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OFFICIAL37 Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some answer choices do not belong in summary because the express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. The Question is worth 2 points. In the twentieth century, new materials and construction techniques contributed to a change in architectural style. Drag your answer choices to the space where they belong. To remove an answer choice, double click on it.

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Modern Architecture In The United States
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At the end of the nineteenth century, there were basically two kinds of buildings in the United States. On one hand were the buildings produced for the wealthy or for civic purposes, which tended to echo the architecture of the past and to use traditional styles of ornamentation. On the other hand were purely utilitarian structures, such as factories and grain elevators, which employed modern materials such as steel girders and plate glass in an undisguised and unadorned manner. Such buildings, however, were viewed in a category separate from "fine" architecture, and in fact were often designed by engineers and builders rather than architects. The development of modern architecture might in large part be seen as an adaptation of this sort of functional building and its pervasive application for daily use. Indeed, in this influential book Toward a New Architecture, the Swiss architect Le Corbusier illustrated his text with photographs of American factories and grain storage silos, as well as ships, airplanes, and other industrial objects. Nonetheless, modern architects did not simply employ these new materials in a strictly practical fashion—they consciously exploited their aesthetic possibilities. For example, glass could be used to open up walls and eliminate their stone and brick masonry because large spaces could now be spanned with steel beams.

The fundamental premise of modern architecture was that the appearance of the building should exhibit the nature of its materials and forms of physical support. This often led to effects that looked odd from a traditional standpoint but that became hallmarks of modern architecture for precisely this reason. For example, in traditional architecture, stone or brick walls served a structural role, but in a steel-beam building the walls were essentially hung from the internal skeleton of steel beams, which meant that walls and corners no longer needed to be solid but could be opened up in unexpected ways. At the Fagus shoe factory in Germany, for example, German architect Walter Gropius placed glass walls in the corners, effectively breaking open the box of traditional architecture and creating a new sense of light and openness. Similarly, steel beams could be used to construct balconies that projected out from the building without any support beneath them. These dramatic balconies quickly became a signature of modern architects such as Frank Lloyd Wright. Wright's most dramatic residence, Fallingwater, has balconies that thrust far out over a stream in a way that seems to defy gravity.

The ways in which new technology transformed architectural design are dramatically illustrated through the evolution of the high-rise office building. After ten or twelve stories, masonry construction reaches a maximum possible height, since it runs into difficulties of compression and of inadequate lateral strength to combat wind shear. Steel construction, on the other hand, can support a building of 50 or 100 stories without difficulty. Such buildings were so different from any previous form of architecture that they quickly acquired a new name—the skyscraper.

From the standpoint of real estate developers, the purpose of skyscrapers was to increase rental space in valuable urban locations. But to create usable high-rise buildings, a number of technical challenges needed to be solved. One problem was getting people to the upper floors, since after five or six stories it becomes exhausting to climb stairs. Updated and electrified versions of the freight elevator that had been introduced by Elisha Graves Otis in 1853 (several decades before skyscraper construction) solved this problem. Another issue was fire safety. The metal supporting buildings became soft when exposed to fire and collapsed relatively quickly. (They could melt at 2700 Fahrenheit, whereas major fires achieve temperatures of 3000degrees). However, when the metal is encased in fire-retardant materials, its vulnerability to fire is much decreased. In Chicago, a system was developed for surrounding the metal components with hollow tiles made from brick-like terra-cotta. Such tiles are impervious to fire. The terra-cotta tiles were used both to encase the supporting members and as flooring. A structure built with steel beams protected by terra-cotta tiles was still three times lighter than a comparably sized building that used masonry construction, so the weight of the tiles was not a problem.

14.Directions: An introductory sentence for a brief summary of the passage is provided below. Complete the summary by selecting THREE answer choices that express the most important ideas in the passage. Some answer choices do not belong in summary because the express ideas that are not presented in the passage or are minor ideas in the passage. The Question is worth 2 points. In the twentieth century, new materials and construction techniques contributed to a change in architectural style. Drag your answer choices to the space where they belong. To remove an answer choice, double click on it.

A.At the end of the nineteenth century, the emphasis was on preserving and conserving historic civic buildings rather than on creating new large structures.

B.Modern architects did not accept the traditional distinction between "fine" architecture and buildings that used ordinary materials and a utilitarian design.

C.Steel construction opened up the possibility of very tall buildings, but these skyscrapers also required new technologies such as elevators and fireproofing.

D.In his influential book Toward a New Architecture, Le Corbusier argued that builders and engineers ought to lead a new revolution in building design.

E.Architects such as Walter Gropius and Frank Lloyd Wright used new materials like plate glass and steel beams to create buildings that emphasized openness, light, and a feeling of weightlessness.

F.Unprotected metal can withstand much more compression than traditional masonry but must be reinforced with terra-cotta tile or the like to combat wind shear.

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正确答案:BCE
题目解析:
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【题目翻译】概要小结题,选择正确的小结。 A:十九世纪末,重点是保护和保存历史性的民用建筑,而不是建造新的大型建筑。 B:现代建筑师不接受传统的“精细”建筑和使用普通材料和实用设计的建筑之间的区别。 C:钢结构为很高的建筑开辟了可能性,但这些摩天大楼还需要新技术,如电梯和防火。 D:勒柯布西耶在他写的关于新建筑的有影响力的书中,认为建设者和工程师应该领导建筑设计的新革命。 E:像沃尔特•格罗皮厄斯和弗兰克•劳埃德•赖特这样的建筑师使用平板玻璃和钢梁等新材料来建造强调开放性、光线和失重感的建筑。 F:未加保护的金属比传统的砖石能承受更大的压力,但必须用红土瓦或类似材料加固以抵抗风切变。 【判定题型】:根据问题的提问方式和6选3的作答方式可以确定该题目为概要小结题。 【选项定位及分析】 选项A说在19世纪末,保护民居比建新的建筑重要,这个原文里没有提; 选项B说现代建筑消除了传统观念里的新潮建筑和普通材料的建筑的区别,做出了功利主义的设计,概括了第一段的内容,可以选; 选项C讲了钢架构的好处和不足,概括了第三四段的内容,可以选; 选项D是第一段的内容,讲的Le Corbusier这个人主张建筑设计的革新,是对的,但是是细节,不选; 选项E说建筑师用玻璃等材料建房子,追求开放、光亮和无重感,概括了第二段的内容,可以选; 选项F说用terra-cotta去抗风,错误,这个材料是防火的。 综合起来选择B,C,E。

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