State Modernism

State Modernism is an which originated in Aurora and the New World in the late 15th Century  AC  and which primarily deals with governmental, judicial, or other kinds of public buildings.

An offshoot of, state modernism has been described as a synthesis of formal elements with a modernist ethos. Facades are often characterized by and bare or engraved, but complex elements such as  and triangular  are eschewed in favor of simplicity of design. Flat roofs reinforce a sense of horizontal extension while columns, rectangular or cylindrical in shape, emphasize verticality – in short, as with Classical Elyrian architecture, aesthetic monumentality reinforces authority.