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These are the types of architecture. Give the examples of each type. Use the words and word combinations below.
Theatre, hospitals, guardhouse, capitols, schools, stores, prisons, parliament buildings, museums, shrines, court houses, villas, circuses, athletic facilities, factories, huts, banks, exhibition, halls, mines, churches, hostelries, libraries, apartment houses, markets, publishing houses, mansions, post – offices, laboratories. Choose the right adjective.
Вариант 2 ARCHITECTURAL PLANNING The architect usually begins to work when the site type and cost of a building have been determined. Planning the environment.The natural environment is at once a hindrance and a help, and the architect seeks both to invite its aid and to repel its attacks. To make buildings habitable and comfortable, he must control the effects of heat, cold, light, air, moisture, and dryness and foresee destructive potentialities such as fire, earthquake, flood, and disease. The placement and form of buildings in relation to their sites, the distribution of spaces within buildings, and other planning devices discussed below are fundamental elements in the aesthetics of architecture. Orientation. The arrangement of the axes of buildings and their parts is a device for controlling the effects of sun, wind, and rainfall. Within buildings, the axis and placement of each space determine the amount of sun it receives. Orientation may control air for circulation and reduce the disadvantages of wind, rain, and snow. The characteristics of the immediate environment also influence orientation: trees, land formation, and other buildings create shade and reduce or intensify wind, while bodies of water produce moisture and reflect the sun. Architectural forms. Planning may control the environment by the design of architectural forms that may modif y the effects of natural forces. Colour. Colour has a practical planning function as well as an expressive quality because of the range of its reflection and its absorption of solar rays. Since light colours reflect heat and dark colours absorb it, the choice of materials and pigments is an effective tool of environmental control. Materials and techniques. The choice of materials is conditioned by their own ability to withstand theenvironment as well as by properties that make them useful to human beings. One of the architect's jobs is to find a successful solution to both conditions; to balance the physical and economic advantages of wood against the possibility of fire, termites, and mold, the weather resistance of glass and light metals against their high thermal conductivity, and many similar conflicts. Interior control. The control of the environment through the design of the plan and the outer shell of a building cannot be complete, since extremes of heat and cold, light, and sounds penetrate into the interior, where they can be further modified by the planning of spaces and by special conditioning devices. Temperature, light and sound are all subject to control by the size and shape of interior spaces, the way in which the spaces are connected, and the materials employed for floors, walls, ceilings, and furnishings. Today, heating, insulation, air conditioning, lighting, and acoustical methods have become basic parts of the architectural program.
Planning for use. While environmental planning produces comfort for the senses (sight, feeling, hearing) and reflexes ( respiration ), planning for use or function is concerned with convenience of movement and rest. Differentiation. The number of functions requiring distinct kinds of space within a building depends not only upon the type of building but also upon the requirements of the culture and the habits and activities of the individual patrons. A primitive house has a single room with a hearth area, and a modern one has a separate areas for cooking, eating, sleeping, washing, storage, and recreation. A meeting-house with a single hall is sufficient for Quaker religious services, while a Roman Catholic cathedral may require a nave, aisles, choir, apse, chapels, crypt, sacristy, and ambulatory. Economic planning. Major expenses in buildings are for land, materials, and labour. In each case they are high when the commodity is scarce and low when it is abundant, and they influence planning more directly when they become restrictive. When land coverage is limited, it is usually necessary to design in height the space that otherwise would be planned in breadth and depth, as in the ancient Roman insula (apartment houses) or the modern skyscraper. When the choice of materials is influenced by cost, all phases of architectural design are affected, since the planning procedure, the technique, and the form of buildings are dependent on materials. High labour cost influence the choice of techniques and, consequently, of materials. AFTER - TEXT EXERCISES
1. To make buildings habitable a) the environment by the design of architectural forms and comfortable the architect… b) is an effective tool of environmental control 2. Trees, land formations, and c) room with a heat area other buildings create… d) must control the effects of the natural environment 3. Planning may control… e) light and sound penetrate into the interior 4. Extremes of heat and cold… f) a nave, aisles, choir, apse, chapels, crypt, sacristy and 5. The choice of materials and ambulatory pigments… g) shade and reduce or intensify wind 6. A primitive house has a single… 7. A Roman Catholic cathedral may require…
Отразить атаку; пригодный для житья; расположение, положение; результаты воздействия солнца, ветра и дождя; создавать влажность и отражать солнце; важное (эффективное) средство контроля; выбор материалов для строительства; способность противостоять воздействиям окружающей среды; отопление, изоляция; кондиционирование воздуха; освещение, акустические методы; функциональное планирование; боковой неф; склеп, ризница, часовня; расходы; влиять на выбор материалов; зависеть от требований заказчика.
Вариант 3 ORDERS OF ARCHITECTURE The first step in architecture was simply the replacement of wooden pillars with stone ones, and the translation of the carpentry and brick structural forms into stone equivalents. This provided an opportunity for the expression of proportion and pattern. This expression eventually took the form of the invention or evolution of the stone "orders" of architecture. These orders, or arrangements of specific types of columns supporting an upper section called an entablature, defined the pattern of the columnar facades and upperworks that formed the basic decorative shell of buildings. The Greeks invented the Doric, Ionic, and Corinthian orders. The Romans added the Tuscan and the Composite. The oldest order, the Doric, is subdivided into Greek Doric and Roman Doric. The first is the simplest and has baseless columns as those of the Parthenon. Roman Doric has a base and was less massive. The parts of Greek Doric — the simple, baseless columns, the spreading capitals, and triglyph-metope ( alternating vertically ridged and plain blocks) frieze above the columns — constitute an aesthetic development in stone incorporating variants on themes used functionally in earlier wood and brick construction. Doric long remained the favourite order of the Greek mainland and western colonies, and it changed little throughout its history. The Ionic order evolvedlater, in eastern Greece. About 600 BC, in Asia Minor, the first intimation of the style appeared in stone columns with capitals elaborately carved in floral hoops — an Orientalizing pattern familiar mainly on smaller objects and furniture and enlarged for architecture. It developed throughout so called Aeolic capital with vertically springing volutes or spiral ornaments to the familiar Ionic capital, the volutes of which spread horizontally from the centre and curl downward. The order was al ways fussier and more ornate, less stereotyped than Doric. The Ionic temples of the 6th century exceed in size and decoration even the most ambitious of their Classical successors. Such were the temples of Artemis at Ephesus in Asia Minor and the successive temples of Hera on the island of Samos. The Corinthian order originated in the 5th century BC in Athens. It had Ionic capital elaborated with acanthus leaves. In its general proportions it is very like the Ionic. For the first time the Corinthian order was used for temple exteriors. Because of its advantage of facing equally in four directions it was more adaptable than Ionic for corners. There are not many Greek examples of the Corinthian order. The Romans widely used it for its showiness. The earliest known instance of the Corinthian order used on the exterior is the choragic monument of Lysicrates in Athens, 335/334 BC. A simplified version of the Roman Doric is the Tuscan order. It has a less decorated frieze and no mutules in the cornice. The Composite order is also a late Roman invention. It combines the elements from all the Greek orders.
AFTER - TEXT EXERCISES
1. Complete the following sentences.
1. The Ionic was always fussier than …a) the Doric b) the Corinthian c) the Tuscan 2. The Corinthian order had Ionic capitals elaborated with…. a) Iotus flowers b) acanthus leave c) geometric ornament 3. For the first time the Corinthian order was used for … a) theatres b) residential structures c) temples 4. In its general proportions the Corinthian is very like … a) the Doric b) the Ionic c) the Tuscan 5. Of all the three Greek orders the Corinthian is…
a) the most elegant b) the simplest
c) the oldest 6. The Doric order was used in … a) the Erechtheum b) the Pantheon c) Artemis temple 2. Choose the right term. 1. The upper section of a classical order is a/an …
a) volute, b) entablature, c) base
2. Spiral ornaments are called …
a) capitals, b) mutules, c) volutes
3. The triglyph – metopes are …
a) alternating ridged and plain blocks of stone, b) porticos, c) floral hoops
4. The part of the column is … a) frieze, b) capital, c) cornice
5. A particular style of column with its entablature having standardized details is …
a) facade, b) colonnade, c) order 3. Match the beginnings of the sentences to their ends using the information from the text. 1. This expression eventually a) elaborated with acanthus leaves took the form … b) on the Greek mainland and in western Colonies 2. The oldest order, the Doric … c) of the invention of the orders of architecture 3. The Doric order was popular… d) by the Romans 4. The volutes of the Ionic capital… e) combines the elements of all the Greek orders 5. The Corinthian order had a capital… f) is subdivided into Greek Doric and Roman Doric 6. The Tuscan order was added … g) spread horizontally from the center and curl 7. Another late Roman invention, downward took the Composite order…
Вариант 4 ROMAN ARCHITECTURE In Roman architecture there were three types of houses: the domus, the insula, and the villa. The domus, or town house, consisted of suites of rooms grouped around a central hall, or atrium, to which were often added further suites at the rear, grouped around a colonnaded court, or peristyle. The atrium, a rectangular room with an opening in the roof to the sky, and its adjoining rooms were peculiarl y Roman elements; the peristyle was Greek or Middle Eastern. There were few windows on the street, light being obtained from the atrium or peristyle. In Rome the chief examples of domus are the House of Vestals in the Forum in Rome and that of Livia on the Palatine Hill. Great blocks of flats or tenements were called insulae. Excavations at Ostia, Italy, have revealed, the design of these blocks. Planed on three or four floors -with strict regard to economy of space, they dependedon light from the exterior as well as from a central court. Independent apartments had separate entrances with direct access to the street. The Latin word villa pertained to an estate, complete with house, grounds, and subsidiary buildings. Hadrian's Villa at Tivoli, began about AD 123, was a sumptuous residence with parks and gardens on a large scale. The unevenness of the site necessitated large terraces and flights of steps. There are remains of great brick and concrete structures. All the buildings are Roman in style and method of construction, though with Greek names. The Romans were great builders and engineers famous for their factories, roads, aqueducts and bridges, grand thermae and amphitheatres, theatres, and temples. The greatest surviving circular temple of antiquity, and in many respects the most important Roman building, is the Pantheon in Rome. It consists of rotunda about 142 feet in diameter surrounded by concrete walls 20 feet thick, in which are alternate circular and rectangular niches. Light is admitted through a central opening, or oculus, about 28 feet across, at the crown of the dome. In front is a porch with an inscription commemorating an earlier building of Marcus Agrippa (12 BC—AD 14) but built with the existing rotunda (AD 120—124) under the emperor Hadrian. The rotunda and dome are among the finest examples of Roman concrete work. The interior was lined with preciousmarbles, the coffers (decorative recessed panels) of the dome itself once was covered externally with bronze plates.
The largest and most important amphitheatre of Rome was the Colosseum, built by the emperors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian in about AD 70/75 —82. Covering six acres (2.4 hectares), it had seating for about 50,000 spectators, and its 80 entrances were so arranged that the building could be cleared quickly. The whole is built of concrete, the exterior faced with travertine and the interior with precious marbles. Other important amphitheatres are those at Verona, Italy; Pula, Yugoslavia; and Aries, France. Imperial thermae were more than baths. They were immense establishments of great magnificence, with facilities for every gymnastic exercise and halls in which philosophers, poets, rhetoricians, and those who wished to hear them gathered. The best preserved are the Baths of Caracalla (begun c. AD 217), which covered an area about 1,000 feet square, and those of Diocletian (c. AD 298—306), with accommodation for 3,200 bathers.
AFTER - TEXT EXERCISES
a) forum, b) domus, c) basilica
a) villa, b) rotunda, c) atrium
a) insulae, b) order, c) porticos
a) interior, b) villa, c) thermae
a) facade, b) entablature, c) peristyle 2.. Give the Russian equivalent.
the crown of the dome in many respects a porch with an inscription precious marbles faced with travertine adjoining rooms depended on light direct access to the street with accommodations for bathers the finest examples recessed panels around a colonnaded court excavations separate entrance establishments of great magnificence the Roman Empire
3. Give the English equivalents.
GENERAL EXERCISES
2.. Translate into Russian paying attention to gerund constructions. 1. I’m thinking of buying a house. 2. The police stopped everyone from leaving the building. 3. The batteries in the radio need changing. 4. The burglars got into the house by breaking a window and climbing in. 3. Point out the infinitive, identify the structure it is used in and translate into Russian.
4. Read and translate the sentences. Comment on the function of Participle I. 1. Being an architect and a designer, he was an extremely visual man and so it was her looks that had initially attracted him to her. 2. You shouldn’t waste time dwelling on that old situation. 3. I love to watch my city waking up. 4. People ran in and out of the house, shouting and crying.
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