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High Tech

Millennium Dome, Greenwich, London, Janet Hall / 澳门王中王 Collections

Influenced by engineering and new technology

High Tech in architecture

Influenced by engineering and new technology, High Tech is a style that accentuates a building鈥檚 construction.

High Tech was a development in British Modernist architecture from the late 1960s. It was a concept of design, based on engineering, construction and other aspects, such as the manipulation of space. High Tech was marked by a preference for lightweight materials and sheer surfaces, a readiness to adopt new techniques from engineering and other technologies, and the celebratory display of a building鈥檚 construction and services.

Norman Foster and Richard Rogers were the key architects who brought about these changes and implemented them from the 1970s. High Tech buildings are characterised by exposed structures (usually of steel and or other metals), with services (pipes, air ducts, lifts etc.) often picked out in bright colours, a smooth, impervious skin (often of glass) and a flexibility to create internal service zones, rather than rooms or sequences of rooms.

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Features of high tech architecture

Hopkins' House, Downshire Hill, Hampstead, London: the studio on the upper level

Flexible interiors

Open plan with the ability to partition as necessary.

Schlumberger Research Laboratories, Cambridge

Expressed Construction

Structures such as beams and cables visibly displayed.

Leadenhall Building, City of London

Coloured pipework and services

Colour used to delineate structural parts and areas.

Sainsbury Centre for the Visual Arts, University of East Anglia, Norwich

Lightweight construction

Use of steel and glass some with reflective surfaces.

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