 |
ART NOUVEAU ARCHITECTURE IN ISTANBUL
|
 |
2001 / JUNE
|
 |
|
 |
 |
For the traditional Turkish houses separated by
gardens, however, no such precaution was required,
and wood continued to be used for the most part.
Art Nouveau was the perfect way to fulfil the
desire to individualise one's house; a concept
that had long since been embraced by the Ottomans.
As a result the new art soon began to make itself
felt in the grandiose wooden houses built along
the European and Asian shores of the Bosphorus,
in Üsküdar, in Kadiköy,
and on the island of Büyükada.
One of the principal ways in which Art Nouveau
made itself felt was in the façades. These
featured bay windows, balconies, loggias and other
features jutting from the façade. Such
articulation was particularly striking when applied
to corner buildings, as we see in Flora Han, an
office building in Sirkeci. In some cases, as
in the Frej Apartment Building, the protruding
elements were placed to either side of the façade,
or with a defining element extending right across
it, as we see on the Botter House on Istiklal
Caddesi. |
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|