Among the celebration of the Modern architecture at that time, Buckminster Fuller saw it as a fad. He charged the Bauhaus who invented the International style with the lack of necessary knowledge in scientific fundamentals of structural mechanics and chemistry. He believed the International Style simplification was but superficial. It peeled off yesterday’s exterior embellishment and put on instead formalized novelties of quasi-simplicity, permitted by the same hidden structural elements of modern alloys that had permitted the discarded Beaux-Arts garmentation. Fuller saw the Modern architects only changes at the surface of end-products which had nothing to do with new technologies that they had much talked about. This was seen as a result of the lack of technical training at the Bauhaus, the formalism and illusionism, the failure to grip fundamental problems of building technology.