Post typical traditional house from your cunt
>>78436863
The average chinese lives in a commie block, nice try though.
>>78436913
>typical traditional house
a lot of people live in villas here
>>78436942
No, that doesn't look right
>>78436965
paradise
>>78436863
>>78436863
It depends on the region, I guess Tuscany is the most representative though.
>>78436863
the equivalent
>>78437197
Do these still exist?
Roman villas remind me of Chinese Siheyuan(四合院)
>>78437293
You can find some archaeological rests but I doubt they still build villas with that disposition. Villas are usually outside the cities or in protected areas. It either wouldn't make sense to have an inner garden if you had a spacious terrain outside the city, or it would be just a waste of space if your space were limited, as in protected urban areas.
>>78436948
there must be traditional ones in east/south states
>>78437610
You are correct.
moving in to one in a few days actually
It's just a white/stone box with a pyramid shaped roof with red tiles.
>>78437768
why do I see designs like pic related everywhere?
>australian architecture
>>78438360
forgot image
but yeah these overpriced cunts
>>78438389
because it's "modern" probably
>>78438389
thats not a traditional house, its a cheapo model home
>>78436863
Traditional Pennsylvania farm house desu it is my dream home
>>78436945
Yes, he already said commieblocks.
Just a shack
>>78438389
>>78436965
Other than location I fail to see why McMansions are bad
>>78438641
looks happy
>>78436863
>>78438670
it is location, poor people will buy a tiny block and fill the entire thing with their mcmansion so their roof is touching their neighbours roof and they have no room for proper landscaping or trees
if you look at new acreages all the house are still mcmansions but they have great landscaping which makes all the difference
>>78438683
It is comfy even without A/C but the coconut roof is maintenance intensive.
>>78438915
>looks happy
Fixed it for OP
>>78438562
Is that stone? I'm impressed
>>78439719
all stone man, it's a work of art in my opinion. Do you have stone houses?
>>78436863
le happy gookblock ^,^
>>78439865
>>78439785
Yes, more than a few, they're especially common for older buildings as it was a method the indigenous Mexicans were well acquainted with, although that style of mortared stone is generally clad as in pictured which is a later example.
>>78437768
looks like a musolla / small mosque desu.
>>78440087
Also some more traditional European masonry, I'm just surprised that would be a traditional style for homes in the US as you people seem to prefer building with wood.
Houses like this are typical of the central Chile rural zones
>>78439865
>>78439927
>>78439951
Why do Koreans build like this? Japan is just as crowded but you never see highrise clusters like these.
>>78441453
The big manufacturing jobs in Korea were and still are mostly centralized to a few major cities. A a rapid mass migration to these cities by the poor in the latter half of the 20th century facilitated the need for quick, cheap, mass housing that only high-rise commie blocks can achieve.
>>78438293
>>78441620
plantation houses usually looked much worse than the ones with greco-roman style columns. like this one, the american home of Chang and Eng Bunker; slave-owning siamese-twins from China.
>>78436955
You could do better than that...
>>78438562
Looks like a typical New Netherlands house
>>78437220
Nice Hacienda wheres this ?
typical brittany's house
>>78443467
>>78438709
I keked, but let's be serious
>>78443532
American houses always look paper-thin to me
>>78443562
>dry walls meme
tb h there is nothing about this house indicating it.
>>78443624
It simply look to me like a bulding you'll freeze to death in when the thermometer hit zero (or 32 for that matter)
>>78443713
Would it matter if there is no sick temperatures
>>78443839
*Such
>>78443684
That's a big roof.
>>78438915
Ventilating the roof is part of the building code here in Canada.
http://ventilation-maximum.com/English/why-ventilate.html
this town still exists with its original houses
>>78443839
Afaik, not every state in the US is Texas
>>78443624
>>78443713
>>78443839
>>78443919
American homes are filled with various types of insulation, the most popular being "batt insulation" (fiber glass).
>>78443953
And what do they use in Canada?
>>78443953
I still don't trust those capitalist buildings
>>78443919
I know that and i'm pretty sure that it's like they build every bungalow in us according to single house plan but a house that fit local climate conditions. Isn't it obvious?
>>78443995
Same thing. The pink stuff is very popular here. And we also have foam insulation just like in the US. You can also buy "rock wool" which is more popular in Europe I think.
>>78444046
This house like it's built in a place where snowy winter isn't something rare.
>>78444101
>>78444046
They may be paper thin but they're wearing a jacket.
>>78444101
ok, you got me. Americans build their cardboard houses and then freeze to death during winter because it's like normal thing over there.
>>78444134
Creepy
>>78444146
ikr
>>78443953
>>78444134
looks creepy af
Depends on the region. I wish that we never entered WWII damnit
>>78436863
traditions
>>78444197
Ah, our beatiful motherland is so plentiful
>>78443505
traditions might be different for different generations, commieblocks are traditional dwellings of soviet and modern russia era, the woody houses are traditional for imperial russia and probably soviet times but only in rural areas
>>78444272
commie shitholes have kolhoz traditions
>>78444300
i won't argue about that but traditions are traditions even if they might be shit from someone's pov
>>78444272
no shit, sherlock. But commieblocks look ugly, you could have at least tried to post something semi-cool.
Log cabins were later introduced to burgerland (before burgers), where it become popular among frontiersmen.
>>78436863
pretty cool. I like that the garden is fairly compact.
>>78436942
looks like some cheap tourist resort.
>>78436948
the american working class has all of my sympathies.
>>78436955
that's not traditional architecture, and it's certainly now how the average person in denmark has ever lived. it's mediterranean imported neoclassicism and only for the rich.
>>78436996
the houses look pretty neat, but it still has a bit of a tourist trap feel to it.
>>78436998
the house looks good, but the colours could have been better.
>>78437047
I'm digging the minimalism here.
>>78437133
another cheap tourist resort.
>>78437197
excellent.
>>78437220
comfy.
>>78437362
also comfy, and with a minimalist touch.
>>78437768
disgusting.
>>78438106
tourist trap.
>>78438293
disgusting american fake neoclassicism.
>>78438562
mixed feelings. the white wooden elements don't go well with the masonry. paint them black instead.
>>78438641
exotic.
>>78438709
comfy, but not relevant to the thread. I'm still a fan of the modernist ideals, though.
>>78439617
disgusting american architecture strikes again.
>>78439865
I like modernism, but this kind of degenerated modernism is disgusting.
>>78440658
looks comfy enough to me.
>>78443386
I don't know why, but I'm not really a fan. it looks too in-place.
>>78443505
very nice.
>>78443684
looks more like fake revival architecture than real traditional architecture. it might have to do with how flat and boring everything looks.
>>78443906
same with this one.
>>78444632
post your cuckshed so we can judge it
>>78444682
How our villages looked before Falu red ruined our rural architecture forever.
>>78444857
More recent traditional architecture looks like this. It's much more homogenous and boring imo.
>>78444857
>>78444906
damn son that's some tragic looking shit, you have a lot of nerve shit talking anyone else's architecture
is a reinterpretation of the traditional central Spanish house but made with local materials like adobe.
In cities it was something like this
>>78444961
in villages
>>78444961
>>78444987
Looks lovely.
>>78444987
villages one level
>>78444961
>>78444987
>>78445017
Love the use of bricks, gives it a real historic look
>>78444950
it's comfy. plus, it's what ordinary people actually lived in, not a cherry picked middle or upper class dwelling like most others in the thread.
>>78445002
Yeah. Shame most of it got destroyed in this shitty conflict
>>78444950
>being that triggered over someone's subjective observation.
>>78443906
Post more, please
>>78445076
That's not brick, that's stone
>>78444857
looks familiar
Depends a lot on the area but I guess this is what we'd call traditional
communists should burn in hell for destroying this
It was better then
>>78445716
Denmark has commies?
They destroyed stuff?
>>78445915
he's probably talking about modernist architects. conservatives in scandinavia are very butthurt about modernist architecture.
>>78445915
most western countries have been infested with sick powerful people who get a kick out of destroying traditional architecture and replacing it with sterile modern architecture. These are the same people who promote shit like modern "art" and diversity as well.
>>78436965
>Cities Skylines
>>78446018
you're confusing modernists with post-modernists.
IT WAS A
BRICK
HOUSE
>>78446018
>traditional russian houses
Mas provençal
traditional house in Provence, you see it pretty much everywhere
>>78446100
I don't care about terms, anyone who deliberately destroys something beautiful needs to hang
>>78436863
>>78446191
so literally every urban planner ever, including the ones who built >>78445716 ?
>>78446220
>destroying
>building around something
Learn the difference Sven
>>78446254
>building around
why do you think that they didn't demolish whatever stood there before?
do you thin that demolishing old buildings was something we invented in the 20th century, and that before that, we always "built around" the existing architecture?
>>78446220
that's the most swedish response I have gotten on here
>>78446292
Yes.
>>78446180
Reminds me of Tartarin's house from Tartarin de Tarascon
>>78446298
nice argument.
>>78446300
do you have any facts to back that claim up?
pic related. nothing stood there before.
>>78446373
No.
>>78446214
People who lived inland lived in that type of houses.
Coastals lived in pic related.
>>78446388
are those actual houses people still live in, or is it some kind of outdoor museum?
>>78446373
was this built to be nice and awe-inspiring, or was it literally built to be as a neutral, abstract and as void of meaning as possible? That's the main difference
>>78436996
Giving the expression "living under a rock" a whole new meaning.
>>78446449
These >>78446214
Have people living in them. But the Thatch ones barely have any one except a few in the extreme north.
Plus UAE is doing some sort of cultural restoration by encouraging the traditional style (pic related)
>>78446610
>encouraging the traditional style
It's good to read there's some sensible people in your region of the world
>>78446561
>built to be nice and awe-inspiring
That's exactly what modernist architecture was. The modernist ideology is literally about praising technological advances and building a better future for coming generations.
>built to be as a neutral, abstract and as void of meaning as possible
This is characteristic for post-modern architecture. It has nothing to do with modernist architecture.
Try reading a book before spouting retarded opinions next time. Pic related by the way: it's built to be unimpressive and meaningless.
>>78446719
Oman is currently the best in the Middle east at making itself look more unique and traditional, the worst is unironically Egypt which is commieblock central.
Oman even uses old lighthouses and marketplaces. And still use Dhow wood ships to trade with India and Africa.
>>78446729
wow it's working, I am so excited for our great future
>>78446810
That is pretty nice, it looks very impressive
>>78446729
>Try reading a book
any recommendations related to it?
>>78446819
once again, you're posting a picture of a post-modern building as an argument that modernism is bad. I can't discuss this with you when you're being unreasonable on purpose like this.
>>78446861
There are tons of great literature on architectural theory. For a good introduction to modernist architecture, you might want to look at Corbusier's books, most notably "Towards a New Architecture".
>>78446819
Is that real??
I have a sudden urge to commit seppuku
>>78446922
thank you
Castilla la Mancha 1
>>78446869
Is Burj Al-Arab Modernist or Post Modernist?
Also what periods would you consider Modernist and what would you consider post-modernist generally.
>>78447008
Castilla la Mancha 2
Andalucia 1
North Castile 1
>>78447059
Windmills are comfy in Mediterranean towns.
>>78446869
>you aren't using the right terms, so the new shit being built isn't disgusting :^)
how the fuck is this any better?
>>78447133
North Castile 2
>>78447188
google images not the greatest example to distinguish styles tb h
>>78447154
yep
>>78447052
most of the UAE cities are very distinctly postmodern, and this includes the building in your pic.
for the definition of modernism, I would call it a time period as much of an ideal and an aesthetic. you could say that the fore-runners of modernism was the "jugendt" and "art deco" styles which were popular from the late 19th century and into the 20's. in america, they never went out of fashion. in the 20's and a few decades onward, the modernist architecture was crystallised in functionalism, and we saw buildings like Le Corbusier's "Unité d'Habitacion" (pic related). In the late 60's and the 70's, the modernist architecture became increasingly degenerated and turned into ugly commieblocks with no aesthetic appeal. around the same time, post-modern architecture was born. interestingly, most-modernism was originally an architectural term, which has since come to be used in all humanities disciplines.
you might have been able to tell already from my earlier posts, but I'm pretty fond of modernism. I'm not a big fan of post-modernism, though.
Leon
>>78447215
North Castile 3
>>78436863
what a crap shithole
Cantabria
1960-2000
>>78447406
post 2000
>>78447188
some of those buildings are modernist, others are not. google images isn't a reliable for these things (you all know what happens when you google "american inventors").
in any case, I haven't defended post-modern architecture at all. I just said that you can't use the term "modernist" as some all-embracing umbrella bogeyman term. because literally no one builds modernist architecture today. the modernist ideals have been dead since the 60's, and it was the student left that killed them.
>>78447316
reminds me of a place in Perú
>>78437047
casa dos youtubers portugueses
>all these Americans posting far upper middle-class houses
wew
not a house but...
Asturias
>>78447430
I don't get how you can think something like >>78447306 looks good unless you had yearlong education to convince you it does. That concrete monstrosity is literally worse than a glass-tower. There is a reason tourists flock to beautiful places like this
>>78447440
o-ok? more pic of the village
now post bahay na bato colonial houses)
>>78447567
Galicia
>>78447704
looks like cs_italy
Valencia
(not the best example but...)
Cataluña
>>78445716
That looks extremely much like smaller Scanian towns (Ystad, Simrishamn etc). The S*edes might have ruined a lot of things but their shitty cottages never really caught on here.
>>78447567
>>78447793
Why are they propped up?
Aragon
>>78448048
to keep the food safe from rats.
>>78448048
those are horreos... is a typical granary from the northwest of the Iberian Peninsula. Its the most tradtional building of that region that i can remember
>>78448165
and this >>78448156 also avoid humidity
the last one
Euskadi (Basque "Country")
>>78448048
That kind of propping up, using staddle stones, was actually very common in England to keep vermin and water away (preventing rotting as well). Modern storage techniques have made it obsolete though, but from the 17th to early Victorian era it was not at all uncommon.
>>78444957
Looks nice/comfy, albeit a bit sweaty. Where is this?
>>78447090
>>78447133
>>78447215
>>78447316
>>78447348
>>78447390
>>78447704
>>78447793
>>78447976
>>78448087
>>78448407
Spain looks fantastic! (Urge to go and get drunk there is growing)
>>78444957
>>78448965
It's in Ouro Preto. The mountain climate along with the summer rains make this climate, the rest of the year and very comfy.
>>78448965
thanks for all those (You)