Le Corbusier
TOWARDS A NEW ARCHITECTURE
Le Corbusier is known as the father of New Architecture. His Magnus opus, Towards New Architecture, reveals the reasons why Le Corbusier was given this title. Being a well-known modernist architect, Le Corbusier was the one of the first few architects to popularize the change that modernism had brought along and suggested way in which it could be incorporated in architectural designs. His book. Towards the New Architecture ' was enthusiastically welcomed by the modernist circles, many of whom agreed with Corbusier's basic ideas for modernist living. Unlike some of his predecessors, Corbusier was of the view that the best and most important objective of architecture was to create designs that are functional in nature. While aesthetic appeal of designs was important, Le Corbusier believed it should take precedence over function, which helped in evolution of architecture. This was indeed a very interesting concept, which appeared in what is regarded as the greatest architectural manifesto of all times.
Towards a New Architecture deals with the problems of pre-modernist architectural designs and the how Le Corbusier thought those problems could be solved. In the introduction part of the book, Le Corbusier states his argument against old designs in these words: "Human warrens of sixty storeys, the concrete house hard and clean, fittings as coldly efficient as those of a ship's cabin or of a motorcar, and the standardized products of mass production throughout."
Le Corbusier maintained that houses should be built to serve an important function i.e. To provide most comfortable yet most practical style of living to a modernist population. It is important to understand that in modernist days, there had been a massive...
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