Avant-garde architecture

Other examples include Constructivism, Neoplasticism (De Stijl), Neo-futurism, Deconstructivism, Parametricism and Expressionism.

[4] This view pushed for the construction of an environment that is according to the creative laws derived from a fixed principle.

[4] A conceptualization by Le Corbusier described avant-garde architecture as constructed for the pleasure of the eye and comes with "inner cleanness, for the course adopted leads to a refusal to allow anything at all which is not correct, authorised, intended, desired, thought-out.

[8] It is also noted that many avant-garde architectural projects do not fare well once evaluated according to suitability principles.

[5] Another argument states that avant-garde architecture is an experiment or that a project is a vehicle for research so that it leads to a built manifesto.

"Collectivist House" – a 1921 sketch by Nikolai Ladovsky , leader of the Rationalist movement