Posts Tagged architecture
Googie Tuesday, part 7
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on December 9, 2008

Within the Theme Building at LAX Airport — circa 1961 — is the Encounter Lounge, the interior of which is simply fabulous. Photos by Telstar Logistics.
The interior of the restaurant was designed by Ed Sotto and Ellen Guevara for Walt Disney Imagineering (WDI). WDI designer Michael Valentino created the interior of the building and exterior lighting program. (WDI is the master planning, creative development, design, engineering, production management, and research and development subsidiary of the Walt Disney Company.)
The Theme Building was part of an overall $50-million “Los Angeles Jet Age Terminal Construction” project, which began in 1960. The building itself was completed in August 1961 at a cost of $2.2 million. On December 18, 1992, the Los Angeles City Council designated the Theme Building a City Cultural and Historical Monument.

Googie Tuesday, part 6
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on December 2, 2008

What satellites have to do with burgers is anyone’s guess, but they’re two great tastes that taste great together — photo by larry&flo.
Googie Tuesday, part 5
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on November 25, 2008

For sheer design and simplicity, this is one of the best neon signs I’ve seen — photo by Matt.
Googie Tuesday, part 4
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on November 18, 2008

A strange flying saucer in Phoenix, Arizona — photo by oybay.
Googie Tuesday, part 3
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on November 11, 2008

Oh would you look at this wonderful spiky, neon-y little thing?? (Photo by Dave van Hulsteyn.)
Googie Tuesday, part 2
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on November 4, 2008

Two fantastic views by Telstar Logistics of Eero Saarinen’s abandoned TWA Terminal at JFK Airport, New York. Fantastic swoopy stuff!

Googie Tuesday
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on October 28, 2008

I’m so happy to have run across this fantastic photo by chattycathy7575 — simply the best Googie motel sign I’ve seen (and certainly the most directly related to this site!) Hop on board and enjoy this Tuesday Googie thing….
Space-Age Architecture & Design
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture, Perspectives on July 22, 2008

Space Age architecture. We’ve all probably seen it, although it’s a bit hard to define; you know it when you see it, right? I never knew what the terminology was, until now; and boy, is there ever a lot of it!
Googie, also known as populuxe or doo-wop, is a subdivision of futurist architecture, influenced by car culture and the Space Age and Atomic Age, originating from Southern California in the late 1940s and continuing approximately into the mid-1960s. The types of buildings that were most frequently designed in a Googie style were motels, coffee houses and bowling alleys.
Features of Googie include upswept roofs, curvaceous, geometric shapes, and bold use of glass, steel and neon. Googie was also characterized by space-age designs that depict motion, such as boomerangs, flying saucers, atoms and parabolas, and free-form designs such as “soft” parallelograms and the ubiquitous artist’s-palette motif. These stylistic conventions reflected American society’s emphasis on futuristic designs and fascination with Space Age themes. The style is related to and sometimes synonymous with the Raygun Gothic style as coined by writer William Gibson. As with the art deco style of the 1930s, Googie became undervalued as time passed, and many buildings built in this style have been destroyed.
— Wikipedia

Photo courtesy of RecentPast.org
I found another page with a far more extensive article on the Space Age style, and the theory behind it:
Googie architecture and design was art that told a story. The story had many variations, but its general plot was always something like this:
Man left his caves and grass huts and through hard work and ingenuity has built an amazing modern world. Tomorrow he will conquer any remaining problems and colonize the rest of the galaxy. However, for all his achievements and modern science man will never lose touch with the natural world and his noble roots.

It then launches into a detailed description of the design elements usually seen in this style. It all relates to space, more or less, but the last four seem particularly relevant:
Atomic Models — This design element appeared in everything from sculpture and roadsigns to dinnerware patterns and household appliances. The interlocking rings of the atomic model were a symbol of man’s scientific ingenuity and represented the unlimited power that would make our future utopia possible. It also doubled as an (inaccurate) model of the solar system.
Starbursts — An even more ubiquitous design element than the atomic model, the starburst took many forms. Just as the atomic model was shorthand for the “innerspace” scientists were exploring, starbursts were symbolic of the outer space being explored by astronauts. It also implied clean and shining surfaces.
Exposed steel beams — These were usually more about appearance than function, but could serve both purposes. Painted steel I-beams often had geometric holes cut in them which served the dual purpose of making them lighter and enhancing their visual similarity to rocket gantries.
Flying Saucer Shapes — Again, this motif was taken from the movies and covers of science fiction books and magazines. The Space Needle in Seattle, Wash. is an excellent example.
One of the style rules for Googie, according to this site, is to “Ignore gravity altogether. ‘Whenever possible, the building must hang from the sky.’ ” I think that’s the most accurate nutshell I’ve seen for this style; it really puts a fine point on what was so visually marvelous about a (now, mostly lost) golden era of design.
Stay tuned next week for more thoughts on the style in general, and Raygun Gothic in particular.

Mystery Astronaut Carving in Salamanca, Spain
Posted by Danielle in Art & Architecture on December 28, 2007

Inside the splendid Ieronimus Cathedral, built by Episcope de Salamanca in 1102 A.D., among the fascinating carvings of mythical animals and saints, we find… NASA Astronaut. Maybe they entered some time portal while on the Moon, and ended up scaring medieval builders in Spain? Probably just a modern addition by the mischievous restoration team.
(Original post here, translated at the bottom of this post.)


This blog celebrates space exploration, human spaceflight and the heavens, through
My name is Danielle Signor, and I am a space cadet. 









