Three Design Basics to Stop the Ugly Building Epidemic

Too many new buildings today are simply ugly—with little to add to urban streets, and resembling buildings in every other city. Jason Hart, AIA reviews some design basics, which he hopes will arrest the ugly building epidemic.

1 minute read

December 4, 2015, 7:00 AM PST

By wadams92101


Housing Construction

Alan Levine / Flickr

"Too many new buildings today are simply ugly behemoths. They have little to add to our urban street scenes, and many look alike from city to city, with the same tired shapes, confused compositions, and bland materials. They give modern a bad name and only help galvanize public backlash – often with good reason," writes Jason Hart, AIA.  

He believes that building owners and developers, municipal review boards, and architects, by revisiting the fundamentals, can stop what he refers to as an "epidemic" of ugly buildings: 

We could debate the many scapegoats for ugliness: building codes, greed, politics, talent, time, but most of these building designers have simply forgotten the basics. Regardless of architectural style, all design, at its basic core, is the artful control of three elements: sizeproportion, and the organization of parts (windows, cornices, columns, etc. for buildings).

Hart goes on to review how each of these elements are utilized and interrelate to make a functional and attractive building. He concludes: 

Good buildings start with good planning, they pay attention to how people use them, and they balance size, proportion, and visual organization. Good architecture masters these aspects, and goes further to convey meaning and purpose through ideas, history, and technology that contributes to the identity of our communities. We don’t have to settle for ugly buildings; we can demand better.

Wednesday, December 2, 2015 in UrbDeZine

Large blank mall building with only two cars in large parking lot.

Pennsylvania Mall Conversion Bill Passes House

If passed, the bill would promote the adaptive reuse of defunct commercial buildings.

April 18, 2024 - Central Penn Business Journal

Rendering of wildlife crossing over 101 freeway in Los Angeles County.

World's Largest Wildlife Overpass In the Works in Los Angeles County

Caltrans will soon close half of the 101 Freeway in order to continue construction of the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing near Agoura Hills in Los Angeles County.

April 15, 2024 - LAist

Workers putting down asphalt on road.

U.S. Supreme Court: California's Impact Fees May Violate Takings Clause

A California property owner took El Dorado County to state court after paying a traffic impact fee he felt was exorbitant. He lost in trial court, appellate court, and the California Supreme Court denied review. Then the U.S. Supreme Court acted.

April 18, 2024 - Los Angeles Times

View of Dallas city skyline with moderately busy freeway in foreground at twilight.

AI Traffic Management Comes to Dallas-Fort Worth

Several Texas cities are using an AI-powered platform called NoTraffic to help manage traffic signals to increase safety and improve traffic flow.

2 minutes ago - Dallas Morning News

View from back of BART Police SUV driving down street in San Francisco, California.

Podcast: Addressing the Root Causes of Transit Violence

Deploying transit police is a short-term fix. How can transit agencies build sustainable safety efforts?

1 hour ago - Streetsblog USA

Sunset view of downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota skyline.

Minneapolis as a Model for Housing Affordability

Through a combination of policies, the city has managed to limit the severity of the nationwide housing crisis.

2 hours ago - Brown Political Review

News from HUD User

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Call for Speakers

Mpact Transit + Community

New Updates on PD&R Edge

HUD's Office of Policy Development and Research

Urban Design for Planners 1: Software Tools

This six-course series explores essential urban design concepts using open source software and equips planners with the tools they need to participate fully in the urban design process.

Planning for Universal Design

Learn the tools for implementing Universal Design in planning regulations.