Le Corbusier Towards a New Architecture

by Le Corbusier

Paperback, 2008

Status

Available

Call number

720.LEC LE

Call number

720.LEC LE

Publication

BN Publishing (2008), 291 pages

Description

TOWARDS NEW ARCHITECTUR(750606274)

User reviews

LibraryThing member janemarieprice
This is a must read for any architect. It explains all of modernism and also gives you a window into its problems. It is also concise which is strange for most architects’ writings.
LibraryThing member encephalical
Passionate writing. The rhetoric of the last chapter made me think of Mon Oncle as a reaction. Corbusier does lay it on thickly. As a rural Midwesterner, his appreciation of grain elevators gladdened me. There are lots of ideas for contemplation buried inside.
LibraryThing member madepercy
This translation of Towards a New Architecture, originally written in 1923, is prophetic in many ways. Le Corbusier writes of the “machine age” much like someone now might write of the “information age”. But he is somewhat poetic, repetitive and I would not be surprised if Tom Peters
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(ex-Harvard innovation guru) adopted something of Le Corbusier's style. While many of the architect's ideas were controversial, and may not have functioned as desired, he foresaw many of the things that are happening today in terms of construction materials. Although I do not doubt that the way these materials have been used meet the "cheapness" but not necessarily the "good work" he envisaged (p. 284). My favourite quote: "There is no such thing as primitive man. There are primitive resources. The idea is constant, strong from the start" (p. 70).
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Language

ISBN

9650060367 / 9789650060367
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