Search Results for: Le Corbusier

Le Corbusier – Acrobat of Architecture, B.V.Doshi interviewed by Carmen Kagal

Few men in history have altered the course of architecture as dramatically as Le Corbusier. His prodigious output, his extensive writings, the very quality of his genius cast him upon a lonely eminence, so that he always remained something of an enigma. It was only to a handful of colleagues that Le Corbusier showed his human side – sensitive, capable of warm and lasting friendships, deeply concerned about the condition of man. In Le Corbusier’s intimate circle was Balkrishna V. Doshi, himself a distinguished architect, who worked with the master over a period of some seven years – first in Paris, later in Chandigarh and Ahmedabad. This association provided a rare insight into the mind of Le Corbusier. Looking back over the years, Doshi stresses Le Corbusier’s remarkable architectural agility, his endless capacity for improvisation and innovation.

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B.Arch Thesis: Revitilization of Le Corbusier’s Legacy: Sanskar Kendra, by Rahul Jadon, Faculty of Architecture, Dr. APJ AKTU, Lucknow

Sanskar Kendra, by Rahul Jadon: The project emphasizes reliving the same old legacy, but, in accordance to the existing urban, functional, socio-economic context, current scenario of the city and the surroundings of the site. For the reinterpretation studies, research of analytical framework of verdicts from the beginning of the project and then the analysis of those ideas on contemporary and contextual grounds was conducted.

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A Brief and Incomplete History of Stacking People, by Sudipto Ghosh

A Brief and Incomplete History of Stacking People

Sudipto Ghosh shares a witty and philosophical dialogue between housing forms across history—Amer Haveli, Roman insula, Berlin tenement, Paris maison à loyer, Marseille Unité, Tokyo capsule tower, and others—debating density, design, community, and failure. The wisdom is clear: buildings that listen to the terrain and human life outlast.

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Pierre Jeanneret's Iconic Furniture in Chandigarh. Courtesy - Sarbjit Singh Bagha

“Pierre Jeanneret’s Chandigarh furniture embodies a remarkable fusion of modernist innovation, local Indian craftsmanship, and postcolonial ambition…” — Sarbjit Singh Bagha

Sarbjit Singh Bagha elaborates on Pierre Jeanneret’s Chandigarh furniture that were crafted with local materials and collaborative craftsmanship, which has become a modernist icon, now globally coveted, yet embroiled in controversies over export, heritage protection, and cultural ownership.

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“As much as this book may help young students to become good architects… it seeks to restore the idealism that was once the hallmark of the profession.”—Praveen Bavadekar reviews Five Architectural Fables

Praveen Bavadekar, in his review for Five Architectural Fables by Edgar Demello, opines how the architectural fables ingeniously critique urban design through non-human perspectives, transforming complex environmental and design challenges into provocative, imaginative storytelling.

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