America's Lost Classical Architecture

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  • Опубліковано 6 тра 2024
  • Despite being a relatively young nation, the United States of America has a wealth of great classical architecture. Some of these masterpieces have unfortunately been lost however, either due to natural disasters, or by being demolished. In this video, we will look at four such buildings.
    Music:
    "Allégro"
    By: Emmit Fenn (UA-cam Audio Library)
    "Brahms, Sixteen Waltzes, Op. 39"
    By: Martha Goldstein (musopen.org)
    "Ravel, Miroirs - III. Une barque sur l'ocean"
    By: Robert Ewen Birchall (musopen.org)
    "Rachmaninoff, Prelude in G Sharp Minor Op.32 No.12"
    By: Jeremy Ng (musopen.org)
    "Ravel, Pavane de la belle au bois dormant"
    By: Luis Sarro (musopen.org)

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,4 тис.

  • @SlapShotRegatta22
    @SlapShotRegatta22 3 роки тому +2930

    The destruction of Penn Station is an absolute tragedy.

    • @pixlplague
      @pixlplague 3 роки тому +126

      A real travesty. Same for the Fed Building in Chicago.

    • @GwaiZai
      @GwaiZai 3 роки тому +39

      when business wins...

    • @elliepurser7867
      @elliepurser7867 3 роки тому +113

      @@pixlplague and was replaced with an ugly cconcrete circle.

    • @pixlplague
      @pixlplague 3 роки тому +14

      @@elliepurser7867 brutal...

    • @ninja1676
      @ninja1676 3 роки тому +64

      I don't get why americans don't preversed their historical architect buildings/structures so we can see it in the present.

  • @Alexander-bn6zp
    @Alexander-bn6zp 3 роки тому +2754

    I literally got angry when I saw the Chicago federal building’s replacement

  • @ponysoldier6770
    @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +2755

    Art demolished to be replaced by giant shoe boxes :/

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +35

      exactly

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому +224

      And not even destroyed by war but on purpose .. what a shame.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +12

      @@vomm yes

    • @unclesam5230
      @unclesam5230 3 роки тому +155

      Modernist architecture is the very definition of humiliating ugliness of garbage and cheaply bought souls!

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +6

      @@vomm very true, a real shame.

  • @rexmundi3108
    @rexmundi3108 3 роки тому +1808

    "Classical" architecture developed over 1000s of years and gave us structures and interiors that still are striking in their beauty. The shift to "modern" architecture gave us functional structures that are generally considered ugly and soulless after less than a century.

    • @yusuffusuy4971
      @yusuffusuy4971 3 роки тому +166

      Not to mention these hunks of glass and steel are abandoned a couple years later.

    • @Vellichor358
      @Vellichor358 3 роки тому +28

      "Generally considered"

    • @megsisded8688
      @megsisded8688 3 роки тому +59

      there were many examples of architectures in history: Romanesque, Gothic and Renaissance
      what is old we think beautiful in the future will be architects who will consider beautiful
      but tearing down old buildings is an idiot
      the usa is getting rid of old buildings, but some had to be repaired or discharged at san francisco and in europe I will keep them
      fixes
      it's only the USA {and china destroys too} destroys it
      "Who Does Not Remember History Is Condemned To Her Again" - George Santayana

    • @sirmount2636
      @sirmount2636 3 роки тому +5

      Classical architecture hasn’t evolved since the Middle Ages. It’s time to grow.

    • @Katya_Lastochka
      @Katya_Lastochka 3 роки тому +25

      And they take no inspiration from their predecessors, unlike all the previous styles. It's similar to the cultural shift of the 60s.

  • @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un
    @SupremeLeaderKimJong-un 3 роки тому +859

    The demolition of Penn Station is why I've put a curse on NYC
    they better not touch Grand Central

    • @t4squared
      @t4squared 3 роки тому +64

      That won’t happen, because they made a law to preserve historical landmarks shortly after Penn station was demolished. Also they are now renovating Penn, so it won’t look as ugly and depressing as it’s been for the past several decades

    • @MunSka
      @MunSka 3 роки тому +3

      @@t4squared Sorry to rain on any optimism u may have but for all the beauty of the Moynihan Train Hall, it still doesn't tackle the chronic issues of the main Penn Station

    • @Potatoverynice
      @Potatoverynice 3 роки тому +20

      @@t4squared penn station has now already been renovated, it's looking good! Finger's crossed they demolish the old 60s eyesore next to it now that it's not got as much traffic, hopefully they rebuild the original penn station as it was or create something spectacular of the modern era, tho as much as that would be cool, I'm hoping for a rebuild myself.

    • @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand
      @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand 3 роки тому +3

      “put a curse on nyc” like new yorkers wanted it, what an idiot

    • @arthurfinidori609
      @arthurfinidori609 3 роки тому +5

      In France we have laws that forben demolition of old building. In paris for exemple, all « Classical » building and facade are rebuilt or clean all the time

  • @Pearlsnappimp05
    @Pearlsnappimp05 3 роки тому +822

    Not to be sad, my dad is a real estate developer. In Dallas, we have restored a lot of lost architecture from the 1880s to the 30's. We are also starting in OKC, Amarillo, and other cities!

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +25

      Sounds lovely🙏

    • @Pearlsnappimp05
      @Pearlsnappimp05 3 роки тому +89

      @@ponysoldier6770 thank you! Our biggest project is restoring a small skyscraper in Dallas (9 story) that was modernized! It was an ornate Italian Renaissance Revival building, and we are rebuilding it AND adding back the surrounding buildings.

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +22

      @@Pearlsnappimp05 Amazing, keep up the good work!

    • @Pearlsnappimp05
      @Pearlsnappimp05 3 роки тому +9

      @@ponysoldier6770 thanks lad!

    • @rokano
      @rokano 3 роки тому +18

      Nice Rhodesia flag

  • @bombfog1
    @bombfog1 3 роки тому +531

    As an American, I thank you for this gift. Unexpected but very appreciated.

    • @goognamgoognw6637
      @goognamgoognw6637 3 роки тому

      ...Also evidently flattering and making false statements about the prevalence of classical architecture in USA, much to the contrary, if there was ever a developed nation in the world with so little classical architecture per land area then it is in USA. This German is still traumatized by the evil name put on germany and thinks he has to flatter the USA.

    • @cheeto4027
      @cheeto4027 3 роки тому +13

      @@goognamgoognw6637 before around the 1950s or 60s it actually was the prevalent architecture in our country though but the old buildings got torn down and replaced with these boxes made of steel concrete and glass.

    • @goognamgoognw6637
      @goognamgoognw6637 3 роки тому +4

      @@cheeto4027 I see, I did not think about that, good point. Still, when you look at the majority of buildings in the usa that would be residential houses you observe the following: Europe for centuries has built them in classical style with brick, very much in continuing the Roman tradition that was broken in the middle age where perishable wood was used but returned to brick at the renaissance and ever since, then usa residential houses are build like fancy frontier sheds or warehouses from stick wood and shingles. That is very much the modern equivalent of Europe's middle age wood building (not withstanding that due to the usa plutocratic controlled floating currency and banking monopolies structure, and the REA monopoly, they still manage to make these primitive dwellings as expensive as the real brick walls in europe). Some of these wood stick houses developed a plantation style, which takes more from the rugged frontier style than classical architecture. Yes there are uniquely rare exception like the Jefferson mansion built in brick and classical style, and probably in every county you'll find the governor or a rich industrialist mansion also built in that fashion but everything else is the middle age walls and structure (i am not talking about modern interior appliances). If you take a road trip in the usa, it is obvious, a chaotic landscape of new utilitarian warehouses all built in middle age utilitarian, short term style.
      So why did USA never adopted durable brick and classical style for residential buildings. I think it's because of the above mentioned actors and also the lack of a tradition and example from past centuries of an aesthetically pleasing architecture.

    • @Xezlec
      @Xezlec 2 роки тому +5

      @@goognamgoognw6637 America doesn't use brick?! Lol man, I rarely even see a building that isn't brick.

    • @robertortiz-wilson1588
      @robertortiz-wilson1588 2 роки тому +1

      Ignorance moronic outsiders.

  • @alexandercolefield9523
    @alexandercolefield9523 3 роки тому +454

    My grandparents still talk about the old Penn Station with stars in their eyes.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 роки тому +73

      New York never recovered from that loss. People wax eloquently about Grand Central, but have no idea how small it is compared to what used to straddle two blocks on 7th Avenue. This was tge grandest, largest, train station in the world. A worthy gate of entry into the nation's premier city. Now, one speculates what ring of hell that armpit of the city is an example of. This was the one of the greatest manifestations of civic stupidity ever perpetrated on the city. Everything about it is gross, disgusting, and repugnant. How cann any city have bragging rights when it presents itself innthis manner? Would you invite one to your home if the living room was in a state of squalor, filth and dissarray?The city continues to make band aid "improvements," but its merely lipstick on a pig.

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +7

      It looked dreamy

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +9

      @@luissantiago8446 either a testament of human stupidity or of corruption since according to the video people didnt want to get rid of it.

    • @xander1052
      @xander1052 3 роки тому +5

      This is one thing I am glad about London for. We'd never demolish Waterloo, Victoria or Charing Cross.

    • @professorshrimpling2979
      @professorshrimpling2979 3 роки тому +7

      @@xander1052 yeah but you have to live with british people so it equals out

  • @aeipee13
    @aeipee13 3 роки тому +1001

    Love this topic. America needs to start thinking more about preservation than destroy and build.

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +12

      Agreed

    • @huntrrams
      @huntrrams 3 роки тому +61

      Agree. When I went to Europe, it was interesting to see them persevere all their historic buildings. I wished the U.S did the same.

    • @theItalianshamrock
      @theItalianshamrock 3 роки тому +38

      USA destroyed these beautiful pieces of history just to make more office buildings...

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому +18

      @@huntrrams There are some examples when historical buildings got demolished in Europe too, like for big infrastructure projects.

    • @Gamerteamguy
      @Gamerteamguy 3 роки тому +12

      @@vomm in London they destroyed this old religious town with huge buildings and turned them into apartments.

  • @thelastmelon9446
    @thelastmelon9446 3 роки тому +628

    Classical architecture is the peak of what humans have been able to design. It evokes both power and beauty in equal measure and can never be outshone by modern alternatives. This is my opinion despite me being taught in college about how great modern architecture is

    • @bingvandermeer8830
      @bingvandermeer8830 3 роки тому +6

      How come it is the 'peak'?

    • @xangarabana
      @xangarabana 3 роки тому +73

      Because classical architecture is designed to be beautiful, not to be useful (mainly). Art is useless and the only excuse to do a useless thing is to admire it infinitely, that's the reason why it evokes feelings, because it is human

    • @bingvandermeer8830
      @bingvandermeer8830 3 роки тому +4

      @@xangarabana That's your opinion

    • @xangarabana
      @xangarabana 3 роки тому +25

      @@bingvandermeer8830 yep, I wasn't trying to say it was objective. What's yours?

    • @bingvandermeer8830
      @bingvandermeer8830 3 роки тому +2

      @@xangarabana I think art can not be judged objectively, because it is such a complex concept to grasp.

  • @gustavramstrom736
    @gustavramstrom736 3 роки тому +1415

    Classical architecture > Modern architecture

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +15

      yup

    • @hes_alive
      @hes_alive 3 роки тому +7

      Eww, classical architecture looks racist!

    • @carlr.6263
      @carlr.6263 3 роки тому +77

      @@hes_alive that’s because it’s not real classical architecture. The Greeks and Romans didn’t have white statues and buildings. They would have been painted in rich bright colors.

    • @cornemou
      @cornemou 3 роки тому +41

      @@carlr.6263 its neo-classic

    • @theeternalflowstate261
      @theeternalflowstate261 3 роки тому +70

      @@hes_alive that word is just as meaningless and garbage as post-modern architecture.

  • @GrandTheftChris
    @GrandTheftChris 2 роки тому +49

    As someone from Dresden, Germany and a fan of classical buildings I found this video highly interesting. It's paradox if one considers that we lost so much beautiful old architecture in Germany due to air raids and at the same time, that also happened in the US without a single bomb drop. What a tragedy.

  • @gojump7
    @gojump7 3 роки тому +598

    It pains me to see beautiful old buildings being demolished, even ones that were demolished long ago. I wonder what people in the neighborhood thought at the time? Where they mostly in favor of modern structures? I personally dislike most modern structures as they lack personality, in my opinion.

    • @clorox1676
      @clorox1676 3 роки тому +51

      Well, they weren't really old to begin with. Chicago Federal Building for example was around 60 years old when it was demolished. That woud be like demolishing buildings from late 60's today. They looked "historic" because they were built following styles that there were already like a 100 years old. It's a beautiful architecture but in the 20th century it was kinda like building art deco today, it's pretty but it's also kinda fake because it belongs to a differnt era.

    • @josephgallegos1156
      @josephgallegos1156 3 роки тому +6

      They never built them. They found them.

    • @BrendanRiley
      @BrendanRiley 3 роки тому +33

      “Elite” opinion and monied interests always behind the demolition of beauty on the West. People do not support it.

    • @gojump7
      @gojump7 3 роки тому +6

      @@clorox1676 You make a good point. I guess I am nostalgic for a time that was decades before my birth even. It seems that most people like things, including buildings, that are bigger, newer and more modern. (with the exception of things like the Tiny Homes trend and others).

    • @jackyex
      @jackyex 3 роки тому +29

      There was many protests and backlash after the demolition of the Penn Station.

  • @withlessAsbestos
    @withlessAsbestos 3 роки тому +264

    The 60s and 70s are my least favorite decades for architecture. That’s when they destroyed most of the old houses in Athens Ga too.

    • @Fjalll
      @Fjalll 3 роки тому +34

      Same here in Sweden. Most grand 17th century buildings were demolished for new minimalistic office buildings in the 60s. Now it looks dated rather than classic.

    • @kiewies
      @kiewies 3 роки тому +21

      The whole state of Georgia is really just fuel for one really long, sad story about how capitalism and insterstates destroyed america's beautiful historic structures and neighborhoods and displaced its people.

    • @withlessAsbestos
      @withlessAsbestos 3 роки тому +35

      @@kiewies it wasn’t the capitalism it was the culture of “new is always better”

    • @kiewies
      @kiewies 3 роки тому +15

      @@withlessAsbestos ah yeah, i forgot. Bc capitalism definitely isn't "replace everything with something better". You're right.

    • @Chinoiserie9839
      @Chinoiserie9839 2 роки тому +7

      Same here in Philippines when a lot of Baroque churches were replaced by modern ones. There is nothing wrong with modernism but I think It must have been nice if they rebuilt the baroque churches.

  • @greenrocket23
    @greenrocket23 3 роки тому +294

    Nothing will ever be as beautiful as classical architecture, for nothing can be better than the proportions and harmony of the natural world

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +6

      exactly

    • @icaruswindrune7116
      @icaruswindrune7116 3 роки тому +13

      True that. The classical architecture in their Golden Ratio is simply amazing (along with the architectural trickery that was used to make them so beautiful). The only close thing would be the Shoin-Zukuri Style of Japan with the silver ratio (albeit this is in part due to the gardens surrounding the buildings).

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому

      @@icaruswindrune7116 yes

    • @monobgantonina5577
      @monobgantonina5577 3 роки тому +7

      What an limited view or architecture or art you must have... So I guess art nouveau is not beautiful. I guess all the impressionist's paintings are also bad.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +5

      @@monobgantonina5577 they are

  • @MaGioZal
    @MaGioZal 3 роки тому +181

    Modernity, post World War II style: Concrete-glass-steel boxes. Everywhere

    • @samuelgaskell6424
      @samuelgaskell6424 3 роки тому +8

      they can't even do anything interesting with it like china or taiwan

    • @stoneruler
      @stoneruler 3 роки тому +20

      @@samuelgaskell6424 hi, I'm from Taiwan. You're making a huge mistake if u think Taiwanese buildings are worth your time.

    • @samuelgaskell6424
      @samuelgaskell6424 3 роки тому +1

      @@stoneruler Taipei 101 looks fucking awesome tho

    • @stoneruler
      @stoneruler 3 роки тому +9

      @@samuelgaskell6424 not great not terrible. You can take a look at Taichung municipal office, classic glass box.

    • @mkmc94
      @mkmc94 Рік тому

      @@samuelgaskell6424 It's ugly one world tower look better.

  • @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901
    @jayasuryangoral-maanyan3901 3 роки тому +1668

    that first building looked beautiful. Bring it back I don't want international style T_T

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +19

      i agree

    • @meinvolkuberalles
      @meinvolkuberalles 3 роки тому +47

      It's brutalist (international style)

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому +15

      why did they demolish it?

    • @meinvolkuberalles
      @meinvolkuberalles 3 роки тому +91

      @@vomm because people are stupid as hell

    • @Hiro_Trevelyan
      @Hiro_Trevelyan 3 роки тому +84

      @@vomm Probably not enough space. But this is a stupid decision. We won't destroy the Louvre because there's "not enough place".

  • @algoraxmago1527
    @algoraxmago1527 3 роки тому +85

    When you think that art can never be regression, just look at the "international style"

    • @CaesarGB
      @CaesarGB 2 роки тому +14

      But it's all "subjective" anyway according to the people who push that idea.

    • @ElRinconJoestar08
      @ElRinconJoestar08 2 роки тому +14

      And Brutalism too.

    • @TheMaster4534
      @TheMaster4534 Рік тому

      @@ElRinconJoestar08 Brutalism? At least Nazi and Soviet brutalism that Hollywood uses as inspiration for "evil empire" settings has style

  • @drewspartz6727
    @drewspartz6727 3 роки тому +53

    Wow, I felt like each of these transformations was a personal dagger to my soul. I've never been much of an 'art' person, but I feel like America has been dealt a huge blow by the high modernists.

    • @CoryPrior999
      @CoryPrior999 2 місяці тому

      they're not "high" anything, they're low, low as they come.... they were born low, they'll always be low -- there's nothing good about them....

  • @Lawnmower737
    @Lawnmower737 3 роки тому +110

    Recently in the past year, we lost yet another classical American building. The Allentown State Hospital, with its beautiful dark engraved wood, lavish designs, arches, and pretty marble was demolished despite the citizens of Allentown’s utter dismay at the destruction. The site is now to be sold by the city to lost likely big brand places like Amazon and Walmart

    • @Train115
      @Train115 3 роки тому +7

      Massachusetts has already lost two of it's kirkbride asylums, and lost several other hospitals.

    • @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand
      @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand 3 роки тому +2

      the architecture isn’t that good, it’s nothing like old penn station or the singer building

    • @LMvdB02
      @LMvdB02 2 роки тому +9

      @@SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand It's a different style. Looks good anyways. I don't understand how the government allows such a beautiful building to be demolished? In my country such buildings would be classified as a monument and would be held to strict rules as to not change or demolish the building.

    • @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand
      @SgtPeppersLonelyHeartsClubBand 2 роки тому +6

      @@LMvdB02 America has a history of being behind.

    • @nutellafoxvideos7350
      @nutellafoxvideos7350 2 роки тому

      There's an old theatre in salt lake city that probably is going to get torn down as well. It hasn't been taken care of either by anyone nor the city so it's literally just rotting away to the point it's about to collapse.

  • @stefan1713
    @stefan1713 3 роки тому +127

    It seems like so much care went into designing buildings back then. Even public high schools looked better.. certain styles just never go out of fashion. why anyone would destroy them is beyond me

    • @willbenson2253
      @willbenson2253 3 роки тому +13

      Exactly my grandmothers house is a beautiful large Victorian home from the late 1980 luckily she was too established in the building to ever sell it so when a grocery store attempted to buy it she refused. Now across the street from her house is a giant parking lot with a grocery store.

    • @kylejmarsh3988
      @kylejmarsh3988 3 роки тому +2

      the Mud Flood, probably

    • @Mr.Peetersen
      @Mr.Peetersen 2 роки тому +5

      Architects hate people

    • @shaunenwright7872
      @shaunenwright7872 2 роки тому +23

      @@Mr.Peetersen As an architecture student I'll say that they don't hate "people" they just hate you, me and the historical culture to which we belong. After world war 2, along with parallel movements in other fields spearheaded by the frankfurt school, they associated gothic and classical architecture with europe and america's "archaic past" and thought that by deconstructing the marble symbols of beauty and power they could usher in a internationalist utopia where there are no boundaries, no differences, no oppression. As you can see there is no utopia, only a grey sludge devoid of meaning and beauty.

    • @Mr.Peetersen
      @Mr.Peetersen 2 роки тому +8

      @@shaunenwright7872 when you become an architect, please design beautiful buildings with symmetry and balance on a human scale

  • @AverytheCubanAmerican
    @AverytheCubanAmerican 3 роки тому +155

    Don't remind me of the fact NYC lost an architectural wonder like Penn Station...
    but at least they're trying to revive it in a way. The revival is better than being stuck in a stinky underground terminal mess below Madison Square Garden. For a while it was home to the state's only Krispy Kreme, which was the only good thing about it, until Krispy Kreme opened more locations in the surrounding area

    • @chungusmaximus526
      @chungusmaximus526 3 роки тому +12

      Bro why do I see you everywhere? You remind me of M'aiq the Liar from Elder Scrolls, that dude was all over the map lmao.

    • @victormgv
      @victormgv 3 роки тому +3

      Seriously! I bump into you and usually within a few days, sometimes hours lol we must be in the same algorithm group my dude. I’m always like “Avery consorte! ¿Acere, que bola?” 😁

    • @criticalhard
      @criticalhard 3 роки тому +1

      MSG will be gone in a couple years sadly. These people never learn.

  • @josephgallegos1156
    @josephgallegos1156 3 роки тому +34

    So sad to see the old world almost completely forgotten.

    • @emmahogg7366
      @emmahogg7366 2 роки тому +15

      Thats exactly why they have been on a mission to destroy it.

    • @TheMaster4534
      @TheMaster4534 Рік тому +2

      @@emmahogg7366 And guess who is behind it.

  • @BigSteak
    @BigSteak 3 роки тому +173

    As a Chicago resident it brings sadness to see what once was. That federal building is way better than it’s replacement!

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому

      exactly

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому +16

      I'm not even an US citizen and it still makes me sad

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 роки тому +5

      I lived in Chicago for 28 years, sad during that time I never got used to Mies Van Der Rohe' s Fededral Plaza.Court houses should look the part and not just another office box. The old Federal Post Office gave d the city a civic dignity and grandeur it lost when it was demolished to be replaced with the current building.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 роки тому

      Tragic how developers with deep pockets and political ties were given tremendous leeway in leveling much of downtown Chicago's urban infrastructure to be replaced with either hideous parking garages, or prairies of asphalt. The zoning changes that would make construction of international style buildings possible, wreaked havoc all over downtown. Shops, small hotels, eateries were knocked down, so they could erect a building sitting in a Plaza that would rise sheer and straight. The result was empty plazas that were always windswept, cold and uninviting. By the 60s, many felt that the Loop was old and faded. Buildings were not kept up, a common tactic for property owners who want to demolish structures. The buildings became eyesores. TZhis is the same excuse they used to tear down Penn Station in NYC. Scores of buildings came down. The Morrison Hotel was the tallest building demolished at that time. The LaSalle Hotel, with its French Mansard Roof. The Sherman House on Randolph, along with the Garrick Theater. The Masonic Temple, a fantastic building, whose reason for bring torn down was a desire to pay less taxes and upkeep on the hulking building. Block 37, which included a number of historic structures, including the law offices of Clarence Darrow, came down. The entire block, across from Marshall Fields, would sit vacant for 20 years! What current sits in the block is a mediocre, hodge podge of boring, buildings whose facades look like they can be peeled with a lube strip razor. Awful stuff.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому

      @@luissantiago8446 exactly

  • @allenpinnix5241
    @allenpinnix5241 3 роки тому +349

    Penn Station was perhaps the greatest architectural loss in the US in the 20th Century...... at least Grand Central has survived to give us a reminder of what once was New York...

    • @piplebref4607
      @piplebref4607 3 роки тому +49

      It was the most mindless act of vandalism. I’m always saddened when I see photos of what has been lost.

    • @chuck-jy7mz
      @chuck-jy7mz 3 роки тому +25

      can we blame the progressives ?

    • @lastswordfighter
      @lastswordfighter 3 роки тому +48

      @@chuck-jy7mz Yes.

    • @stevie68a
      @stevie68a 3 роки тому +24

      Penn Station was far more beautiful than Grand Central Station.

    • @sleekoduck
      @sleekoduck 3 роки тому +6

      I remember stopping there in the 1990s for a change of trains and a hot dog and being less than impressed after seeing it in so many movies. Now I understand why.

  • @Berkana
    @Berkana 3 роки тому +24

    It's a damn shame that these buildings are often demolished to be replaced with featureless boxes that aren't worth looking at for more than a second.

  • @pax14
    @pax14 3 роки тому +68

    Very interesting. As a French, I am accustomed to see beautiful classical architecture, and when I went to Washington DC, I admired the classical architecture, it was like I was in an European city. Then, I went to Chicago, and that was not the same, those giants buildings make me feel I was in America, with only modern architecture, none of the buildings seemed to be built before the late of the XIX century.

    • @catalannationalist9847
      @catalannationalist9847 3 роки тому +28

      That's because Chicago suffered a devastating fire in 1871.

    • @xxevery9seconds87xx
      @xxevery9seconds87xx 3 роки тому +3

      @@catalannationalist9847 Thank you, beat me to it.

    • @catalannationalist9847
      @catalannationalist9847 3 роки тому +2

      @@xxevery9seconds87xx Excuse me, what do you mean?

    • @mrsupremegascon
      @mrsupremegascon 3 роки тому +7

      @@catalannationalist9847 he wanted to say the same thing, but you answered quicker than him.

    • @ALEJOGZ123
      @ALEJOGZ123 Рік тому +6

      Also because DC has a rule that no building can be higher than the Washington Monument (once tallest structure in the world until Eiffel Tower overtook it). This limits most building to 130ft.
      As someone who lives close to the area I love seeing these great old European style works in the US where they are not too common.
      After a night out in downtown on the drunk walk back I end up annoying my friends pointing all the nice buildings out LOL.

  • @ToyotaCamrySEv
    @ToyotaCamrySEv 3 роки тому +41

    I think America’s biggest distinction between us and Europe is our refusal to look back and enjoy the past. There are soo many buildings and cathedrals in Europe that they won’t tear down bc they’re cool to look at and they don’t think of the corporate development space they could get out of it.
    I’m not saying this is good or bad. Just a difference.

    • @GigaNietzsche
      @GigaNietzsche 2 роки тому +11

      Thats wrong, Americans love beautiful architecture. However you also have these multinational corporations coming in and lobbying to tear down America's most beautiful site, many such cases across the country

    • @M50A1
      @M50A1 Рік тому +9

      @@GigaNietzsche "multinational" alot of those companies are ours, bud.

    • @GigaNietzsche
      @GigaNietzsche Рік тому

      @@M50A1 Ours? Last I checked they operate on a global scale and outsource labor and aid in the subversion of my people via propaganda and mass immigration.

    • @jokers7890
      @jokers7890 Рік тому

      no its def bad...its an american trait to try and deny its history, because american history is full of so many crimes against humanity

    • @mystic_galaxies9832
      @mystic_galaxies9832 Рік тому +1

      @@M50A1 I would go on a limb and say most to all of those companies are ours.
      Also, small nitpick and I'm sorry but
      "a lot" not "alot"

  • @theItalianshamrock
    @theItalianshamrock 3 роки тому +51

    2:11... they destroyed a beautiful building for a boring lifeless structure

  • @AM-xr2xw
    @AM-xr2xw 3 роки тому +57

    I'm filled with so much rage to see all these beautiful works of art be replaced by sterile, glass cubes
    I wish someone would have the spine (and the integrity) to bring this back.

    • @brentlucke8713
      @brentlucke8713 3 роки тому +2

      Unfortunately, it's hard to bring back something already taken away, but hopefully, preservation becomes more important to developers in our country. (Also, don't forget some of those "glass cubes" have stories and value when they someday come to tear them down for whatever is next).

    • @yrobtsvt
      @yrobtsvt 3 роки тому +9

      trump demanded that all new buildings be neoclassical, but it's easy to make ugly buildings in such a style if you're designing with CAD software. really we need more care put into our designs

    • @CaesarGB
      @CaesarGB 2 роки тому +4

      @@brentlucke8713 I don't think anyone will mourn those modern monstrosities and the idolatry to ideals that are un-American that they represent.

    • @PengMIY
      @PengMIY 2 роки тому

      How? Who's going to pay for them? It' is so much more expensive now to build them.

    • @PengMIY
      @PengMIY 2 роки тому +2

      @@CaesarGB Oh I'm pretty sure many would disagree with you and be careful throwing the "un-American" catch-it-all verbiage around, cause I think what you are saying here is pretty "un-American."

  • @tigervalley62
    @tigervalley62 3 роки тому +123

    I find this fascinating from a European's perspective. Yes, we too have had a lot of destruction of classical buildings in the past 100 years, especially after the war. But we tried to reconstruct and preserve them as much as possible. My home country Portugal was fortunate enough to not suffer such devastation such as Poland, France or Germany for example, so we have a lot of untouched architecture. However, even when you go to these heavily WW2 affected countries, you still see a lot of classical architecture, especially in France. What I am getting at, is that unlike America, classical architecture still remains although not entirely. Everything is mixed. Modern with classical. It's very rare to see a full modern city like Chicago in Europe.

    • @mrsupremegascon
      @mrsupremegascon 3 роки тому +23

      Well coming from France, I can tell you that French cities, except few in the north, didn't suffered a lot from WW2. Germany is the one that got most of the destruction and its awful to see how Germany changed since.

    • @Axefighterr
      @Axefighterr 2 роки тому +2

      @@mrsupremegascon Nothing can beat Poland and its capital being nearly totally razed to the ground by Germans.

    • @ttvrs1059
      @ttvrs1059 2 роки тому +8

      @@mrsupremegascon Strongly disagree. Poland got the most destruction.
      As for the damage France had, no only northern and eastern cities were heavily destroyed, Paris and Lyon were too. For example Lyon had to rebuild 20 of its 24 bridges at the time. The differences to the USA are twofold: 1) barely nothing was destroyed there because of the war since the conflict took place on european soil; 2) when something was destroyed in Europe, we rebuilt it to a replica because we're actually aware of our cities architectural values.

    • @branigankerls
      @branigankerls 2 роки тому +10

      I wouldn't say that chicago is full modern. It has a TON of classical architecture in some of its skyscrapers.

    • @weenisw
      @weenisw 2 роки тому +2

      @@branigankerls yes, and the neighborhoods are mostly pre-modern 100ish year old brick buildings

  • @LFPAnimations
    @LFPAnimations Рік тому +11

    Modern art and modern architecture are the two glaring examples of declines in human artistry. Modern art has turned art galleries into money laundries and modern architecture has turned buildings into shiny corporate boxes.

    • @Luboman411
      @Luboman411 Рік тому +2

      Modern art I'm fine with, when done well. There's lots of quite thought-provoking and beautiful pieces. That's because those pieces are done with care for aesthetics and proportions. The problem with modern architecture is that modern developers don't take what is great about modern art and apply it to most buildings. Instead developers use modern art as a barely-hidden excuse to make buildings that are ugly and cheap. Then when people complain that these buildings look ugly and cheap, the developers turn around and say "Well, that's modern art." No, it's not. It's just you being cheap.

    • @LFPAnimations
      @LFPAnimations Рік тому

      @@Blakbox92 Yeah you are 100% correct. Dadaism is exactly what I was referring to and a lot of modern art is pretty good. I would also add brutalism as one of the biggest mistakes in architecture. I guess some people like it, but to me it makes spaces seem like parking garages.

  • @ideatorx
    @ideatorx 3 роки тому +18

    Penn Station is one of the greatest tragedies architectural history. It just devastating.

  • @nilocrekkab3112
    @nilocrekkab3112 2 роки тому +8

    With modern technology we could build the most beautiful buildings ever made, but instead we build flat gray boxes.

  • @rodrigoteresa7944
    @rodrigoteresa7944 2 роки тому +11

    There used to be such an art in making things, even the smallest corner in a building was intricately carved and well thought out. I know its not economical but I hope to see a Renaissance of this kind of care put into ordinary things in my lifetime.

  • @Mirokuofnite
    @Mirokuofnite 3 роки тому +258

    Classical architecture makes me have pride and feeling in a city. Modernist/post modern is ugly and rootless.

    • @bigleague9683
      @bigleague9683 3 роки тому +14

      Thats the point

    • @clorox1676
      @clorox1676 3 роки тому +7

      They're pretty indeed, but they are rehashes from European buildings from the 18th century built in the US in late 19th or early 20th century. Their historical and architectural value is arguable.

    • @bigleague9683
      @bigleague9683 3 роки тому +14

      @@clorox1676 i wouldnt say that they arcetuctural value is arguable it is clearly quite buetiful far better that the brutalist and modernist we see today

    • @whenthedustfallsaway
      @whenthedustfallsaway 3 роки тому +3

      @@clorox1676 Why is their value determined by their appropriation? Did not the Romans and Carthaginians appropriate their neighbors architecture? Honestly, the whole reason Americans have built such things is because they like having the best of things, so in a sense its an ode to the greatness of these styles.

    • @clorox1676
      @clorox1676 3 роки тому +7

      @@whenthedustfallsaway It's not so much about appropriation, it's the fact that style of building has been built all over the world for 150 years. And not all of them are really valuable or even well designed. In the case if Chicago Federal Building, you can tell the proportions are pretty off and the whole thing is quite a bizarre collage.

  • @johannesmuller8842
    @johannesmuller8842 3 роки тому +78

    In Germany a lot of pure classical buildings where damaged. After the war (at least in the west) we spend a lot of money we didn't have to reconstruct them. Interesting what happend in American.

    • @hairharbor5080
      @hairharbor5080 3 роки тому +15

      Germany actually demolished a lot of their great buildings after the war because they lacked the money to restore them. In East Germany the communists demolished a lot of Palaces and Churches for ideological reasons.

    • @sherryviera5696
      @sherryviera5696 2 роки тому

      I think the modern and classical mix in Germany is breathtaking.

    • @maximilian3544
      @maximilian3544 2 роки тому +1

      Some entirely undamaged classical buildings and inner cities in germany were torn down in the 50s and 60s as well. Cologne Station survived the war and was replaced with an eyesore. Same for a lot of the historic inner cities that were removed during that time, as for example in kempten, which was largely intact and got torn down in the 60s to make way for concrete blocks.

  • @Zefo_No
    @Zefo_No 3 роки тому +21

    So basically, America had the same kind of grandiose 19th century architecture as Europe, since architects took inspiration from eachother or just moved around. The difference being that, instead of the buildings being brought down by war, they were demolished when it looked like they wouldn't be profitable anymore, with a cheaper, slicker new one build in place.

    • @vaimantobe3034
      @vaimantobe3034 Рік тому +2

      Yes. But in Europe there's also a sense of cultural heritage. Historical buildings are kept and protected because of historical value. Some buildings that were greatly damaged in the 2nd World War were even restored!
      I don't see that happen too often in the big cities in the USA. Entire city layouts have been changed, with city centers becoming parking lots.

    • @Luboman411
      @Luboman411 Рік тому +1

      @@vaimantobe3034
      The sad part--the modern replacements sometimes weren't even slicker. Take Penn Station. The original was apparently very easy to navigate--any idiot could figure out very quickly how to catch which particular train. Which is the genius of Grand Central Terminal--it's easy to figure out its layout. The new Penn Station is a hideous, dark, smelly maze of tunnels that go all over the place. It takes a freaking map to figure out up and down, left and right, let alone where you could catch your train. You have no idea how many anxiety attacks I've had trying to figure out where to catch my train with only minutes to spare. So f*cking annoying.

  • @badnewofficial
    @badnewofficial 3 роки тому +38

    Modern architecture is a monstrosity-it consider only the usage of the building, neglecting the beauty, which it something relevant as the cities are populated by humans and not robots.
    The demolishing of those marvelous buldings is a shame. Even though they were not profitable, they were something people could admire and see meaning through.
    I believe that cities' architecture should be everything but modern. We need to bring back the respect for the classical architecture and its inner power of meaning.

  • @Buzbikebklyn1
    @Buzbikebklyn1 3 роки тому +20

    As a child, my Aunt took me to the circus.
    It was held in the old Madison Square Garden.
    We took a train into The old Penn Station, my Aunt showed me the " biggest area " under one roof.
    It's was magical to me.
    Then she showed me the biggest post office in America, it was gigantic! and I was 5 years old.
    3 years later Penn station was torn down, and some of its statues were dumped out in New Jersey, they can still be found there today.
    I think some of the old buildings should be appreciated, like a museum of time.
    Buildings out of time.
    Just a thought.

    • @gojump7
      @gojump7 3 роки тому +1

      That is wonderful that you had those memories and remember the times and the feeling of then. Not much in the way of solace, I suppose, but i think it's neat to hear that you have seen the old Madison Square Garden, Penn Station and Post Office.

  • @huntrrams
    @huntrrams 3 роки тому +82

    I’m from Chicago, the city known for the birthplace of the skyscraper ! It just makes me sad and angry that Future generations never got to see the first skyscraper to the pre- Chicago fire City Hall. I recommend reading the book Lost Chicago by David Lowe, has so many cool buildings lost to time or were demolished.

    • @icaruswindrune7116
      @icaruswindrune7116 3 роки тому

      True. There is also the fact that we can only read about Downtown Chicago prior to being raised 4 to 14 feet and how some of the houses down there were swallowed up or demolished as a result.
      Then you have the old city hall subway station of New York City - which was closed to the public for a long time (albeit now there are ticket tours sometimes) and the Pneumatic Tubes that served as the "first" subway stations of NYC.
      There is also Penn Station, the Singer Building, Midway Park (which Frank Lloyd wright had poured his soul into), Mark Hopkins' Mansion, the Birmingham Terminal Station, the Beach Hotel, and the Hippodrome Theatre.
      After researching this a bit, 6 of the extra buildings I listed (NYC's Pneumatic Tube System, Pen Station, Singer Building, Midway Park, Birmingham Terminal Station, and the Hippodrome) where torn down - 2 Burned down (Mark Hopkins' Mansion and the Beach Hotel) - and 1 (Old City Hall Station) was sealed up.
      It is honestly such a shame that we cannot preserve the architecture of the past.

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 роки тому +3

      I read David Lowe's book upon arriving in the city. At that time I was fishing for a position at Skidmore, Owens,& Merril, which at that time , was the world's largest architectural firm. I was shocked and appalled at the city's treatment of its architectural heritage. Especially the uniquely distinctive, and beautiful edifices designed by Louis Sullivan. The Stock Exchange building, the Garrick theater. One after another. The 50s,60s and 70's found the city on a demolition binge. Not only buildings, but neighborhoods were decimated. The downtown area in 1980, looked like a faded dowager with missing teeth. In River North and areas surrounding the Loop, there were acres and acres of surface parking lots. It remained this way even until the end of the 20th century. The city had eliminated many of the smaller, modest buildings that contained family run businesses. When the lots began to redevelop, they opened branch banks, or Walgreens. Boring. Chicago with its grit and true character, was a more interesting city then the tourist trap its become today. There have been some improvements, especially with green spaces. Otherwise it offers a litany of what every other city offers, except the view along the lakefront. I left the city for New York, but before I did, I stopped at Graceland Cemetery to pay my respects and homage at the tomb of Louis Sullivan. Chicago never appreciates its own.

    • @cyan1616
      @cyan1616 3 роки тому +2

      Chicago used to be so beautiful.

    • @cyan1616
      @cyan1616 3 роки тому +1

      I know, I am 6th generation Chicagoan and I don't even recognize the downtown area anymore. Supposed to be a capital of architecture, but all the new buildings are fugly and forgettable.
      Chicago used to be so beautiful!

    • @luissantiago8446
      @luissantiago8446 3 роки тому +4

      Many of these buildings look better from a distance then close up. On the ground level, most of them are afflicted with the common problem of how to meet the street and relate to people. Most of these buildings have desolate lobbies, with slabs of marble and a reception desk enlivened with a floral sprig in a vase. Or cringe worthy examples of art. Older buildings lent dignity and decorum to human activities. Look at the old Continental Bank interior on LaSalle Street. A grand and glorious space. Look at what greets one upon entering the lobby of the Board of Trade Building. Banks looked like banks churches, looked like churches, not office buildings or lecture halls. Older buildings also had the tripartite formula in design. There was a distinctive bottom section, and different mid section, topped off by definitive crown. Builfings today are not so refined in finish, treatment, nor approach. The details are crude, coarse, and sometimes sloppy. This is the reason why older buildings age better then newer ones. Modern buildings are all about pragmatic utility, and constantly vie to appear, "sleek." When all they end up looking like cold, sterile tubes of silicone.

  • @alexelshami8723
    @alexelshami8723 3 роки тому +40

    My sister is an architect and I always criticize the modern architecture she learned at the university, actually I'm not happy with this new type of cities, I saw beautiful 19th and 18th centuries houses demolished to build uncharacteristic 15 and 20 floors building, native and classical architecture it's the commune identity.

    • @icaruswindrune7116
      @icaruswindrune7116 3 роки тому +10

      As someone who has been to American Cities and and also European ones (namely Florence, Rome, Venice, Paris, London, and Edinburgh), I prefer the European Cities architecturally speaking.
      As for why we went with the modern/postmodern architectural styles - it has much to do with Bauhaus Style's wide adoption, the rejection of enlightenment thinking, the post modernist movement that ruined art in general, and probably how world war two affected the countries caught up in it (and maybe how classical styles were tied to the Third Reich for a bit. Don't forget that they wanted a world capital using Neo-classical styles).

  • @mmv10
    @mmv10 2 роки тому +7

    Wow this just made me so sad to see all of the great architecture lost

  • @Alex_FRD
    @Alex_FRD 3 роки тому +78

    Brutalist architecture has more soul than the "international style".

    • @weenusfeet3317
      @weenusfeet3317 3 роки тому +15

      At least when I think of brutalist architecture I think of Soviet style buildings and not just a generic glass building.

    • @kylejmarsh3988
      @kylejmarsh3988 3 роки тому +7

      That's not saying much - both are a blight

  • @chuckkottke
    @chuckkottke 3 роки тому +8

    This breathtakingly beautiful building was replaced with a cold, sharp glass box... Paved paradise, put up a parking lot.🚧

  • @foowashere
    @foowashere 3 роки тому +17

    Oh, unexpected but very welcome! Thanks for making and sharing. +1

  • @napoleonibonaparte7198
    @napoleonibonaparte7198 3 роки тому +51

    Really hate the now utilitarian nature of modern architecture buildings.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +4

      same

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +11

      Agreed, many developers have no concern for beauty, its a shame.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +1

      @@ponysoldier6770 truly is

    • @icaruswindrune7116
      @icaruswindrune7116 3 роки тому +11

      Well, that is how the modernist doctrine is. It is a revolt against the bourgeosie and the enlightenment, after all - and also very closely linked with Communism due to its disdain of the Bourgeosie and how utilitarian it is.
      Plus, the argument they use against classical designs is cost of materials, but they fail to mention that the can literally cast and stain concrete to look like wood - marble - granite - bricks - etc. and make buildings look like the capitol building for a lot less than if they were to use granite or marble. It would also lower the overall cost of upkeep - specially if they used roman concrete (which hardens over time and prevents cracks from spreading. Also hardens even faster when salt water is sprayed on it).

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому

      @@icaruswindrune7116 exactly

  • @PLuMUK54
    @PLuMUK54 Рік тому +6

    A common theme with the loss of such buildings, including in my own city in the UK, is that they have usually replaced the buildings with structures that are bland and in many cases already demolished or requiring demolition. The 1960s have a lot to answer for!

    • @Blakbox92
      @Blakbox92 Рік тому

      I wish Googie architecture took off in the 60s, instead of the ugly boring "International Style"

  • @sirmount2636
    @sirmount2636 3 роки тому +4

    This is a beautiful video. While I personally don’t have a great deal of attachment to classical architecture, I appreciate that you took the time to examine a nation’s culture, especially a foreign nation.

  • @BiggWalrus
    @BiggWalrus 2 роки тому +3

    Might be my favorite video on yt. Traditionalism, architecture, quality classical music, doesn't get much better!

  • @vincentr.9672
    @vincentr.9672 3 роки тому +1

    Love your historic architecture videos!

  • @awookieandagerman
    @awookieandagerman 3 роки тому +3

    You could mention so many buildings in a video like this. I'm glad this has gained some traction on UA-cam. Another horrible loss was the loss of the ornate original Madison Square Garden designed by McKim Mead And White with the current one that's nothing but a massive curved billboard on the outside.

  • @R1project0
    @R1project0 3 роки тому +47

    post war western world: look at all the beautiful architecture that inspires us
    post war architects: thats so true, we should demolish as many of them as possible and substitute them with brown cubes to honour classical's architecture rich history! Also, every other thing we build should be brown cubes but grey may also be acceptable. Finally we should call it brutalism, which completely drives home the idea of beautiful spaces made to measure to people's actual needs and requirements.

    • @HTtwentyten
      @HTtwentyten 3 роки тому +6

      As much as I love classical architecture, I don't regret that brutalism happened. I think it has a coherent aesthetic of its own that's rooted in at least some discipline and craft - something which cannot be said of the absolutely vulgar architectural whims (e.g. glass buildings curved like bananas) that came after it. However yes, it is a horrific tragedy that we no longer see classical architecture as a cumulative, living heritage contemporary architects draw from for new projects.

    • @R1project0
      @R1project0 3 роки тому +4

      ​@@HTtwentyten I totally agree with you in that, the one good thing about brutalism is the coherent aesthetic, which I feel is of primary importance in making a city look beautiful.

    • @Rubycon99
      @Rubycon99 3 роки тому +2

      @@HTtwentyten I agree. I think people mention Brutalism so often because of the name. There's actually a certain amount character and even charm present in a lot of Brutalist buildings that's missing from the current Schizophrenic Moderne plaguing our cities.

    • @AL73250
      @AL73250 3 роки тому +4

      @@HTtwentyten nope sorry, brutalism is satanic

    • @Fox_Cord
      @Fox_Cord 3 роки тому +10

      I think brutalism is the worst architectural school bar none. This isn’t just my opinion, but it seems to be a pretty popular one (8 out of 10 of the least popular British buildings are brutalist). While it’s aesthetically consistent, the problem is its inhumane nature. International style glass structures at least allow for much light. Brutalist concrete behemoths are dark, decay after a few decades and have a psychologically oppressive feel to them (see Cabrini-Green public housing). There’s something almost fascistoid about brutalism, which is reflected in it’s inventors highly questionable political philosophy. The only thing good about brutalism, is that it was tried, failed and thankfully won’t be used anymore.

  • @stevedinks6090
    @stevedinks6090 3 роки тому +53

    Beautiful building replaced by rectangles... so sad

  • @katelawyer3689
    @katelawyer3689 Рік тому +4

    I feel architecture went down hill in the post ww2 period honestly I miss neoclassical and baroque or even Victorian. I know I sound strange but the buildings of the colonial era, renaissance, Middle Ages or anything earlier were truly superior to much of what the western world constructs today.

    • @katelawyer3689
      @katelawyer3689 Рік тому

      We should rebuild these buildings maybe not in the same position but still I just want to see these majestic buildings in this modern world

  • @Dayvit78
    @Dayvit78 3 роки тому +34

    The old San Francisco City Hall looks like something you'd build in Anno 1800.

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому +3

      Wow, that's weird, because Anno 1800 plays in the time where buildings like the City Hall got constructed. What a strange coincidence!

    • @Dayvit78
      @Dayvit78 3 роки тому +2

      @@vomm I meant the weird layout of it. Not the design elements. ^_~

    • @whenthedustfallsaway
      @whenthedustfallsaway 3 роки тому

      @@Dayvit78 lol

  • @andyt8216
    @andyt8216 3 роки тому +14

    It's enough to make you cry. The same thing happened here in the UK especially in the 1960s and 70s.
    And now the cheap and ugly replacement buildings are being demolished, so it was all criminally for nothing.
    I wish we could be more like Germany and central European countries who actively rebuild some of that which was destroyed. Frankfurt has just finished rebuilding its Old Town for example and Hungary is rebuilding buildings in its Castle Area.

  • @muledeer654
    @muledeer654 3 роки тому +3

    Makes a man want to cry. Modernist and International cities are a hellscape

  • @Kevin-yh9yt
    @Kevin-yh9yt 3 роки тому

    More please!! Thanks for this!

  • @santiagomerchan9605
    @santiagomerchan9605 7 місяців тому +1

    You should do another video about this but showcasing other countries' destroyed/lost architectural legacy. For example Rio de janeiro and Sao paulo in Brazil lost absurd amounts of beautiful buildings that were iconic landmarks.

  • @micahistory
    @micahistory 3 роки тому +28

    Man, this is so sad. All those building except the last ones were infinitely better and more beautiful than their ugly modern replacements

    • @ponysoldier6770
      @ponysoldier6770 3 роки тому +12

      Modern replacements are soul less.

    • @micahistory
      @micahistory 3 роки тому +10

      @@ponysoldier6770 because the people who make them are soul less and reflect it through their architecture

    • @vomm
      @vomm 3 роки тому

      @@micahistory Yes, of course, it certainly has nothing to do with the fact that nowadays buildings made of white granite and thousands of decorations are simply absolutely unaffordable. But it's the missing souls. Sure.

    • @icaruswindrune7116
      @icaruswindrune7116 3 роки тому +8

      @@vomm You do know that there is a way to fake granite and marble, right? You can still use concrete and just have it stained by acid for a marble look - granite also can use acid staining, but there is also the ability to use special mixes to create "mineral veins" as well. Heck, you can even have concrete look like wood if you wanted too.
      This is similar to how you can make cement look like bricks or how people would guild regular objects with gold leaf to make them appear more expensive.
      So the entire thing about needing white granite is simply bull.
      As for thousands of decorations, Classical Architecture and Romanesque Architecture are known for being sparsely decorated. So that two can be thrown out the window. Now if it was Gothic or Renaissance, then that might be a bit different - with Gothic probably being the most expensive of them all.

    • @Krawn_
      @Krawn_ 3 роки тому +9

      @@vomm Demolishing buildings that could last 500+ years for buildings that last 60 years? which is more expansive....

  • @Berkana
    @Berkana 3 роки тому +7

    6:10 I can't even imagine that SF's original city hall was even larger and more ornate. The current city hall is already incredible. The dome of the SF city hall is larger than the dome at the national capitol.

    • @deirdrejones5974
      @deirdrejones5974 2 роки тому +1

      The Fox Theater, a practically perfect condition Art Deco movie palace about a block away from City Hall, was demolished replaced by an atrocity known as Fox Plaza. It’s a brown shoebox where had my first grown up job.

    • @Luboman411
      @Luboman411 Рік тому

      That one isn't as sad, though. A huge earthquake ripped it apart. It wasn't greedy developers that brought its mighty columns down.

  • @timvantori
    @timvantori 2 роки тому

    Stumbled across this channel and I'm not disappointed instant sub

  • @whenthedustfallsaway
    @whenthedustfallsaway 3 роки тому

    Great Video. I'm fortunate to have been recommended this in my UA-cam feed. One suggestion though, the ending was too abrupt. It'd be better if you said something of the significance of these changes.

  • @AK-vr8el
    @AK-vr8el 2 роки тому +3

    The 1960s - 1970s was a modern iconoclasm.

  • @nuralibolataev4474
    @nuralibolataev4474 3 роки тому +3

    Demolishing such beautiful marvels of art not only architecture but true art, only to be replaced by the blight of modernist and post-modernism is not only soul-crushing but an insult to humanity and beauty as a whole! Modernism and its successors are truly the greatest villains to cities more than any bomb or fire. We live in an age of previously unimaginable capabilities yet we create unimaginative and ugly buildings that look the same! Is this how we repay the previous generations? For all the beauty that they gave, even with lesser tools? And what of the future generations are we not to leave them with something that will make them proud to live in this world?

  • @ItsOveeer
    @ItsOveeer 2 роки тому

    Your channel is awesome man

  • @tommoncrieff1154
    @tommoncrieff1154 3 роки тому +2

    Excellent video. Thank you.

  • @Alex_FRD
    @Alex_FRD 3 роки тому +7

    Make Architecture Great Again

  • @giuliofornabaio8077
    @giuliofornabaio8077 3 роки тому +4

    seeing these beautiful structures demolished and then replaced by ugly glass buildings crashed me

  • @TheEliteOverride
    @TheEliteOverride 3 роки тому +1

    Great video! Have you considered doing something similar for showcasing the classical buildings found elsewhere in the old colonial empires?
    As a sidenote for the future, sewing is pronounced 'sowing'.

  • @AdSd100
    @AdSd100 Рік тому +1

    I am immigrant to the US and never forget when I passed by SF city hall one day in my car by chance not knowing anything about it.
    I was awestruck!
    God Bless America!

  • @youtubeaccount6539
    @youtubeaccount6539 2 роки тому +4

    You’ll never guess who I blame for this…..

  • @v1e1r1g1e1
    @v1e1r1g1e1 Рік тому +3

    The destruction of those beautiful neo-Classical buildings is nothing short of vandalism. What replaced them is not architecture; it is abhomination.

  • @dixonpinfold2582
    @dixonpinfold2582 Рік тому

    Excellent work. I heartily applaud the way you didn't take up much of our time. You're good at selecting the salient points.

  • @mentalbreak
    @mentalbreak 3 роки тому

    plz make more videos like this. :) i really enjoyed it.

  • @greenrocket23
    @greenrocket23 3 роки тому +34

    We shouldn't have let those who hate beauty dominate our architecture courses

  • @johnlambert9976
    @johnlambert9976 3 роки тому +15

    The 1950's and 1960's were a period of architectural tragedies in the U.S. when so many beautiful buildings were torn down and replaced with plain & ugly eyesores.

  • @vincethewhat1362
    @vincethewhat1362 3 роки тому +1

    This video made me sub really enjoy your channel

  • @lillyguo1302
    @lillyguo1302 2 роки тому

    Would you please make a video on what you think are the best American classical buildings existing today? So sad to know of the ones we lost, it’d be great to appreciate what we have now

  • @cleantoad4332
    @cleantoad4332 3 роки тому +3

    My library still looks like this.

  • @ahcokris
    @ahcokris 3 роки тому +5

    old penn station: let's build ourselves a roman basilica like building

  • @ece5925
    @ece5925 3 роки тому +2

    YES! A NEW KINGS AND THINGS VIDEO!

  • @matthewcollins4764
    @matthewcollins4764 3 роки тому +1

    My city although littered with parking lots and garages and cut in half by highways there are several classical and historical buildings such as a grand courthouse with towering columns (just realized there are several courthouses similar to this but I love them all. My favorite building in the city is a classical sky scraper adorned by lions at the top on our main street. There are several classical stately looking mansions/ expensive homes in our historic neighborhoods. There are several gothic churches from the 1800s to early 1900s as well. There are many historic schools as well with at least one I have seen built in the 1800s, but most of our buildings in the 1800s are 1890-1899 and overall most of the historic houses at least were built in the early 1900s. Some of my favorite buildings from the 1800s are two Victorian houses built in 1890 and 1899. This just shows how easy it is to find historic structures if you look in the right places. My city has dealt with economic problems until it’s recent recovery and many of our buildings have been destroyed by highways I take the time to walk around my neighborhood and in my city reflecting at the beautiful landscape created by rooftops, columns, and windows. I want to go to Chicago soon.

  • @RasakBlood
    @RasakBlood 2 роки тому +3

    A shame those beautiful buildings where destroyed. But to me this just highlights how young of a nation US is. Making even more sad that they destroyed those buildings so fast just to replace them with more efficient but soulless rectangles. All in the name of highly valuable down town relestate i guess.

  • @birdwife589
    @birdwife589 3 роки тому +4

    I think about the loss of the singer building every week. pretty tragic it was one of the first ever skyscrapers and it was torn down☹️

  • @kal_bewe1837
    @kal_bewe1837 3 роки тому

    Your channel is really very interesting; I find the new San Francisco city hall looks like the Invalides in Paris but less well the old San Francisco city hall was prettier

  • @medi8482
    @medi8482 3 роки тому +2

    You should create a discord. :) Love your videos! Är du Svensk?

  • @yadediuburekyolu8481
    @yadediuburekyolu8481 Рік тому +3

    The “modern” style of architecture looks like the boxes that the classical buildings came in.

  • @ellaw356
    @ellaw356 3 роки тому +11

    I feel like especially in the south, there are So many buildings and “plantation mansions “ that were allowed to go into disrepair bc of its history. It’s still so sad to see those buildings never to be saved and eventually demolished. (Due to financial issues)
    Penn Station is so SAD!

    • @dog-ez2nu
      @dog-ez2nu 3 роки тому +3

      I think their history actually emboldens their case to be renovated. Considering how big racism and slavery was to Southern culture, history and identity - it's extremely important that there are visual reminders of the dark era to make sure it doesn't become too blurry or vague, whether they are cultural centres or museums or whatever. I can understand to a certain extent though, why you might not want to live in one.

    • @thefutureisnowoldman7653
      @thefutureisnowoldman7653 3 роки тому

      When should have done what the german did with consentration camps made into a museum but the south would probably try to make it a trophy for their lost cause.

  • @Liphted
    @Liphted 3 роки тому

    Good stuff man!

  • @maximus4765
    @maximus4765 2 роки тому +2

    "Your home?"
    "Yes... and it was beautiful."

  • @rokano
    @rokano 3 роки тому +3

    Whoa I was researching about this today by pure coincidence

    • @Oberkommando
      @Oberkommando 3 роки тому +1

      No it wasn't google knows what you do and recommends accordingly

    • @artdecotimes2942
      @artdecotimes2942 3 роки тому

      @@Oberkommando why I can never trust digital technology. They try to appeal to human kind, yet appeal more alien every day... especially in their goal.

  • @ThaSchwab
    @ThaSchwab 3 роки тому +6

    Fun fact: the rubble from the demolished U.S. Post Office and Customs House at 1:07 was used to build the stunning Basilica of St. Josaphat to the north in Milwaukee.

  • @blakeknight4500
    @blakeknight4500 3 роки тому

    Aspects of the drawing of the first building at 1:09 remind me a LOT of the Eisenhower Executive office building in Washington D.C. I wonder if there is any connections somehow between designers, schools of architecture, firms, etc.

  • @edgarsnake2857
    @edgarsnake2857 3 роки тому

    Great video. Thanks.

  • @rafaelmarwati
    @rafaelmarwati 3 роки тому +4

    It’s a shame to see infrastructure constructed solely for efficiency, and that art and heritage is no longer put into the equation

  • @phillipeden
    @phillipeden 3 роки тому +4

    Only just got u in my recommendeds which is a shame but better late than never. Been bingeing ever since.

  • @kiplingwasafurry1108
    @kiplingwasafurry1108 3 роки тому +1

    One lost building that makes me sad is the Union Terminal concourse in Cincinnati which went from a train station to a museum center over the years. While it still kept the front of the structure they had to tear down the concourse which resulted in the loss of beautiful architecture and a massive mural that depicted the US time zones.

  • @alexanderthedude5474
    @alexanderthedude5474 3 роки тому

    Fantastic video