After the 1950's, architects began to explore new means of expression. Several architects expanded the use of reinforced concrete. Le Corbusier led the way with his design for the chapel Notre Dame du Haut (1955), in Ronchamp, France. It has a boldly curved roof made of a thin shell of reinforced concrete held together by concrete struts. A narrow strip of windows just below the roof makes it appear to float. Numerous other windows pierce the thick walls, filling the inside of the chapel with an otherworldly light.
American architect Louis Kahn also used concrete in his design for the Salk Institute in La Jolla, California. The design and materials lent themselves to the creation of both large open spaces for group research and quiet, private areas for individual study. The buildings were carefully designed to reflect the character of the site, with its dramatic ocean views.
Other architects used concrete to create bold, expressive forms. Frank Lloyd Wright designed the galleries of New York City's Guggenheim Museum (1959) as a series of ramps spiraling around a central atrium, or court. The TWA Terminal (1956-62) at Kennedy International Airport in New York was designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen. It features curved concrete shells that resemble a bird about to take flight.
An often overlooked but important influence on architecture after World War II was the growing movement to the suburbs. U.S. cities saw a tremendous loss in population as families moved to new housing developments in outlying areas. One of the first of these developments was Levittown, built on Long Island, New York, in 1948. Its designers adapted methods of mass production used in industry, enabling houses to be built quickly and cheaply.
In 1956, Southdale, the first fully enclosed, environmentally controlled shopping center, opened in a suburb of Minneapolis. Its architect, Victor Gruen, intended the center to be the new "town square" of the suburbs. It was to have places for people to socialize as well as shop. That same year, General Motors opened a complex of offices and research facilities in suburban Detroit, designed by Eero Saarinen. Soon other businesses were relocating to the suburbs.
During the 1960's, a group of architects emerged who were dissatisfied with what they viewed as the plain simplicity of the international style. The followers of this movement, which later became known as postmodernism, decorated their buildings with elements that recalled historical styles. The American architect Robert Venturi was an early leader of the movement. He thought architecture should reflect life by being complex and filled with contradictions. Michael Graves' design for the Portland (Oregon) Public Service Building (1983) featured historical elements. These included columns that were simulated (not structural) with colors and bas relief. Philip Johnson topped his design for AT&T's headquarters in New York City (1984) with a classical pediment. I. M. Pei's design for the new entrance to the Louvre in Paris (1989) featured a pyramid constructed of steel and glass.
Venturi and fellow architects Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour wrote a book called Learning from Las Vegas (1972). In it they suggested that architects should also look to commercial shopping centers and other common neighborhood features for inspiration. The book accompanied a growing interest in vernacular architecture.
Throughout the 1970's, many architects focused their attention on historic preservation and the architecture of the city. Projects such as the 1976 renovation of Quincy Market in Boston drew shoppers back into the city from the suburbs. They reminded people of the rich history and character of cities.
Most architects strive to make balanced structures that are in harmony with their surroundings. Other architects purposely seek to make their structures clash jarringly with their surroundings. This movement is called deconstructivism because the architects seem to deconstruct, or take apart, a conventional building and reassemble its various elements in an apparently random or jumbled fashion. In his design for the Wexner Center (1989) on the campus of Ohio State University, the American architect Peter Eisenman combined forms from buildings that had previously existed at the site with forms from the existing campus. This resulted in walls and other parts of the building intersecting one another at unexpected angles.
Buildings designed by the American architect Frank Gehry resemble deconstructivist architecture. But Gehry had a different method and purpose. He used computer modeling programs. That way he could calculate structural systems and create buildings in shapes that would have been impossible to achieve even 20 years earlier. Gehry's Guggenheim Museum (1997) in Bilbao, Spain, looks like an explosion of curving forms clad in a shiny skin of titanium.
Computer modeling programs have also made possible the structural feats of other designers. These include Richard Rogers, Norman Foster, and Santiago Calatrava. They designed bridges, train stations, airports, and exhibition halls with sweeping roofs supported by columns, trusses, or cables. Calatrava's addition to the Milwaukee Art Museum (2001) has a roof that looks like two great wings spreading out from the building. In fact, these wings actually move. Such buildings recall the great engineering feats of early modernism. And they point to a future of increasingly dynamic buildings, based on a new era of materials and structural techniques.