AD Round Up: American Classics

By David Langdon

Salk Institute / Louis Kahn. Image © Liao Yusheng

Happy Fourth of July! In recognition of Independence Day in the United States, ArchDaily has assembled six of our favorite “American Classics.” Featuring projects by Louis Kahn, Mies van der Rohe, Richard Neutra, Paul Rudolph, Eero Saarinen, and Richard Meier, each of these canonical works occupies a prominent place in twentieth-century American architecture. See them all after the break.

Salk Institute / Louis Kahn. Monumental without being ostentatious, the Salk Institute is among Kahn’s most famous projects in the .


Salk Institute / Louis Kahn. Image © Liao Yusheng
Salk Institute / Louis Kahn. Image © Liao Yusheng

The Atheneum / Richard Meier. One of Richard Meier’s most important early projects, this community center in the post-utopian Indiana town of New Harmony helped launch his career. It is a beautiful exercise in geometric construction and a pioneering example of Meier’s distinctly personal brand of modernism. .


The Atheneum / Richard Meier. Image Courtesy of Richard Meier & Partners
The Atheneum / Richard Meier. Image Courtesy of Richard Meier & Partners

Farnsworth House / Mies van der Rohe. Along with Fallingwater and the Glass House, the Farnsworth House is one of the United States’ most famous private residences. Located in the Chicago suburb of Plano, Illinois, it is remarkable for its radical simplicity and transparency. .


Farnsworth House / Mies van der Rohe
Farnsworth House / Mies van der Rohe

Lovell House / Richard Neutra. Built in the late 1920s in Los Angeles, Neutra’s hilltop residence helped import a European-dominated strand of modernism to the United States. .


Lovell House / Richard Neutra. Image © wikiarquitectura
Lovell House / Richard Neutra. Image © wikiarquitectura

North Christian Church / Eero Saarinen. Located in the town of Columbus, Indiana, the North Christian Church was the final building of Saarinen’s distinguished career. It articulates the architect’s personal religious and moral polemics through its processional arrangement, heavenward gestures, and moody ambiance. .


North Christian Church / Eero Saarinen. Image © Flickr user Danube66
North Christian Church / Eero Saarinen. Image © Flickr user Danube66

Orange County Government Center / Paul Rudolph. Currently faced with the threat of demolition, this late-brutalist project is characteristic of Rudolph’s tendency toward complex, intersecting massing schemes. .


Orange County Government Center / Paul Rudolph. Image © New York Times - Tony Cenicola
Orange County Government Center / Paul Rudolph. Image © New York Times – Tony Cenicola

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