towers also do it quite well i think; they do look like they would be found in a place like NYC, which seems like the point. "fake" heritage, most things are "fake" heritage. Gothic isn't from the 1800s and neoclassical goes back well over 1,000 years.
i am anti-foreign investment but i hope this building survives!
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Minor point of note (or correction).
Neoclassicism only goes back a couple of hundreds of years and not,..."
well over 1,000 years"
Like literally around 250 years (back to the mid 18th Century) give or take a couple of decades.
It hearkened back to, and drew inspiration from, ACTUAL Classicism (Antiquity) and Classical style from the Classical antiquity era (Ancient Greece, Ancient Roman, Ancient Egyptian,...etc...) - which is what goes back over 1,000 years (up to 4 to 5,000 years ago to just after the dawn of civilization in the middle East and Southern Europe)
That's where the name '
Neo-classicism' comes from :- 'Neo' meaning "New", and 'Classicism' (at the time it was thought to be "New" but in reality wasn't actually referred to as such until about 100 years after the era dawned, in the mid-19th Century when the term "Neo-Classicism" was coined and first used) basically referring to the revival of the classical styles.
It's also worth noting that it actually encompassed a wide variety of styles from that era - and some of which are still seen in designs even today - from Greek and Roman revival, to Gothic revival all the way to Art Deco from the early part of the last century.
Sorry for the nitpicky pedantic history lesson and detour, but Neoclassicism was a major focus of my final studio in undergraduate school in college.
Incidentally, this building while indeed Neoclassical in its design styling and language, it's actually designed in the specific style of (early)'Art Deco' from the 1900's to 1920's early century Industrial era as opposed to Gothic revival or the other Neoclassical subset styles I mentioned.
As you were.