1. ArchDaily
  2. American City

American City: The Latest Architecture and News

Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

"O beautiful, for spacious skies, for amber waves of grain, has there ever been another place on earth where so many people of wealth and power have paid for and put up with so much architecture they detested as within thy blessed borders today?"

Tom Wolfe wrote this in his 1981 book From Bauhaus to Our House. The conflict between modern and traditional design has barely abated since, as is evident in this recent article. In the U.S., modern buildings are often met with community aversion, for familiar reasons: their perceived coldness and lack of contextual sensitivity, the impact on local character, and the loss of historical continuity. But on another level, the critique against modern design finds even more purchase on the larger scale: the city. Modern U.S. cities reek of traffic congestion and pollution, social inequality and gentrification, a loss of community and cultural spaces, and a lack of usable open space.

Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City - Image 1 of 4Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City - Image 2 of 4Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City - Image 3 of 4Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City - Image 4 of 4Contemporary Architecture and the Modern City - More Images

American City: St. Louis Architecture / Robert Sharoff + William Zbaren

American City: St. Louis Architecture / Robert Sharoff + William Zbaren - Image 8 of 4

When architectural journalist Robert Sharoff and photographer William Zbaren created the series American City, the intention was to celebrate some of the States’ most architecturally impressive cities. For their St. Louis publication, the team has produced a beautiful large format book highlighting 50 projects scattered across the city. Organized with incredible photographs and insightful text, the book is the first of its kind, since the 1920s, to document the architecture of St. Louis.

More about the publication after the break.