In: Civil Engineering
Le Corbusier was fascinated by certain engineering objects. This interest was well expressed in his book Towards a new Architecture (1923) and well captured by his definition of house as “a machine for living in”. In a similar vein, Walter Gropius outlined the new orientation of his school as “the Bauhaus believes the machine to be our modern medium of design and seeks to come to terms with it.”
What do these two statements mean? What is the relation between ‘architecture’ and ‘machine’ as stated by these two architects? Explain your answer by using at least one building by Le Corbusier and one building by Walter Gropius.
the modern architect Le Corbusier's
The idea of architecture as machine was proposed by Le Corbusier
particularly through his well-known statement ‘The house is a
machine for living in.’ This phrase appeared in his writing Toward
A New Architecture to illustrate his argument that architecture
should be designed in a way that refers to the engineers’ working
methods in problem solving and that it should be designed in
accordance to standards. The idea that house should be designed
following the same logic as the machine has led to the
establishment of standardization in architecture, which Le
Corbusier then also further extended into the standardization at
the city scale. Le Corbusier's idea of machine by particularly
examining how it could potentially depict the way architecture
fulfills its functional purpose for human well-being.
The idea of machine was not exclusively proposed by Le Corbusier.
Various works in architecture and other related disciplines has
addressed both the abstract and concrete meanings of the machinic
concepts, such as Guattari’s desiring machine and Daniel
Libeskind’s reading, memory and writing machines . Some works took
further the idea of machine in architecture through the concepts
such as mechanics and appliances, such as Nicholson’s appliance
house and Banham’s idea of house as an ensemble of mechanical
gadgetry . These works suggest that the idea of machine involves
the mechanisms of interface, complexity and causality, and
therefore it provokes some critical ways of comprehending the
relationship between elements involved in a system.
Le Corbusier argued that the establishment of standard was a
logical way to address the problem. Each of the requirements that
were demanded in the Manual of the Dwelling illustrated an aspect
of the dwelling space, and it was established for logical reasons
and to address certain problems. The major problems identified by
Le Corbusier, as he further explained, were primarily related to
comfort and health. The demands for physical comfort constantly
appeared in his works, especially in the established requirements
for an open plan design which allowed for light and air to come
through. It also appeared in the Manual of the Dwelling: ‘the house
is only habitable when it is full of light and air.’ Such openness
as spatial properties was then developed into what was called the
form language of modern architecture: One of the more important
attributes of modern architecture style was the freedom it gave
architects to plan the interior areas of buildings without regard
to the previous conventions… With the new style, architects could
open whole wall surfaces to light and air. The introduction of
modern materials that allowed for larger span of space also meant
possibility to have more open space design, which was open to light
and air that functioned to provide comfort for the
inhabitants.
In the Twentieth Century, the American designer Ben Nicholson
conceived and constructed the Appliance House, an experiment in the
search for the ideal model of a mass-produced suburban home.
Appliance House was an installation built to elaborate upon the
tensions inherent in the modern domestic interior. It was never
occupied, and it was not intended to function as a real dwelling,
instead it was conceived as an experiment in which the conditions
of occupancy could be analysed and then fabricated. In the book
‘Appliance House’ Nicholson suggested,
Le Corbusiers’ Modular Man was considered to be the harmonious
measure of human scale, based on the mathematics of the human body,
and a possible occupier of the ‘House Machine’, the Kleptoman is
the disharmonious inhabitant of Appliance House. He is the
scavenger of the city, accumulating unwanted objects, and applying
them to his shelter. All of these objects are rescued from
oblivion, and are then incorporated into the trophy room, the first
room of Appliance House. This room is called ‘The Kleptoman Cell’,
Appliance House was a unique experiment used for exploring some of
the concerns in the creation and occupation of modern domestic
space. In its short life it became both a concretization and also
an inversion of some of the central ideologies of Modernist
domestic design. It also offered an amusing narrative on the issues
of occupancy, and also collecting, by creating a house that has
been extensively reformed through the expression of a compulsive
and intense habit.
Walter Gropius.
''the Bauhaus believes the machine to be our modern medium of
design and seeks to come to terms with it.”
Summary of Walter Gropius
Not only was Walter Gropius one of the pioneers of modern
architecture, he was the founder of the Bauhaus, a revolutionary
art school in Germany. The Bauhaus replaced traditional teaching
methods with a flexible artistic community, focusing on a
collaborative approach to learning and the creation of integrated
design projects. Later, the Bauhaus also incorporated mass
production techniques into its output, designing objects and
buildings for a wide audience. The school taught some of the most
famous names in modernism as well as attracting established artists
working within the fields. Despite its relatively short-lived
existence, the Bauhaus and the design styles associated with it
were hugely influential on a global scale, but particularly so in
the United States where many of the artists moved before and during
the Second World War to escape persecution by the Nazis.
This “model” or “experimental house” was built to satisfy all the
needs of a citizen of the times and contains all the architectural
principles of the Bauhaus: streamlined shapes (squares and
rectangles), without any frills, and a structure that can be built
with few resources and using novel materials. Inside, it had the
most advanced technology of the time, like central heating and a
laundry, and furniture made in the school’s workshops. This white
cube was supposed to be the first of many which would house
students and teachers, but these were never completed due to the
school’s relocation.
MetLife Building, US
Plans for what is now the MetLife Building date to 1955, when Grand
Central Terminal was proposed for demolition. Developer Erwin S.
Wolfson proposed a 65-story tower called Grand Central City to
replace the six-story baggage structure (which had by then become
an office building) north of the terminal. He revised the plan in
1958, downsizing the tower to 50 stories. The tower would contain
three movie theaters with a total capacity of 5,000; an open-air
restaurant on the seventh floor; and a 2,000-spot parking garage.
This plan was ultimately approved. In July 1958, it was announced
that architects Walter Gropius and Pietro Belluschi, noted
architects in the Modern style, would assist Richard Roth of Emery
Roth and Sons in designing Grand Central City. The initial plans
called for the tower to rise 708ft, with 2,703,112sqft of floor
area.The building remains one of the city's most recognizable
skyscrapers. Designed in the International style, the MetLife
Building is mixed use commercial and office, with large floor
plans, simple massing, and an absence of ornamentation inside and
out. The octagon shape and window wall were intended by the
architects to reduce the building's perceived sense of scale.