@@th3omachos that's all very subjective. i'd say an imposing brutalist building is at least as evocative as a similar building with neoclassical, gothic or art nouveau elements. and to dismiss all these forms of modern architecture completely dismisses the amazing societal and political changes of the past century. you can't exactly live in a modern city without acknowledging any of the developments that made it possible in the first place. Bauhaus, brutalism, modernism. postmodernism, etc etc are all great to see when done properly, and maintained well. just as with any classical building.
i like tudor the most, the english countryside is absolutely gorgeous and the tudor and norman cottages make it so much cozier, rolling hills with grazing sheep, hedges and forests a like, little 1 lane roads running through with villages dotted throughout with tudor and norman architecture, its so beautiful
@@ThoughtfulDuck-r8h I totally agree with you. I’m an American, now living in the English countryside, and am very lucky to now live in a cottage which dates to the early 1400s. The history is just incredible; and you’re right, the historic rural architecture is the epitome of coziness (plus of course incredibly beautiful and picturesque). In the region of England where I am (Suffolk), there are thousands upon thousands of medieval/ Tudor half-timbered houses everywhere here - many painted in bright local colors with a fairytale thatched roof.
Hit the nail on the head. A strange kind of soulless. Not the same kind of grinding Soviet Constructionist or Ceausescu-esque soulless, but soulless, notwithstanding.
I genuinely think bauhaus and brutalism looks better than most old building styles made only to flaunt wealth Like I'll never find art nouveau or arts and craft appealing
All modernism, like bauhuas and brutalism, has strong pow to the people sentiment, others styles are just money flex. I found the corporate soulless music really offensive.
The european architecture was one of the most beautiful ones in the world, only to be ruined by modern disgusting grey blocks. Im italian, and im proud that most of european cities are still intact!
Modernism is totalitarianism... It's not a coincidence that communist and fascist architecture have the same objective... Controlling the population and eliminating the individual identity and culture for the sake of the "collective" "Ohhh but the war"... Yeah, tell that to Poland
@@Fl8yd_Johnson Yes, because every single person involved in modern architectural styles was and is Jewish... literally no other ethnic group is involved in the design of buildings these days... and also literally no one of Jewish heritage was ever involved in the design of old buildings in the past... because that's how real life works...
That's today and its often times not even true. Think about the Centre Pompidou. In the future people will look at brutalism like they look at historism today. Things change.
@@GorgelhenkertAs a Hellenen and Ortodox.The Eastern Roman emperor and the church are wrong dippictions.The one looks like a gypsie and the other not typical traditional rather a modern cheaper one.Osios loukas monastery,Church of Holy Apostoles,Rotonda are much more iconic and representative of the architecture from Justinian till Bulgar slayer and Komnenos time.
@Tjalt-EvertvanderKaakbokkert i honestly like a bit of everything. It probably depends on the setting. I wouldn't want to see gothic or Byzantine in a rural setting 90% of the time. Tudor, stave, or Swiss Chalet wouldn't look great in an urban environment. Constructivist or whatever looks depressing as hell pretty much everywhere that isn't utilitarian and industrial. Neoclassical/nazi Germany looks like the roman architecture with the life sucked out of it. Expressionist and post modern are interesting but run the risk of looking stupid if not in a very specific setting or if they are overdone. I basically just despise the whole "everything that isnt generically traditional is awful" because its a boring and pseudo intellectual stand point that hinders human progress.
I hope Europe embraces some of it's more traditional architecture styles, they've got so many great ones to choose from with so much history behind them. The newer ones (save for revivals of old styles) are kinda bad, hope they eventually get away from making everything into mal-formed cubes.
The music is so apt. Some of these got me good. Especially: The corporate soy music for Bauhaus at 0:42. The piece for Brutalism at 0:47. The circus music for Post Modern at 1:57.
the brutalism was one of the ones that i thought didn't fit at all. A romantic piece under such a modern building? It would have been better if it were some sort of depressing droning-music or industrial metal
@@RealCodreX Brutalism can be beautiful but most of the time it is done by architects with taste or perhaps even poor talent. Brutalism in Russia, for example, is often very ugly.
@@thetwiceapostle6175 because it was wrong. Said music (Prokofiev's dance of the knights) would be a contemporary to Stalin's Empire style (like the VDNKh and seven sisters) and would be later criticized for being too ornate. Brutalism needs something from Pakhmutova (e.g. Soviet ice hockey anthem) or some of Sviridov's more modern pieces, e.g. "Time forward"! Or, for older brutalism, riot of spring
@СтепанАлексеев-у8к I think it's pretty popular. Everyone knows the St Basil Cathedral, and associates that style of many domes and bright colours, present in every orthodox country, to Russia. I'd love to visit your country, but I don't know of it's possible right now
@@mrpearson8166 Спорить не буду, но я имел ввиду гражданские здания, вот их правда немного, больше конструктивизма или другие Европейские стили, чем Русский стиль
Architect here. It was kot profit, it was regulations on what to build where and how. Regulations written by bureaucrats that when translated to reality its like drawing with tied hands while every line bears the risk of a lawsuit
@@doeixoBut every time an architect gets to do a passion project or make something beautifull they chose to make some glass and concrete abomination that doesn't even have a percent of a percent of inspiration from their cultural heritage. And when you see perfectly intact classical buildings knocked down and replaced by theese monstrosities it just makes your blood boil.
It would be perfect for Stalin's Empire. The author was criticised for too fancy music in the begging of constructivist era For brutalism it should be rite of spring, as both deny beauty.
@@valentinpopgeorgiev746 It would be perfect for Stalin's Empire. The author was criticised for too fancy music in the begging of constructivist era For brutalism it should be rite of spring, as both deny beauty.
Not just Paris, it was the main urban architectural style in France in the second half of the 19th century. If a French city was already built in 1900 and wasn't bombed to the ground during the world wars, it probably has Haussmanian buildings.
I like classical architecture. Not really neo-classical though. Neo-classical is mostly just white/white marble. Classical architecture had colour. It’s that touch of personality that completes a building.
Como español debo asincerarme, tengo la foto del 0:59 como fondo de pantalla, he estado muchas veces en Sevilla, y siempre me gusta apreciar la entrada de ese palacio. Saludos
I think that all the new "modern" architecture like brutalism, neo-futurism is needed only to highlight beauty of historical buildings against backdrop of this crap, for example in Neoclassical or Victorian style.
yea cos building something for years and it only being accessible to kings and the rich is better, when you look at these sites they are mostly palaces or ecclesiastical buildings so yea they look nice but are useless and waste of resources
@@gabrielx4639 Yes as your mentality has dragged society down and now we get ugly buildings in general and can't even afford the small ones. In the very least I'd much prefer to walk past a large building I can't afford that at least doesn't make me want to die when I see it.
Here in Italy, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire(476), there have been so many foreign dominations that lasted even hundreds of years (Germans, Byzantines, East Europeans, French, Spanish, Normans and even the Arabs in Sicily...)so you can find many styles that can be found...i should make a long list...
So little time has passed, but people already forgot about the brutalistic beauty of shape complexity and color simplicity for the sake of flashy "old" styles. May their legs be sealed in concrete forewer.
I don't think people here really gave modern architecture, or architecture in general, that much thought. "Old" = good, "new" = bad. That's all it is. Zero consideration as to why traditional styles "worked", why they generally fail today, and why the modern styles were implemented. No wonder we are stuck in a sea of pointless mcmansions and post-modern monstrosities
Bauhaus and brutalist architecture are really overlooked and it's annoying, I wish people stopped opposing so-called "traditional" architecture with more modern movements just for the sake of bashing what's being built today (which can be ugly/soulless but can also be great)
@@wszyscyzginiemy854i feel like ppl forget ww2 happened and also forget that the citys of old werent all these unesgo level buliding just city centres were most of these citys from the 19th centuray were mostly slums
Byzantine is making a comeback in Russia, they're building churches in that style and they're planning to build "the largest orthodox church in the world" larger than Hagia Sophia, in the Byzantine style.
2:09 Stave churches look like the kind of place where a grad student discovers ancient runestones and accidentally advances the field of Ancient Germanic poetry while playing with Lidar in its ancient basement.
Some good styles like Art Deco, Dutch Mannerism and Brick Gothic are missing. Also there are different Swiss Chalet architectures, Chalets in Bern look different from those in Appenzell etc.
I've been to a few follies around the UK and there's one folly where it was used as an execution spot and you can stand with your back against the wall and take a picture with musket strikes all around your body and over the top of your head.
Stave church ! Even though I'm in Europe, we don't have it here, so for a long time I thought it was just a building invented in films to represent these countries 😭
I miss the days of just round towers and aqueducts. I can imagine a modern newspaper delivery man just using a small trebuchet to deliver the weekly paper.
Niko was born to Milica Bellic and an unnamed father in an unspecified country in Eastern Europe. Milica, a maternal and caring presence in Niko's life, regrets that her sons have been forced to endure the hardships they did as children, including their abusive, alcoholic father. As a teenager, Niko participated in an unnamed war as an infantryman, tank driver, and helicopter pilot, during which he witnessed numerous atrocities that traumatised him, leading to his cynical view on life. He is implied to have committed war crimes.After his unit of fifteen men from his village were ambushed by the enemy, Niko escaped and concluded that the unit had been betrayed by one of their own soldiers. He later learned that there are two other survivors, Florian Cravic and Darko Brevic, and vowed to search for the traitor. After the war, Niko experienced difficulty leading a normal life, and his brother was killed in action. Knowing only violence, Niko turned to the Balkanic criminal underworld. He joined a smuggling and trafficking ring run by Russian crime lord Ray Bulgarin. During one smuggling run into Italy, the boat that Niko was working on sank in the Adriatic Sea.He was able to swim to safety, but Bulgarin accused him of sinking the ship intentionally to escape with the money. Niko later joined the merchant navy to flee from Bulgarin, befriended the crew of the Platypus cargo ship, and contemplated his cousin Roman's requests for him to come to Liberty City in the United States. Once in Liberty City in 2008, Niko quickly realises that Roman's stories of wealth and success were exaggerated. In reality, his cousin lives in a small, decrepit apartment in the Broker district,and owes gambling debts across the city, which he struggles to pay through his unprofitable taxi service. In addition to working for Roman as a cab driver, Niko must protect him from loan sharks and work for Russian gangster Vlad Glebov to prevent Roman from sinking further into debt. Niko completes most of the jobs he is given with ease, as his military skills give him an advantage over the street thugs of Liberty City. During this time, he also begins making criminal contacts that will eventually become important allies,such as Yardie second-in-command Little Jacob and car entrepreneur Brucie Kibbutz. Niko's professional and personal relationships expand over the course of the game, as he is introduced to more powerful and influential criminals.
Brutalist is mostly used in government or official buildings, medical centers and other facilities, due to low cost and durability. But a lot of these buildings actually have a strange aura to them, in a cloudy or humid day, these megastructures with their peculiar shapes, angles and height emitting an other-worldly feeling as they stand ominously over the fog, the lights and strobes blaring through the thick humidity of the mist... An example being the Dallas city hall, or a lot of buildings in Madrid and other European cities like it. And its more "intense" usage on monuments also really give an ominous feeling of progression, survival and our suffering from the past, Eastern-Europe uses these styles a lot as momuments to the world wars and the Cold War that followed it. Also some people are forgetting these more classical type buildings were expensive as shit to build, let alone any architect who knew how to build them were fucking dead. And a little thing that happened in between 1914, 1918, then also between 1939, and 1945, happened. But the combination of brutalism, neo-futurism and other modern architecture, with the more gothic older buildings standing among them, gives a sort of powerful or ominous feeling to how far humanity has come into the future.
I think a lot of people don't understand that the world wars didn't just physically destroy a lot of these old baroque buildings but also discredited the nationalist and romantic ideologies that these styles represent. We live in like a post-apocalyptic world, is it any surprise many who lived then wanted to let the past burn?
Yes, I agree people must be more thoughtful when considering their ancestors relationship to their architecture. Much like how the notre dame cathedral was heavily damaged in multiple occasions during revolts/rebellions/riots.
@@IAmTheStig32not at all the right nationalist are rising all over Europe what are you talking about? The very left who seeks to demonize is losing control of the narrative which has been spun in a thous-1000 directions which is why the divide especially in the USA and Canada is so apparent.
Germany, Poland and Czechia largely rebuilt the areas destroyed in WW2 with the same style they had before. Czechia specially is currently changing a lot of Soviet ugly neighbors back to their historical styles, and it's not over expensive, no one is talking about building a massive baroque palace, just a nice human-scale townhouse. Also there's a thing called "books", that's why we can learn about things long after those who knew them died...
@ buddy do you think Egypt is in Africa? Also Turkey is both in Europe and Asia. And Ottoman Empire had many lands in Europe, you can find Ottoman architecture in Europe today
I do wonder... what a regular looking castle or fort would look like if built today? Or any other building that would be considered historical for that matter. Man oh man, some of these buildings be looking real nice, thanks for putting this together! I like how when visiting the past there are these huge buildings that are beautiful to watch, histroy really did leave us with much and sadly, it does seem that we don't always appreciate even the small, much less the big, things. Then we come closer to modern day and everything is just concrete, glass and plastic. I think I heard someone say about this matter that building tall, block-like buildings might not look nice but they are very efficient to house lots of people where space might be tight. I mean, could you imagine any large city that has - say, sky scrapers and such - to have instead just regular houses and so on? That leads to an interesting point, though, and that is that history happened and things were built to last and in many cases to look beautiful, too. But we live in the 2000s and things are simply too different to be done equally. I'm not defending those modern buildings that are supposed to be art as well or something. Appreciate the past but keep your eyes towards the future, as some wise someone somewhere probably has said 😅
Some other interesting options (for a part 2) are: (german) half-timbered architecture, jugendstil, art nouveau, art deco, romanogothic, empire style, rococo, 'Veneto style'/arabic influenced renaissance, etc.
Architector back then: Hehe i love adding details to my building and most important lets add the statues on the building for the king Architectors now: square
An underrated architectural style that wasn't included in this is Wilhelminian, popular in Germany during the time of the German Empire. Very few buildings of the style still stand but they were prevalent in Germany until WW2. If you look at old photos of Berlin for example you'll very likely see a building that has the Wilhelminian architectural style. Edit: Wilhelminian is technically a sub-style of Baroque but it is distinct.
I like modern stuff too A sleek business skyscraper is different to a soviet geometrically bizarre brutalist building is different to a quirky fruitger aero mirror's edge style building
We truly live in the age of soulless, unoriginal and bland gentrification of a post-modern taste that destroyed every local tradition and difference in the name of corporate diversity and wage gaps. Downtowns all feel the same once you negate poor people or locals to express their culture and traditions.
In Spain, many houses and flats built in the last years, even in random small towns, are of modern stiles. White or grey cubes with no personality 🤦♂️🤢
I miss when buildings werent mostly metal cubes
Or bricks
That's what happens when you have people in charge that don't care about what buildings look like, so long as they cost the least
@@thekingofsas9407or having fiction inside does not care about aesthetics
Bricks are fine actually. Not the most fancy things but you can make wonderful buildings with bricks
When were they metal cubes?
I’m sensing a bias here, and I agree with it.
why? are you so narrow minded that you can't appreciate different forms of architecture?
@ Lol
@@EmJayEll I understand trying to understand. But sorry it's just horrible, it affects the eyes, it hurts the city.
@@th3omachos that's all very subjective. i'd say an imposing brutalist building is at least as evocative as a similar building with neoclassical, gothic or art nouveau elements. and to dismiss all these forms of modern architecture completely dismisses the amazing societal and political changes of the past century. you can't exactly live in a modern city without acknowledging any of the developments that made it possible in the first place. Bauhaus, brutalism, modernism. postmodernism, etc etc are all great to see when done properly, and maintained well. just as with any classical building.
@@EmJayEllno, go live in Eastern Europe
Baroque, Gothic and Neo-classical for me.
+Victorian
Byzantine, roman and romanesque are goated, neoclassical and almohad are also great
i like tudor the most, the english countryside is absolutely gorgeous and the tudor and norman cottages make it so much cozier, rolling hills with grazing sheep, hedges and forests a like, little 1 lane roads running through with villages dotted throughout with tudor and norman architecture, its so beautiful
@@ThoughtfulDuck-r8h I totally agree with you. I’m an American, now living in the English countryside, and am very lucky to now live in a cottage which dates to the early 1400s. The history is just incredible; and you’re right, the historic rural architecture is the epitome of coziness (plus of course incredibly beautiful and picturesque). In the region of England where I am (Suffolk), there are thousands upon thousands of medieval/ Tudor half-timbered houses everywhere here - many painted in bright local colors with a fairytale thatched roof.
Victorian WW2 German and the spanish one for me
*Bauhaus is so disturbing with the corporate training video music*
Hit the nail on the head. A strange kind of soulless. Not the same kind of grinding Soviet Constructionist or Ceausescu-esque soulless, but soulless, notwithstanding.
This music doesn't match bauhaus
I genuinely think bauhaus and brutalism looks better than most old building styles made only to flaunt wealth
Like I'll never find art nouveau or arts and craft appealing
All modernism, like bauhuas and brutalism, has strong pow to the people sentiment, others styles are just money flex. I found the corporate soulless music really offensive.
Art costs money@@champiggyfrm_pig5271
The european architecture was one of the most beautiful ones in the world, only to be ruined by modern disgusting grey blocks.
Im italian, and im proud that most of european cities are still intact!
Bro had you heared about that thing called "ww2" and what it did with most of the european cities (especially in east)
Modernism is totalitarianism... It's not a coincidence that communist and fascist architecture have the same objective... Controlling the population and eliminating the individual identity and culture for the sake of the "collective"
"Ohhh but the war"... Yeah, tell that to Poland
Well i got good news for u. The beautiful architecture is actually slowly comming back :)
modern architecture was a leftist abomination. they were trying to destroy western civilization with it
@@sid86588 only in western europe. here in turkey we still have car dependent suburbia and skyscrapers in places which should be unesco sites
Medieval Architecture: 😮
Modern Architecture: 😂
Eastern Roman Architecture go brrr
White Architecture:
Jewish Architecture:
@@Fl8yd_Johnson Yes, because every single person involved in modern architectural styles was and is Jewish... literally no other ethnic group is involved in the design of buildings these days... and also literally no one of Jewish heritage was ever involved in the design of old buildings in the past... because that's how real life works...
@@SanctusPaulus1962 His 1 IQ Nazi brains equates anything bad in the world Jewish. Communists? Jewish. Capitalists? Jewish. His mom? Jewish.
@@Fl8yd_Johnsonit’s people like you who makes advocating for traditional architecture so difficult!
1:37 bro why does it look so beautiful
Because it's Florence??
Stupid question.
Because it's italian
What the architect don’t realize is that when tourist come it’s to see the magnificent old monuments. Not the hideous cement squares.
That's today and its often times not even true. Think about the Centre Pompidou. In the future people will look at brutalism like they look at historism today. Things change.
In montreal city the metro is quite famous for its brutalist architecture and people do come to see it specifically
@@phenix4181the metro is underground so that’s fine
@@bencemolnar7957you'd have to live in a cave made of sh*t and vomit to think that brutalist arhitecture is worth flying to another country for
There's nice modern looking buildings though. The Elbphilharmonie for example. An absolutely stunning looking building.
Europe the greatest ❤
0:52 Emperor Justinian portrayed by the Australian wojak caught me off guard.
Stave Church, Gothic and Byzantine are the best
Based
Boring basic nerd taste in architecture
@@GB-ix1lk Well, why not tell me about your own high class and delicate taste of architecture? I'm very interested
@@GorgelhenkertAs a Hellenen and Ortodox.The Eastern Roman emperor and the church are wrong dippictions.The one looks like a gypsie and the other not typical traditional rather a modern cheaper one.Osios loukas monastery,Church of Holy Apostoles,Rotonda are much more iconic and representative of the architecture from Justinian till Bulgar slayer and Komnenos time.
@Tjalt-EvertvanderKaakbokkert i honestly like a bit of everything. It probably depends on the setting. I wouldn't want to see gothic or Byzantine in a rural setting 90% of the time. Tudor, stave, or Swiss Chalet wouldn't look great in an urban environment. Constructivist or whatever looks depressing as hell pretty much everywhere that isn't utilitarian and industrial. Neoclassical/nazi Germany looks like the roman architecture with the life sucked out of it. Expressionist and post modern are interesting but run the risk of looking stupid if not in a very specific setting or if they are overdone.
I basically just despise the whole "everything that isnt generically traditional is awful" because its a boring and pseudo intellectual stand point that hinders human progress.
Thank you God for the neo-classical.
Indeed, would love to see what they can do with modern materials done in a revival of the older style.
I hope Europe embraces some of it's more traditional architecture styles, they've got so many great ones to choose from with so much history behind them.
The newer ones (save for revivals of old styles) are kinda bad, hope they eventually get away from making everything into mal-formed cubes.
Such spectacular audio-visual experience!
The music is so apt. Some of these got me good. Especially:
The corporate soy music for Bauhaus at 0:42.
The piece for Brutalism at 0:47.
The circus music for Post Modern at 1:57.
What was that for Romanesque? Can't remember.
the brutalism was one of the ones that i thought didn't fit at all. A romantic piece under such a modern building? It would have been better if it were some sort of depressing droning-music or industrial metal
@@thetwiceapostle6175That's because Brutalism is beautiful
@@RealCodreX Brutalism can be beautiful but most of the time it is done by architects with taste or perhaps even poor talent.
Brutalism in Russia, for example, is often very ugly.
@@thetwiceapostle6175 because it was wrong. Said music (Prokofiev's dance of the knights) would be a contemporary to Stalin's Empire style (like the VDNKh and seven sisters) and would be later criticized for being too ornate.
Brutalism needs something from Pakhmutova (e.g. Soviet ice hockey anthem) or some of Sviridov's more modern pieces, e.g. "Time forward"! Or, for older brutalism, riot of spring
Where is art deco ? In downtown bucharest is present at every corner
Technically Egyptian Revival can be considered a part of Art Deco
Also Jugend is missing...
I never met a woman who likes post modernism or brutalism.
Bro how could you miss the BASED Manueline Style (Portuguese: estilo manuelino) during the Portuguese Renaissance and Age of Discoveries
And Herrerian style in Spain, during the same period of time. Iberian excellence
И про русский стиль тоже не сказал( хотя он не популярен даже у меня на родине, так что не удивительно)
@СтепанАлексеев-у8к I think it's pretty popular. Everyone knows the St Basil Cathedral, and associates that style of many domes and bright colours, present in every orthodox country, to Russia. I'd love to visit your country, but I don't know of it's possible right now
@@mrpearson8166 Спорить не буду, но я имел ввиду гражданские здания, вот их правда немного, больше конструктивизма или другие Европейские стили, чем Русский стиль
@@СтепанАлексеев-у8кСоветский Монументализм тоже не упомянули - а его много и он при этом очень красивый
For those who would like to know the song of the Italian Renaissance, its name is Ecco La Primavera, by Landini; beautiful piece.
Proffit has killed creativity, we started in caves of stone, had a golden age of arquitecture and now we live in caves of metal
Architect here. It was kot profit, it was regulations on what to build where and how. Regulations written by bureaucrats that when translated to reality its like drawing with tied hands while every line bears the risk of a lawsuit
More like collectivism ruined it.
I misread it as "golden age of agriculture"
*Sat Tee Touy intensifies*
@@doeixoBut every time an architect gets to do a passion project or make something beautifull they chose to make some glass and concrete abomination that doesn't even have a percent of a percent of inspiration from their cultural heritage. And when you see perfectly intact classical buildings knocked down and replaced by theese monstrosities it just makes your blood boil.
@@Rägarded wrong
Did a 12 year old make this
Perchance
This is so accurate I can't ...
Long live beautiful architectural styles
Old = Chad Sigma turbo diesel manly
New = woke gay
The dance of the knights for brutalist was ✨perfect✨
But it doesn't match very well.
It would be perfect for Stalin's Empire. The author was criticised for too fancy music in the begging of constructivist era
For brutalism it should be rite of spring, as both deny beauty.
@@valentinpopgeorgiev746
It would be perfect for Stalin's Empire. The author was criticised for too fancy music in the begging of constructivist era
For brutalism it should be rite of spring, as both deny beauty.
0:23 this is in my hometown Subotica♥
I ja živim ovde ❤
@wes_traiders kad si se doselio?
Исто, лудница
🇭🇺🇭🇺 SZ A B A D K A 🇭🇺🇭🇺
@@hans7856 Суботица 🇷🇸🇷🇸🇷🇸
The hungarian art nouveau is underrated af. Check them out if possible, really beautiful ones!
Miss the Hausmanian style in Paris but great video
Seems like neoclassical.
@@Antarius1999yes while at the same time it also topk inspiration from other architectural styles more than just neoclassical
Not just Paris, it was the main urban architectural style in France in the second half of the 19th century. If a French city was already built in 1900 and wasn't bombed to the ground during the world wars, it probably has Haussmanian buildings.
Same as the German Wilhelminian
I like classical architecture. Not really neo-classical though. Neo-classical is mostly just white/white marble. Classical architecture had colour. It’s that touch of personality that completes a building.
Renaissance, Baroque and Neo-classical are all variants of classical architecture and the best one is Baroque by far.
Neo Classical is still better than modernist or brutalist though; a step in the right direction at least.
@@joesomebody3365 True. If you just give a bit more color to the neoclassical style, with colored marble panelling and such, it becomes great.
You forgot a lot of styles, especially romanesque, Renaissance, Art deco, national romantism, nordic classicism...
I can think of also Jugend, Functionalism, Alpine Folk(clay&timber)
You've learned your lesson and included an the music right off the bat, good man.
1:17 😂 brilliantly done
You forgot Stalinist architecture, also known as soc baroque or soc reality. That's at list what I know!
Stalin's Empire it is, because it inherits to regency era Russian Empire, not baroque
@annasolovyeva1013 thanks, I didn't know the accurate terminology. I had heard about it from documentary about a town in my country(Bulgaria) .
1:23 this has got to be the best
Como español debo asincerarme, tengo la foto del 0:59 como fondo de pantalla, he estado muchas veces en Sevilla, y siempre me gusta apreciar la entrada de ese palacio. Saludos
I think that all the new "modern" architecture like brutalism, neo-futurism is needed only to highlight beauty of historical buildings against backdrop of this crap, for example in Neoclassical or Victorian style.
yea cos building something for years and it only being accessible to kings and the rich is better, when you look at these sites they are mostly palaces or ecclesiastical buildings so yea they look nice but are useless and waste of resources
@@gabrielx4639 Yes as your mentality has dragged society down and now we get ugly buildings in general and can't even afford the small ones.
In the very least I'd much prefer to walk past a large building I can't afford that at least doesn't make me want to die when I see it.
01:20 Broadway Tower in the Cotswolds. ☺️
Another certified banger!
Im all about the Gothic
God loves you!❤
Amen brother! Let us spread the good news to all and reaffirm the courage and faith of those who already believe!
@ yessir!! 🙏
Jesus Is the Way, the Truth and the Life ✝️
Almohad mentioned 🇲🇦🙏⚔️💪💪💪🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦🇲🇦⚔️⚔️⚔️🏴🏴🏴🏴🏴
Another top 'be like' video from Crusader. Your move Giorgio B.
1:58 Don't you DARE piss on the dancing tower!
I love Art Nouveau, so whimsical and pretty
1:12 "expressionism" it looks more like drunkness and lack of decent creativity
1:57 Hhh the dancing tower what a overrated building
Here in Italy, after the fall of the Western Roman Empire(476), there have been so many foreign dominations that lasted even hundreds of years (Germans, Byzantines, East Europeans, French, Spanish, Normans and even the Arabs in Sicily...)so you can find many styles that can be found...i should make a long list...
1:52 reminds me of one of the maps in Call of duty ghosts
Literally Siege!
So little time has passed, but people already forgot about the brutalistic beauty of shape complexity and color simplicity for the sake of flashy "old" styles. May their legs be sealed in concrete forewer.
I don't think people here really gave modern architecture, or architecture in general, that much thought. "Old" = good, "new" = bad. That's all it is. Zero consideration as to why traditional styles "worked", why they generally fail today, and why the modern styles were implemented. No wonder we are stuck in a sea of pointless mcmansions and post-modern monstrosities
Bauhaus and brutalist architecture are really overlooked and it's annoying, I wish people stopped opposing so-called "traditional" architecture with more modern movements just for the sake of bashing what's being built today (which can be ugly/soulless but can also be great)
@@wszyscyzginiemy854i feel like ppl forget ww2 happened and also forget that the citys of old werent all these unesgo level buliding just city centres were most of these citys from the 19th centuray were mostly slums
I like Gothic and Byzantine. Both should make a comeback.
Byzantine turned into classic Ottoman which turned into neo Ottoman, which is being aped by the government of Turkey for some buildings.
Bits and pieces of Byzantine are still present in Brancovenesc and Neo-Romanian architecture, also in Serbian churches.
Unfortunately, outside Churches and other ecclesiastical buildings we won't see it(pretty darn expensive) but you are right.
Byzantine is making a comeback in Russia, they're building churches in that style and they're planning to build "the largest orthodox church in the world" larger than Hagia Sophia, in the Byzantine style.
gothic is also call " l'art français" french art.
2:09 Stave churches look like the kind of place where a grad student discovers ancient runestones and accidentally advances the field of Ancient Germanic poetry while playing with Lidar in its ancient basement.
Some good styles like Art Deco, Dutch Mannerism and Brick Gothic are missing. Also there are different Swiss Chalet architectures, Chalets in Bern look different from those in Appenzell etc.
I've been to a few follies around the UK and there's one folly where it was used as an execution spot and you can stand with your back against the wall and take a picture with musket strikes all around your body and over the top of your head.
1:42
I love this style of architecture
I like it, it looks like a dildo
Stave church ! Even though I'm in Europe, we don't have it here, so for a long time I thought it was just a building invented in films to represent these countries 😭
Okay whoever made that Pepe version of Henry VIII is extremely talented
I miss the days of just round towers and aqueducts. I can imagine a modern newspaper delivery man just using a small trebuchet to deliver the weekly paper.
Niko was born to Milica Bellic and an unnamed father in an unspecified country in Eastern Europe. Milica, a maternal and caring presence in Niko's life, regrets that her sons have been forced to endure the hardships they did as children, including their abusive, alcoholic father. As a teenager, Niko participated in an unnamed war as an infantryman, tank driver, and helicopter pilot, during which he witnessed numerous atrocities that traumatised him, leading to his cynical view on life. He is implied to have committed war crimes.After his unit of fifteen men from his village were ambushed by the enemy, Niko escaped and concluded that the unit had been betrayed by one of their own soldiers. He later learned that there are two other survivors, Florian Cravic and Darko Brevic, and vowed to search for the traitor.
After the war, Niko experienced difficulty leading a normal life, and his brother was killed in action. Knowing only violence, Niko turned to the Balkanic criminal underworld. He joined a smuggling and trafficking ring run by Russian crime lord Ray Bulgarin. During one smuggling run into Italy, the boat that Niko was working on sank in the Adriatic Sea.He was able to swim to safety, but Bulgarin accused him of sinking the ship intentionally to escape with the money. Niko later joined the merchant navy to flee from Bulgarin, befriended the crew of the Platypus cargo ship, and contemplated his cousin Roman's requests for him to come to Liberty City in the United States.
Once in Liberty City in 2008, Niko quickly realises that Roman's stories of wealth and success were exaggerated. In reality, his cousin lives in a small, decrepit apartment in the Broker district,and owes gambling debts across the city, which he struggles to pay through his unprofitable taxi service. In addition to working for Roman as a cab driver, Niko must protect him from loan sharks and work for Russian gangster Vlad Glebov to prevent Roman from sinking further into debt. Niko completes most of the jobs he is given with ease, as his military skills give him an advantage over the street thugs of Liberty City. During this time, he also begins making criminal contacts that will eventually become important allies,such as Yardie second-in-command Little Jacob and car entrepreneur Brucie Kibbutz. Niko's professional and personal relationships expand over the course of the game, as he is introduced to more powerful and influential criminals.
no mention of Art Deco? I will now weep
Brutalist is mostly used in government or official buildings, medical centers and other facilities, due to low cost and durability. But a lot of these buildings actually have a strange aura to them, in a cloudy or humid day, these megastructures with their peculiar shapes, angles and height emitting an other-worldly feeling as they stand ominously over the fog, the lights and strobes blaring through the thick humidity of the mist... An example being the Dallas city hall, or a lot of buildings in Madrid and other European cities like it.
And its more "intense" usage on monuments also really give an ominous feeling of progression, survival and our suffering from the past, Eastern-Europe uses these styles a lot as momuments to the world wars and the Cold War that followed it.
Also some people are forgetting these more classical type buildings were expensive as shit to build, let alone any architect who knew how to build them were fucking dead. And a little thing that happened in between 1914, 1918, then also between 1939, and 1945, happened. But the combination of brutalism, neo-futurism and other modern architecture, with the more gothic older buildings standing among them, gives a sort of powerful or ominous feeling to how far humanity has come into the future.
I think a lot of people don't understand that the world wars didn't just physically destroy a lot of these old baroque buildings but also discredited the nationalist and romantic ideologies that these styles represent. We live in like a post-apocalyptic world, is it any surprise many who lived then wanted to let the past burn?
Yes, I agree people must be more thoughtful when considering their ancestors relationship to their architecture. Much like how the notre dame cathedral was heavily damaged in multiple occasions during revolts/rebellions/riots.
@@IAmTheStig32not at all the right nationalist are rising all over Europe what are you talking about? The very left who seeks to demonize is losing control of the narrative which has been spun in a thous-1000 directions which is why the divide especially in the USA and Canada is so apparent.
Germany, Poland and Czechia largely rebuilt the areas destroyed in WW2 with the same style they had before. Czechia specially is currently changing a lot of Soviet ugly neighbors back to their historical styles, and it's not over expensive, no one is talking about building a massive baroque palace, just a nice human-scale townhouse. Also there's a thing called "books", that's why we can learn about things long after those who knew them died...
bla bla bla bla
Expressionism? Looks more like depressionism😂
The Italian renaissance building, the cathedral in Firenze is Byzantine in art inspiration and arguably gothic, not renaissance
Agree, only the dome is early renaissance.
@ the dome is actually inspired by the architecture of Venice i believe, which has many Byzantine influences 😆
It's a mixture of many styles
The brutalist one is btw a church in Mauer, Vienna (AT)
1:03 is Derzhprom
damaged by trash country
not the most beatifull piece, but we should remember who threatens it
Not even a trash country, but a horde of uncivilized sub-orcs.
dont pretend you care about it, you didnt even build it, commies did
Muscovy
ukraine hates that building just as much
country full of depraved sub-orcs
I can say that my expression on seeing expressionism could be best described as "...WTH?..."
Added Egyptian Revival but didn’t add any Ottoman achitecture?
Video about Europe,not Asia
@ buddy do you think Egypt is in Africa? Also Turkey is both in Europe and Asia. And Ottoman Empire had many lands in Europe, you can find Ottoman architecture in Europe today
@@Lampey22 1 % Europe,99 % Asia
Xd,Islamic country is Europe,xddd
@@franzkafka9734 you really don’t get it do you…
I miss half-timbered houses
Europe, motherland of modern civilization and the best continent
De Stijl (Dutch school) was mentioned Huzzah
Art Noavue 🤩
Art Nouveau, Arts and Crafts, and Tudor styles are the best!!
I created the 2nd wojak in the "Almohad". It is not an arab, it is an ancient dacians based on burebista
no dacia arap 🤑🤑🤑🤑😈😈👌🧔🏿♀️🧔🏿♀️
Yea as a Romanian I was thinking about that, I thought "hey that's not an Arab"
@@wallachia4797 Da vezi ca eu am facuto
base 0:32 1:07 1:32 1:39 1:48 2:19 2:24
The renaissance in my beutiful city of Firenze! God i love my country especially my home region Tuscany
So many great styles... Really inspiring
Thing is the old architecture will still outlast the modern architecture
Can we Europeans stop building abstract and "Avant guard" bs? Let's keep it traditional.
It's postmodernism's turn. Send in the clowns.
I do wonder... what a regular looking castle or fort would look like if built today? Or any other building that would be considered historical for that matter. Man oh man, some of these buildings be looking real nice, thanks for putting this together!
I like how when visiting the past there are these huge buildings that are beautiful to watch, histroy really did leave us with much and sadly, it does seem that we don't always appreciate even the small, much less the big, things. Then we come closer to modern day and everything is just concrete, glass and plastic. I think I heard someone say about this matter that building tall, block-like buildings might not look nice but they are very efficient to house lots of people where space might be tight. I mean, could you imagine any large city that has - say, sky scrapers and such - to have instead just regular houses and so on?
That leads to an interesting point, though, and that is that history happened and things were built to last and in many cases to look beautiful, too. But we live in the 2000s and things are simply too different to be done equally. I'm not defending those modern buildings that are supposed to be art as well or something. Appreciate the past but keep your eyes towards the future, as some wise someone somewhere probably has said 😅
I’m English and love Tudor and Victorian houses
Some other interesting options (for a part 2) are:
(german) half-timbered architecture, jugendstil, art nouveau, art deco, romanogothic, empire style, rococo, 'Veneto style'/arabic influenced renaissance, etc.
Tudor is goated
Architector back then:
Hehe i love adding details to my building and most important lets add the statues on the building for the king
Architectors now:
square
An underrated architectural style that wasn't included in this is Wilhelminian, popular in Germany during the time of the German Empire. Very few buildings of the style still stand but they were prevalent in Germany until WW2. If you look at old photos of Berlin for example you'll very likely see a building that has the Wilhelminian architectural style.
Edit: Wilhelminian is technically a sub-style of Baroque but it is distinct.
Music to the postmodern sounds perfectly
Europe has a lot of amazing architecture that needs to be preserved.
But the modern ones are a sore for eyes..
Why the Eastern Roman Emperor is potrayed as a gypsie? Also this isnt a traditional Orthodox church.
1:12 I love how "Expressionism" is just another NPC 😆so .. "unique" in distorting reality even though that is the default position for these people!
It seems NPCs live in your head rent free
European Architecture used to have so much culture behind it, now it lacks an identity. Kinda like present day Eurppe itself.
Oh no such a huge loss.
How about we fix some of the more deadly issues?
@@Dicka899like immigration? I agree
Bro, Tančící dům vypadá náhodou dost cool..
You know you’ve traveled a lot when you’ve been to almost every single place here 😳
I like modern stuff too
A sleek business skyscraper is different to a soviet geometrically bizarre brutalist building is different to a quirky fruitger aero mirror's edge style building
I might be the only one, but i really appreciate Amsterdam school being mentioned
We truly live in the age of soulless, unoriginal and bland gentrification of a post-modern taste that destroyed every local tradition and difference in the name of corporate diversity and wage gaps. Downtowns all feel the same once you negate poor people or locals to express their culture and traditions.
In Spain, many houses and flats built in the last years, even in random small towns, are of modern stiles. White or grey cubes with no personality 🤦♂️🤢
Gothic, Victorian, Church Stave, Romanesque, Norman, Tudor, Follies, Baroque, Neo-Futurism💙💙
Gothic on top of
I just know that one victorian castle was at most tv series/movies
The Swiss chalet is absolutely massive 😭 usually they’re small and cute dawg
... Arts Déco ???
I like the art nouveau architecture!