I'm doing a project where I'll have to include a wall in Die Weissenhof. Wherever I want, or wherever I think its needed.
I must say, I miss some things in Die Weissenhof. Being such a group of modern architecture houses focusing in the space economy with such cubic and geometric architecture, plain and simple, as they were social buildings for the industry workers; I miss the green colour, the references to nature, the wide spaces with beautiful trees.
My idea is not trying to do a wall adapted to the architecture these famous architects did already, its no use to repeat what's already done there. If I have to build something there, it must be to make this place richer by adding what it lacks.
So my idea of the wall will be around three things: green, water and cristal. Why green and water are there is an obvious reference to nature, and I wanted to use cristal or something like that cause light makes an important role in the green world.
I'm going back to the past by not doing the same as these architects. I'm going back to having nature as my main model for the architecture I'll be projecting.
To inspire myself I've searched around the Internet walls related to what I wanted, and I found these interesting ones:
The crying wall:
Being as the name points, a wall with water running over it
The Green walls or Vertical Gardens:
These and more is the inspiration I'm having right now. I've got some sketches I hope I'll be able to upload soon
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martes, 17 de febrero de 2015
lunes, 2 de febrero de 2015
MIES VAN DER ROHE AND THE WEISSENHOF
BRIEF INTRODUCTION TO GET STARTED
“Architecture epitomises the human being’s spatial confrontation with his environment; it expresses how he asserts himself in it and how he manages to master it.” (Ludwig Mies van der Rohe)
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe
- Born March 27, 1886 Aachen, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
- Died August 17, 1969 (aged 83) Chicago, Illinois, USA
- Nationality German 1886-1944/American1944-1969
- Awards Order Pour le Mérite (1959) Royal Gold Medal (1959) AIA Gold Medal (1960) Presidential Medal of Freedom (1963)
- Work Buildings Barcelona Pavilion Tugendhat House Crown Hall Farnsworth House860-880 Lake Shore Drive Seagram Building New National Gallery Toronto-DominionCentre Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (March 27, 1886 – August 17, 1969)
SHORT INTRODUCTION ABOUT THE ARCHITECT
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (March 27, 1886 – August 17, 1969) was a German architect. He is commonly
referred to and addressed by his surname, Mies, by his colleagues, students, writers, and others.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, along with Walter Gropius and Le Corbusier, is widely regarded as one of the
pioneering masters of Modern architecture. Mies, like many of his post World War I contemporaries, sought to
establish a new architectural style that could represent modern times just as Classical and Gothic did for their own
eras. He created an influential 20th century architectural style, stated with extreme clarity and simplicity. His mature
buildings made use of modern materials such as industrial steel and plate glass to define interior spaces. He strived
towards an architecture with a minimal framework of structural order balanced against the implied freedom of
free-flowing open space. He called his buildings "skin and bones" architecture. He sought a rational approach that
would guide the creative process of architectural design. He is often associated with the aphorisms "less is more" and
"God is in the details".
SIGNIFICANCE AND MEANING
Mies pursued an ambitious lifelong mission to create a new architectural language that could be used to represent the new era of technology and production. He saw a need for an architecture expressive of and in harmony with his epoch, just as Gothic architecture was for an era of spiritualism. He applied a disciplined design process using rational thought to achieve his spiritual goals. He believed that the configuration and arrangement of every architectural element must contribute to a unified expression. The self-educated Mies painstakingly studied the great philosophers and thinkers, past and present, to enhance his own understanding of the character and essential qualities of the technological times he lived in. More than perhaps any other practising pioneer of modernism, Mies mined the writings of philosophers and thinkers for ideas that were relevant to his architectural mission. Mies' architecture was created at a high level of abstraction, and his own generalized descriptions of his principles intentionally leave much room for interpretation. Yet his buildings also seem very direct and simple when viewed in person. Every aspect of his architecture, from overall concept to the smallest detail, supports his effort to express the modern age. The depth of meaning conveyed by his work, beyond its aesthetic qualities, has drawn many contemporary philosophers and theoretical thinkers to continue to further explore and speculate about his architecture.
DIE WEISSENHOFSIEDLUNG
SIGNIFICANCE AND MEANING
Mies pursued an ambitious lifelong mission to create a new architectural language that could be used to represent the new era of technology and production. He saw a need for an architecture expressive of and in harmony with his epoch, just as Gothic architecture was for an era of spiritualism. He applied a disciplined design process using rational thought to achieve his spiritual goals. He believed that the configuration and arrangement of every architectural element must contribute to a unified expression. The self-educated Mies painstakingly studied the great philosophers and thinkers, past and present, to enhance his own understanding of the character and essential qualities of the technological times he lived in. More than perhaps any other practising pioneer of modernism, Mies mined the writings of philosophers and thinkers for ideas that were relevant to his architectural mission. Mies' architecture was created at a high level of abstraction, and his own generalized descriptions of his principles intentionally leave much room for interpretation. Yet his buildings also seem very direct and simple when viewed in person. Every aspect of his architecture, from overall concept to the smallest detail, supports his effort to express the modern age. The depth of meaning conveyed by his work, beyond its aesthetic qualities, has drawn many contemporary philosophers and theoretical thinkers to continue to further explore and speculate about his architecture.
DIE WEISSENHOFSIEDLUNG
The Weissenhofsiedlung is considered one of the most important monuments of the "Neues Bauen" movement. It was created in 1927 as a building exhibition of Deutsche Werkbund and was funded by the City of Stuttgart. None of the subsequent expositions by Deutsche Werkbund achieved a comparable international charisma. Despite significant destruction during World War II, the ensemble of buildings today represents highly valued cultural heritage of the 20th century with early works of architects who shaped modern architecture. In some special way, Weissenhofsiedlung represents the social, aesthetic and technological changes following the end of World War I. Using the programmatic title "Die Wohnung" (The Housing), this Werkbund exposition demonstrated the renunciation from habitats characterized by pre-industrial periods. In these 33 houses with 63 apartments, a total of 17 architects from Germany, France, Holland, Belgium and Austria formulated their solutions for living arrangements of the modern big city dweller, coupled with the use and implementation of new building materials and effective construction methods. As part of this novel and overall urban concept, typical buildings for cost-effective mass production were created but also buildings of great architectural variety.
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