Quote:
Originally Posted by Nouvellecosse
I've heard some debate about these classifications with some considering POMO to be limited to buildings with retro-design elements and placing neo-futurism as a separate category. There's generally an easily recognizable difference between them so I'm somewhat partial to that interpretation and if it does become the consensus, it would mean Foster's works like The Bow would not be considered POMO, meaning that POMO is pervasive but not encompassing of everything after modernism.
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The Bow fits more in line with what I'll call Structural Expressionism (sometimes termed High Tech). It's certainly not as blatantly obvious as something like The Lloyd's Building in London (UK) or HSBC in Hong Kong (another Foster Building and maybe my favourite by him), but Architecture, Art, Music, and Literature can all be over categorized for me to the point of being a genre-splitting argument with little useful information.
I'm totally agreeing with O-tacular in Montreal having fantatic Po-Mo buildings. All the ones he listed are always in my brain when someone asks what my favourite skyscrapers ever in Canada and all would be at least in the Po-Mo umbrella.
When I dislike Po-Mo it is a certain colour palette and specific era within the larger umbrella. Things that harken to mall-chitecture like Portage Place in Winnipeg and the Investors Group Building here, which is starting to grow on me.