Tous ceux qui souhaitent un regard lucide sur Le Corbusier et ses constructions destinées au logement liront avec le plus grand intérêt l'analyse qu"en fait Olivier Baranbcy sous le titre "Misère de l'espace moderne "-La production de Le Corbusier et ses conséquences " ed. Agone 2016 .
Lui voleva raggiungere dei risultati cerramente impensabili per gli altri secondo il suo intento...per questo è un architettura sempre sorprendente....comunque questa soluzione è migliore rispetto alla " Casa Villa Rocher"
At last I found a Le Corbusier building that I actually found interesting but even this one is a failure since it's clearly not a Christian Church, it´s clearly a building for ritual murders committed by the evil galactic empire
Thank you for the video walk-thru. Would anyone have recommendations on finding pictures from the day's the villa was occupied (i.e. furnished) I realize Le Corbusier espoused the home is a machine for the living, but this seems cold, institutional, and sterile without furnishing.
Le Corbusier était en avance sur son temps, avait tout compris de l'espace habitable pour un humain, merci du partage et on voit concrètement son travail avec cette vidéo
I admire Le Corbusier’s unités d’habitation a lot, but I perceive the standard ceiling height of 2,26 m based on his modulor as too low. It’s claustrophobic, especially if the space contains a lot of furniture. In the Berlin unité d’habitation ceiling height has been increased to 2,50 m due to german building regulations. I doubt that measurement systems like the modulor are of such great importance for good design proportions.
Ajoutons que cette hauteur sous plafond ne correspond plus à la taille moyenne , elle était proche de 1,6 m quand Le C. a dessiné son Modulor , aujourd'hui les jeunes hommes mesurent souvent 1,8 m.Et les circulations tout comme le mobilier s'adaptent mal à cette taille .
Was there actually a wall/tomb where Brians buried?.or even Scalpa himself? Needs to read more about it. Do not wish to go see it, was plenty of this video, thanks a lot🙏✨
Visitors are gonna go up by a LOT i think because this place is in dune part 2. Definetely wanna go here soon. Possibly this year. Nice video where you showed everything 🔥
Au début des années 2000 j'ai vécu ici.... d'abord Un studio et ensuite un T2 en duplex j'ai adoré et sa situation sur une colline a l'écart de la ville avec la nature a deux pas c'était le plus... mais je crois que ces dernières années l'ambiance générale s'est dégradée avec des incivilités et une propreté dans les rues qui n'est plus ce que c'était...la population a changé et les nouveaux arrivants c'est pas le dessus du panier si vous voyez ce que je veux dire.... dommage
I think it's a stunning building. The way the light is directed and filtered through basic shape and colour is amazing. It seems a very spiritual place for me. He built several religious buildings, all of which are fascinating and inspiring imho.
Thanks for the comment. This building was owned by a swiss avant-garde art collector Raoul Albert La Roche. It was designed as a vacation house as well as a place for being housed his art colletions.
I agree. I feel like I'm in a hospital. Cold, soulless atmosphere. And the layout of the building is very strange. Le Corbusier is a very peculiar architect, to say the least.
A small wonder. It is a rare building that can define itself as entirely foundation, no superstructure - an act of real wit to give a chapel such a structure. Then you enter, and realise that the superstructure is there, in the negative. The poles that formed its interior space as the cement was poured in courses, were shrunken and split by charring, and then removed. The space they made, fixed in the concrete, leads the eye upward as required in a place of devotion.