modernist architecture Flashcards
villa savoye features
modern country house
- free plan with flexible interior divisions and walls, as enabled by reinforced concrete pilotis
- flat roof terrace with solerian, inspired by large ship structures
- ground floor has space outside it between building and supportive pilotis, functions as garage
- curved glass wall on the ground floor
- first floor cantilevered and with a ribbon window
- monochrome white
- built in furniture/cupboards
- spiral staircase and ramp
- handrails trace the lines of energy up the staircase
- ramp has windows to let light flow in, and continues from ground floor to roof
- interior walls do not reflect those below them
villa savoye context
- a machine for living in
- le corbusier’s five points of a new architecture
- commissioned by wealthy savoyes, with little requests other than space for cars, an extra bedroom and a caretaker’s lodge
- utopian ideas promoting huygens, health and daylight
- bauhaus school by walter gropius promoting the combination of art and utility
salvation army hostel features
- ferroconcrete pilotis
- curtain wall of glass, ribbon window
- no applied ornament
- open driveway going under main building
- long and thin rectilinear slab or six stories and attic stories with flat roof above
- windows cannot be opened- double glazing, with air pumped through
salvation army refuge context
- commissioned by wealthy philanthropist singer for poor and destitute residents being supported by the salvation army
- mass production for the urban masses
- practical and functional
- utopian and authoritarian attitude to housing design
fagus factory features
- factory building with a flat roof, curtain wall of glass bays, metal panels concealing floor slabs
- brick battered piers
- entrance block of channeled masonry
- concealed cantilevers beads supporting corners and staircases
fagus factory context
commissioned by karl benscheidt, factory owner and founder, for shoe lasts
- gropius had worked with peter behrens on aeg turbine factory which was more classical and less ‘light’
- design for benefit of the workers, consumers and society
- rejection of vernacular traditions
schroder house features
- small two storied home
- composition of abstract rectilinear planes and cubic shoes with cantilevers projecting roofs and balconies
- no ornamentation
- horizontal and vertical
- white, grey, and primary colours
- asymmetrical with free plan- upper floor is open plan
- flexible living space- sliding and revolving panels enabling changeable room configurations
- space saving devices like in built kitchen and warbrodes
- modern skeletal construction without load bearing walls
- steel girders with mesh, supporting the building
- walls made of brick and plaster, floors of wood supported by wooden beams, window frames and doors made of wood
schroder house context
- commissioned by Truus Schroder-Schrader, wanted a house for her and her three children, that would encourage them to live unconventionally
- cheap, could be mass producible
- de stijl- the style- pure abstraction, no need to refer to things beyond themselves, universal language of geometry and colour, universal appeal through simplicity and purity of elements
modernism aims
- functionalism
- utopia
- appearance of modernity
- new materials
le corbusier’s five points
- free plan
- free facade
- fenestration/ ribbon windows
- flat roof
- pilotti
modernist materials
ferroconcrete- concrete reinforced with iron
skeletal structures taking the load off walls, allowing
curtain walls
fenestration
ribbon windows