Zigzag Moderne is a substyle of the architectural Art Deco if the classification established by David Gebhard is used. The Zigzag style was popular in the 1920s and was replaced by the Streamline Moderne in the 1930s.
(1929) Gebhard lists the following traits of the Zigzaq Moderne: • heavy and monumental exterior forms built of smooth surfaces with window openings arranged within inset panels; • flat roof, no Classical or Gothic termination at the top; • central tower that lowers in steps to the periphery; • decorations consist of zigzags, chevrons, sunbursts, spirals, stylized flora and fauna. == Examples ==
File:Chrysler Building NYC-20090519-RM-094845.jpg|alt=|Chrysler Building (1930) File:Tobu-Asakusa-station-2018.jpg|alt=|Tobu-Asakusa Station (1927) File:LA Eastern Columbia Building.jpg|Eastern Columbia Building (1929) File:Bullocks Wilshire.jpg|alt=|Bullock's Wilshire Department Store (1929) File:Théâtre des Champs-Élysées, 21 April 2013.jpg|Theatre des Champs-Elysées (1913) == References ==