Wojciech Odrobina

Throughout history, architectural styles have emerged, which have lasted for a greater or lesser time, as a role model in the works, characterizing the architecture of an entire region. Obviously they are not the only examples of architectural styles that exist, but some are included above others due to the importance they have had not only during their validity in a given region, but because later styles have been nourished by their principles and characteristics, which has managed to make them last in time.

Some of the most notorious architectural styles are those during the Megalithic age were the Archaic, Sumerian, Egyptian, Babylonian, Assyrian, Minoan, Mycenaean, Greek, Hindu, Etruscan, Roman, Chinese, Maya, and Inca Aztec. In the Paleo-Christian era, the Visigoda, Byzantine, Merovingian, Islamic, Mozarabic, Mudejar, Romanesque, Cistercian, Gothic architecture stood out. Later the Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, Neoclassical architecture came into force. Nowadays the styles of architecture are divided into Actual or contemporary, Art nouveau, Art deco, Organic and Postmodern.

Wojciech Odrobina Longford

Modern architecture is a science Architecture is considered a science that originates and is nourished by many other sciences and enriched by the experience and learning of man throughout its history. It is the judgment and the criteria derived from that experience are incorporating new elements, practices and trends in this fascinating science that is architecture. It is a discipline in which practice and theory intertwine.

WOJCIECH ODROBINA LONGFORD

The practice is the frequent and continuous contemplation of the way to execute a given work, or the mere operation of the hands, for the conversion of matter in the best way and in the most finished way, while the theory is the result of reasoning that demonstrates and explains that the forged material has been converted to result as the proposed purpose. The process of architectural production, or project, involves sensitivity as a means of cutting the different associated disciplines.