This is the first guidebook to cover the recent architecture of a city best known for its medieval and earlier heritage. Istanbul is not a museum, but a dynamic and rapidly growing city. While an understanding of traditional building types is necessary for its appreciation, and this book provides this through descriptions of key works from earlier periods, to ignore the achievements of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is to miss a vast body of rich and exciting building.
Many styles are represented, each reworked with a particular Istanbul vision. Westernisation, accompanied by architectural eclecticism, began in the nineteenth century. Following independence in the 1920s, the First National Architectural Movement dominated, while later in the decade the modern movement produced some remarkable Bauhaus-inspired buildings. The 1940s saw a reaction with the Second National Architectural Movement (supported by, among others, Bruno Taut and Clemens Holzmeister), which used classical forms with a regional inflection.
This book describes and illustrates more than 100 buildings, from mosques and fortresses to shops and the gecekondu, the illegal mass-housing developments, originally self-built but now commercial, housing Istanbul's exploding population.
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