Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret), Pierre Jeanneret
Swiss Pavilion, Cité internationale universitaire de Paris Paris, France Side elevation
1932
Airbrush on lithograph
Not on view
The Cité internationale universitaire de Paris was founded in 1921 to accommodate foreign students in the city. Within a decade it had grown into a collection of highly differentiated buildings, each associated with a different nation. Though Le Corbusier and his cousin and associate Pierre Jeanneret originally refused the commission to build the complex's Swiss Pavilion, they eventually designed it in accordance with nearly all the elements outlined in their 1926 manifesto "Five Points Towards a New Architecture." These included raising the building on pilotis, or pillars; using load-bearing columns separate from the exterior walls to allow a free plan and a free facade, distinct from the building's structural logic; and incorporating horizontal strip windows for greater natural illumination and for visual links to the landscape. Although this project was included in the Museum's 1932 show Modern Architecture: International Exhibition, the Pavilion's curved rubble wall relates to vernacular traditions and hints of an emerging primitivism in Le Corbusier's work.
75 Years of Architecture at MoMA, 2007.
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Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret)
French, born Switzerland. 1887–1965 210 works onlineIn 1923, in his book Vers une architecture ( Towards a New Architecture ), architect and designer Le Corbusier declared houses to be “machines for living in.
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