Archistory
Archive Room
Index
ArchitectsBuildingsStylesRelationsCountries / Regions
Building CodeGlossaryThesis IdeasTimeSearchFeedback
中文EN日本語

Index

ArchitectsBuildingsStylesRelationsCountries / Regions

Periods

Classical EraMedievalRenaissanceBaroqueNeoclassicalIndustrial Revolution

Styles

Classical ArchitectureRenaissance ArchitecturePalladianismBaroque ArchitectureEnglish BaroqueMannerism

Archive Room

Thesis IdeasBuilding CodeGlossaryTimeSearchFeedback

Archistory © 2026
Archistory

Style index

Styles

Styles are recurring formal languages: shared ways of handling structure, ornament, material, space, and historical references.

34

Styles

106

Architects

517

Buildings

Archive paths

Read by period and style

Open a style, then compare its architects and works from the detail page.

Major styles

17

Modern Architecture9 Architects · 28 BuildingsContemporary Japanese5 Architects · 20 BuildingsMinimalism5 Architects · 16 BuildingsContemporary Architecture8 Architects · 8 BuildingsHigh-Tech Architecture4 Architects · 12 BuildingsDeconstructivism3 Architects · 12 BuildingsRenaissance Architecture4 Architects · 9 BuildingsBaroque Architecture3 Architects · 7 BuildingsClassical Architecture3 Architects · 5 BuildingsJapanese Modern Architecture2 Architects · 6 BuildingsEcological Architecture4 Architects · 3 BuildingsInternational Style3 Architects · 4 BuildingsBrutalism2 Architects · 4 BuildingsCatalan Modernisme1 Architects · 5 BuildingsContemporary Danish1 Architects · 5 BuildingsContemporary Swiss2 Architects · 4 BuildingsParametric Design2 Architects · 4 Buildings

More styles

17

Art Nouveau2 Architects · 3 BuildingsBrazilian Modernism1 Architects · 4 BuildingsMetabolism2 Architects · 3 BuildingsNordic Modernism1 Architects · 4 BuildingsOrganic Architecture1 Architects · 4 BuildingsPalladianism1 Architects · 4 BuildingsChicago School1 Architects · 3 BuildingsEnglish Baroque1 Architects · 3 BuildingsFunctionalism2 Architects · 2 BuildingsSculptural ArchitectureAn architectural tendency defined by strong massing, curved surfaces, or highly recognizable form.4 BuildingsStructural ExpressionismAn architectural tendency that treats visible or emphasized structural systems as a primary formal language.4 BuildingsBauhaus1 Architects · 2 BuildingsGeometric AbstractionA formal tendency based on clear geometry, abstract composition, and ordered volumes.3 BuildingsEarly Skyscraper1 Architects · 1 BuildingsOrganic Modernism2 ArchitectsPostmodernism1 Architects · 1 BuildingsPrairie SchoolAn American modern residential movement marked by horizontal lines, broad eaves, open plans, and continuity with site.1 Architects · 1 Buildings