Over the last 200 years, the practice of architecture has transformed drastically with the outcome of imperiling the customary or traditional quality of architecture, tectonics (Frampton, 1991). Architectural tectonics is often regarded as to be the unavoidable factor in building - the practical concerns of joints, materials, and construction that an architectural design necessitates to follow so as to be build. This is how the idea is often exercised in daily language. On an extensive scale, however, tectonics has been one of the main sources of stimulation throughout architectural history; the modern movement's expression is ...