Form-follows-function

/fɔrm ˈfɑloʊz ˈfʌŋkʃən/ phrase

A design principle stating that a building's shape and appearance should be primarily determined by its intended purpose and use. This modernist doctrine prioritizes functional efficiency over decorative concerns.

Coined by American architect Louis Sullivan in 1896, though the concept was implicit in earlier functionalist thinking. It became the rallying cry of modernist architecture, rejecting 19th-century historicism and ornament.

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