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Architecture - Overview

Overview of Architecture

The Architecture Library is one of the branches or the Hesburgh Libraries of Notre Dame and is located within the Matthew and Joyce Walsh Family Hall of Architecture. The library is comprised of over 36,000 volumes and hundreds of periodicals on the built and planned environment. Collection strengths include classical & traditional architectureAmerican architectureItalian architectureLatin American architectureNew Urbanismsustainable design & planning, and urban planning. The Architecture Library supports the research and instructional needs of the School of Architecture's NAAB-accredited programs including the five-year undergraduate program and its two- and three-year Master of Architecture and Master of Architectural Design and Urbanism programs. 

Beginning Your Research

The Architecture Library houses valuable resources that will enhance your research and study of Architecture. Below is a quick guide to help you get started. 

How to Start

Explore your topic and develop a strategy for finding information. What are the most important aspects? These ideas becomes your 'keywords' for searching. For researching an architect, the architect's name is your keyword. For researching a style or movement, that name would be the keyword. It is important to start broadly and then narrow your search process. 

It is helpful to create a chart that describes all aspects of what you are looking for.

Example Searching for a specific building
Architect's Name Leon Battista Alberti
Building Name Malatesta Temple
Alternate Names Temio Malatestiano, Church of San Francesco at Rimini
Location Rimini, Italy
Associated Names Sigismondo Malatesta (patron), Pope Pius II, Isotta degli Atti
Associated Architects/Artists Matteo de'Pasti, Piero della Francesca, Agostino di Duccio
Other Keywords engaged columns, triumphal arch

Once you have your keywords follow these steps:

  1. Search the Notre Dame Library Catalog and/or WorldCat for books
  2. Look for articles on your topic
  3. Look for images
  4. Cite your sources

Search the Web

Google Web Search

The Architecture Library's Collections

The Architecture Library's books are part of many different collections. Be sure to note which collection the book you are looking for is part of in order to find it on the shelf!

Collection Location
General The General Collection begins on the 2nd floor (A- NA705 .A673) and continues in the lower level.
Reference Main floor, adjacent to Circulation Desk
Course Reserves Main floor, adjacent to Circulation Desk
New Books Main floor, adjacent to Circulation Desk
Periodicals New periodicals are available in the lower level and bound periodicals are shelved within the regular collection
Oversize At the end of the General Collection in the Lower Level
Flat Oversize Rare books, ask a staff member for assistance
Ryan Rare Book Room By Appointment, ask a librarian for help

Architecture Terms

Arcades Series of arches on the same plane and carried on piers, columns, or pilasters; either free-standing or attached to a wall (a "blind arcade"). The term is also used to denote a covered avenue with shops on one or both sides, which originally was set within an architectural arcade.
Awnings Roof-like coverings, usually of canvas or metal and often adjustable, placed over windows, doors, or decks to provide protection from sun and rain.
Balusters Short vertical members used to support a stair handrail or coping, often circular in section with a vase-shaped outline.
Balustrades Parapets or low screens composed of balusters and carrying a rail or other horizontal member that is usually heavy in proportion to the balusters themselves.
Bay Windows Windows, either single or in a series, forming a bay or recess in a room and projecting outward from the wall in a rectangular, curved, or polygonal form.
Bays (building divisions) Refers to repeated, similar vertical divisions or compartments of a building or part of a building, as defined by recurring architectural features, such as arches, vaults, doors/windows, or pilasters.
Brackets Refers to the elements, usually of generally triangular shape, that project from a wall, pier, or other structure. They support vertical loads or strengthen an angle by transferring the load against the face of the structure from which they project; sometimes more decorative than functional.
Broken Pediments Pediments whose lines are interrupted either at the apex or the base, or in both locations; found especially on Late Antique, Baroque, and Mannerist architecture.
Buttresses Pierlike masonry elements built to strengthen or support walls or resist the lateral thrust of vaults.
Capitals (column components) The uppermost members of columns, piers, or pilasters.
Cast Shadows The shadow of a figure or an object portrayed as it falls or is "cast" on another surface.
Ceilings Overhead surfaces of interior spaces, sometimes constructed to mask building systems or structural elements.
Chapels Rooms or small buildings that serve as sanctuaries or places of worship. A chapel may be used for private worship in or attached to a church, palace, house, prison, monastery, or school. It may alternatively be used for public worship of the established Church, subordinate to or dependent upon the parish church, the accommodation supplied by which it in some way supplements. The concept includes both freestanding chapels and rooms or recesses serving as chapels in churches or other buildings.
Chimneys Vertical noncombustible structures containing flues for drawing off into the outside air products of combustion from, for example, stoves, fireplaces, and furnaces.
Churches Buildings for public Christian worship that are distinguished historically from chapels and oratories, which are buildings that are in some respect private, or not public in the widest sense. Church architecture generally somewhat follows standard models, which vary depending upon the date, location, and characteristics of the congregation.
Cities Generally, cities designate large or important communities with population, status, and internal complexity greater than most towns in the region.
Clerestories Upper zones of walls rising above adjacent roofs and pierced by windows so as to admit light to a high central room or space flanked by lower rooms or spaces.
Cloisters Enclosed spaces composed of a garth and surrounding walkways, which are generally arcaded on the courtyard side and walled on the other; usually found in Christian religious building complexes. Use for such features in secular buildings only when closely resembling the prototype.
Coffers Recessed panels, usually square or octagonal, set into ceilings, vaults, or soffits.
Colonnades Rows of columns supporting an entablature and often one side of a roof. Includes spaces behind such a feature when they are long and used for circulation.
Colossal Orders Refers to architectural orders where columns, pilasters, or piers extend over two or more stories.
Columns Refers to cylindrical or slightly tapering, vertical members made to either give support or to appear to give support. They usually comprise three sections: base, capital, and shaft. The term also refers to all uprights in steel frame or concrete frame structures. Columns may occasionally stand alone as a monument. Square or rectangular members can be called piers, pilasters or posts.
Composite Order Refers to an architectural order characterized by capitals composed of foliate echini derived from the Corinthian order superposed by volutes derived from the Ionic order.
Construction The process of creating something by combining parts or elements, and also for the manner in which the thing has been put together.
Corbels Cantilevered masonry blocks used singly or in ranges to support architectural or ornamental features or used in successive courses to form arches, domes, or vaults; when referring generally to the projecting courses of masonry, prefer "oversailing courses."
Corinthian Order Refers to the architectural order characterized by a capital having a bell-shaped echinus decorated with a combination of spiral and plant, usually acanthus, motifs.
Cornices The projecting, uppermost features of classical entablatures; use also for similar features crowning a window or wall.
Coupled Columns Groups of two columns set closer together than others in a line, or otherwise forming a visual unit.
Courtyards Uncovered areas, surrounded or partially surrounded by the walls of a building.
Cupolas Generally refers to small domes, placed on a circular, polygonal, or square base or on small pillars or a glassed-in lantern or skylight. A cupola is typically used to crown a turret, roof, or larger dome. The term may also refer specifically to the inner vault of a dome. When these structures are intended to be used as lookouts, prefer
Domes Rounded vaults comprising spheres or portions of spheres sitting on circular, elliptical, or polygonal bases, forming the roof of any building or part of a building.
Doors Barriers that swing, slide, tilt, or fold to close a doorway, usually of solid and finished construction and usually leading to or separating interior spaces.
Dormers Structures projecting from a sloping roof usually housing a window or ventilating louver. Used to provide light, ventilation or more livable space.
Eaves Refers to the horizontal portions of a sloping roof that project beyond the walls.
Elevations A 2D representation of the vertical arrangements of the elements of a building, either exterior or interior.
Facades Exterior surfaces or faces of a building that are substantially in one plane, particularly those perceived to be the principal or most architecturally ambitious ones, designed with special regard to their conspicuousness or association with an entrance and looks onto a street or open space.
Flat Arches Arches in which neither intrados nor extrados has any curvature, yet is composed of voussoirs arranged so that lateral thrusts are generated from vertical loads.
Floor Plans Drawings or works in another two-dimensional medium that represent a horizontal section through a building taken above a floor to diagrammatically illustrate the enclosing walls, interior spaces, doors, and windows of a building.
Fluting Closely spaced parallel grooves used to ornament columns and pilasters and in the decorative arts in woodwork, metalwork, glass, and ceramics.
Flying Buttresses Exterior arched supports transmitting the thrust of a vault or roof from the upper part of a wall outward to a pier or buttress.
Friezes Middle horizontal members of a classical entablature, above the architrave and below the cornice.
Can also be: Extended horizontal bands decorating architecture, furniture, or other objects and containing figures, scenes, inscriptions, or ornamental motifs.
Gable dormers Dormers with a roof terminating in a gable
Gable roofs Roofs with two sloping sides meeting at a ridge, and gables at one or both ends.
Gables Vertical triangular portions of the ends of buildings having double-sloping roofs. Includes similar ends which are not triangular in shape, as of a gambrel roof.
Galleries Spaces set aside, as in museums, for the display of objects in a collection.
Gambrel roofs Curb roofs with only the two opposite sides sloping.
Gardens Area of ground or open space where flowers, shrubs, trees, vegetables, or fruits are grown and cultivated.
Groined Vaults Compound vaults in which barrel vaults intersect forming ridges called groins.
Hip roofs Roofs which rise to a peak or ridge by inclined planes on all, usually four, sides, therefore requiring hip rafters.
Hipped dormers Dormers with hip roofs.
Hôtels French town houses, especially of the 18th century, generally more elegant, ornate, and larger than other houses.
Houses Individual dwellings designed to be occupied by a single tenant or family.
Ionic Order Refers to the architectural order characterized by capitals with volutes, richly carved moldings, and columns with bases.
Keystones Central wedge-shaped voussoirs in arches or vaults; also, similar elements used as ornaments on the heads of doors or windows.
Landscaping Arranging and modifying the effects of the natural environment for aesthetic effect.
Lighting Fixtures Lighting devices fixed in place, such as those attached to a ceiling or wall.
Loggias Covered, roomlike spaces, open to the outdoors usually through arcades or colonnades; may be contained within or adjacent to buildings.
Mansard roofs Curb roofs with all four sides sloping, usually enclosing habitable spaces, and therefore having dormers.
Maps Refers to graphic or photogrammetric representations of the Earth's surface or a part of it, including physical features and political boundaries, where each point corresponds to a geographical or celestial position according to a definite scale or projection.
Masonry Construction composed of cut, carved, shaped, or molded units composed of stone, ceramic brick or tile, concrete, glass, adobe, or other similar material.
Metalwork Visual works that are the products of working any kind of metal, particularly metal objects of artistic merit.
Moldings Long projections used for finishing and decorative purposes.
Monuments Structures or edifices of importance or historical interest, typically erected in memory of the dead or of an important event.
Naves Refers to the main central part of an interior divided into a high center with lower side portions divided by columns or piers, usually but not always in a church. Use also for the main part of a church without aisles but with a distinct chancel.
Neckings (capital components) The part of a column between the bottom of the capital and the top of the shaft, or the molding or moldings located here.
Niches Small recesses in walls.
Ornaments Decorative forms or embellishments that are an integral part of a building or object but are not essential to its structure.
Overhangs Projections of roofs or upper stories beyond a story immediately below.
Paneling Wall coverings consisting of panels of wood or other material joined in a continuous surface.
Parapets Low walls, projecting from the edge of platforms, terraces, or roofs, or surmounting the cornices of a building; also, walls forming the uppermost part of defensive walls or ramparts.
Paths Narrow walks or ways, typically not constructed like a road, and intended to be traveled by foot.
Pavilions Light, sometimes ornamental, structures in gardens, parks, or places of recreation that are used for entertainment or shelter.
Paving Laying or covering with stone, brick, asphalt, concrete, or other material, making a firm, level, or convenient surface for travel.
Pedestals Solid, fixed supports found under architectural elements such as columns or balustrades, or built in to hold sculpture.
Pediments Triangular gable walls above the horizontal cornice of a classically treated building; also, triangular or roughly triangular elements, sometimes curved, or broken at the center, surmounting porticoes or openings.
Pergolas Garden structures with open wood-framed roofs, often latticed, supported by regularly spaced posts or columns; often covered by climbing plants such as vines or roses, shading a walk or passageway.
Piazzas (squares) In Italian cities and towns, open public spaces usually surrounded by buildings.
Piers Refers to solid supports of masonry or another material designed to sustain vertical pressure, including a square or rectangular pillar or pilaster, the solid masonry between doors and windows, the pillars from which an arch springs, or the pillars or posts of a gate or door. It is sometimes distinguished from columns or posts by being more massive in size and often square or rectangular in cross section.
Pilasters Shallow piers or rectangular columns projecting only slightly from a wall and, in classical architecture, conforming with one of the orders.
Pillars Detached vertical members made of stone, brick, wood, metal, or another solid material. They are characterized by being slender or narrow in proportion to their height, and of any shape in section. A pillar is typically used as a vertical support of some superstructure, as a stable point of attachment for something heavy and oscillatory, or standing alone as a conspicuous monument or ornament. The usage of "pillar" is broader than "columns," "posts," or "piers," which are basically pillars of particular shapes, proportions, and functions; a "pillar" may be, but is not necessarily, any of these three more specific members.
Plans Refers to drawings, sketches, prints, computer graphics, or works in other media depicting a building or any object viewed from above, geometrically represented as projected on a horizontal plane.
Plasterwork Visual works made of plaster, which is a soft, plastic material, in this context usually a mixture of water, lime, and sand, often combined with other materials, such as animal hair. Plasterworks are either applied smoothly to a surface or as a combination of high-relief, sculptural, and surface decoration.
Plinths Rectangular or square supporting elements or lower blocks, as for columns, pilasters, or door framing; also solid monumental bases, often ornamented, used to support statues or memorials.
Pointed Arches Arches composed of two intersecting arcs of a circle, struck so that the apex of the arch is a point.
Porches Used to designate roofed spaces, open along two or more sides and adjunct to a building, commonly serving either to shelter an entrance or used as living space.
Porticos Roofed porchlike spaces, open along at least one side and usually associated with an entrance, supported by columns and often surmounted by a pediment; porticoes may project from the main building mass or be recessed in it.
Proportion Relation between respective parts or between parts and the whole, in a building or any work of art, whether considered purely visually or numerically.
Public Spaces Open spaces designed for public use or are accessible to the public, often designed to foster a sense of community.
Quadrangles Rectangular grassy or paved areas surrounded by buildings, generally of an academic or civic nature.
Quoins Stones helping to form the corner of a wall of masonry, especially when accentuated by a difference in the surface treatment from that of the rest of the wall mass.
Rafters Parallel sloping members that support the roof covering.
Relief Use to describe a surface that has been carved, molded, or stamped so that an image or design projects from or is sunk into a continuous surface.
Relieving Arches Arches which deflect the weight off of another arch, opening, or other structural member located beneath.
Roofs Outside, overhead enclosures of buildings or other structures, including the roofing and its structural framing.
Ruins The remains of buildings or groups of buildings that have been destroyed or are in a state of great disrepair or decay.
Rustication Surface pattern originally for stone but frequently simulated in other materials, giving the effect of large blocks with deep, wide joints.
Sections Orthographic drawings or works in another media depicting a building, object, or site as if cut through.
Segmental Arches Arches in the shape of a segment of a circle that is less than a semicircle.
Semicircular Arches Arches with intradoses that are full semicircles.
Shadows Regions that are blocked by an object so that light is unable to reach the region directly.
Shafts The portions of columns, colonettes, or pilasters between the base and the capital.
Shed dormers Dormers whose eaves lines are parallel to the eaves lines of the main roof instead of being gabled; provide more attic space than gabled dormers.
Shed roofs Pitched roofs with only one slope
Shingles Material such as wood, slate, tile, concrete, or asbestos cement, cut to stock dimensions; used chiefly for roofing.
Shutters Movable screens, covers, or similar contrivances to close an opening, especially a window
Siding Nonstructural, outer, exterior wall covering of buildings.
Site Plans Drawings laying out the precise arrangement of a structure on a plot of land. It may also refer to plans for gardens, groups of buildings, or developments, where the layout of buildings, roadways, utilities, landscape elements, topography, water features, and vegetation may be depicted.
Soffits The underside of a part or member of a building (as of an overhang, ceiling, staircase, cornice, or entablature).
Stairs Ascending series or flights of steps, sometimes connected by landings, leading from one level to another; typically used for passing from one floor to another in a house or other building.
Stringcourses Horizontal bands of masonry, generally narrower than other courses, extending across the face of a wall and in some instances continuing across piers or engaged columns; may be flush or projecting and may be flat surfaced, molded, or otherwise shaped.
Surrounds The visible bordering elements around a door, window, or other opening.
Temples Buildings housing places devoted to the worship of a deity or deities.
Terraces Level paved or planted areas, usually elevated above surrounding terrain and adjacent to buildings or parts of garden complexes
Towers Detached or isolated buildings or other structures high in proportion to their lateral dimensions
Can also be: Parts of buildings with walls rising considerably above the rest, usually with vertical proportions, and to some extent architecturally distinct.
Town/Row Houses Attached or very close urban dwellings, in a series of three or more, each having its own private entrance. Usually very narrow and long.
Triglyphs The characteristic ornaments of the Doric frieze, consisting of a slightly raised block of three vertical bands separated by V-shaped grooves.
Trusses Structural members such as beams, bars, or rods, usually fabricated from straight pieces of metal or timber, that form a series of triangles lying in a single plane; based on the principle that a triangle cannot be easily distorted by stress.
Turrets Small towers, especially when corbelled out from a corner.
Tuscan Order Refers to the architectural order characterized by unfluted columns, torus bases, unadorned cushion capitals, and plain friezes.
Urns Large or decorative vessels, especially ones with an ornamental foot or pedestal, that usually have a mouth that is smaller than the body, and which often have two side handles.
Vaults Arched structures, usually of masonry and forming a ceiling or roof.
Villas Used since the Roman period to designate country houses, generally of some pretension, and often including their outbuildings and gardens.
Volutes The spiral forms in capitals of the Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite orders; sometimes used also for other three-dimensional scrolling elements in architecture and the decorative arts.
Voussoirs Masonry units that form an arch or vault.
Windows Openings in the wall of a building, serving to admit light, to see outside, and often to admit air.