The ebb and flow, the expansion and contraction of societies, civics, and economies informs the way that the human lives. In times of great prosperity societies expand geographically as seen in the rise of all the great societies. In times of hardship and depression these same societies contract for many reasons, economy, efficiency or society. It is my opinion that due to a growing problems in the American economy, especially related to the housing industry, combined with an explosive cost of living, and the interest in global climate change, and sustainable living, the way that Americans live and are housed is teetering on the verge of dramatic change.
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There are documented times of civic hardship, and how this changes the way people live. During the Great Depression, “all across the country farms were being foreclosed in rural districts. People who lost homes naturally gravitated towards the city”5, and in response to the influx of people came the Hooverville phenomenon.
Another time period of hardship is postwar Europe in the mid 1940’s.
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Unite d’Habitation Marseilles
A new urban object
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The planning of Unite d’Habitation Marseilles, according to Le Corbusier is rooted in the ideals of his concept of the garden city which he describes in his book The City of Tomorrow and It’s Planning. Le Corbusier describes the status quo of the typical suburban garden city, and then proposes a solution so wonderfully it should be included here verbatim.
CONCERNING GARDEN CITIES
… we saw that there were two kinds of population ; the citizens, with many good reasons for inhabiting the city proper, and the " suburbanites," those who could only live to advantage outside the city. These suburbanites, according to their social condition, live in villas, or in dwellings in working-class quarters, or in small working-class houses which they rent.
If we formulate our problem, we shall have :
(a) The present-day solution, which exists all over the world and is looked on as ideal; it consists of a plot of roughly 400 square yards with a little house in the middle. Patt of the plot is a flower garden, and there are a few fruit trees and a tiny vegetable garden. It is complicated and difficult to keep up, and involves endless pains (call it the romantic simple life if you like) for the householder and his wife to keep things tidy, to weed it, water it, kill the slugs and the rest ; long after twilight the watering-can is still on the go. Some people may call all this a form of healthy exercise. On the contrary, it is a stupid ineffective and sometimes dangerous thing. The children cannot play there, for they have no room to run about in, nor can the parents indulge in games or sports there. And the result of all this is a few pears and apples, a few carrots, a little parsley and so on. The whole thing is ridiculous.
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The houses and their " hanging " flower gardens are juxtaposed in immense blocks " with set-backs " in three super- imposed double storeys. The sun gets in everywhere, as does the air. The garden is paved with red tiles, its walls are hung with ivy and clematis; laurels and other shrubs cluster thickly in large cement pots ; the place is gay with flowers ; this is a real urban garden easy to keep up. There is a table sheltered from the rain where the household can eat ; one can converse or rest in the open.
At the foot of the building the 150 square yards allotted for games have been added to those of the neighbours. Football, tennis, running tracks, basket ball, etc., are all available. You come home, you change, you can take your exercise just outside your own home.
Close at hand are the 150 square yards of kitchen garden joined up with the similar plots belonging to the neighbours. So we get allotments of 400 yards by 100 yards, i.e. nearly 10 acres. The watering-can is not needed, for water is laid on; the allotments are automatically watered and can be equally well ploughed with tractors and manured systematically. 2
For the Unite, Le Corbusier extended this concept into what he described as the vertical garden city, which was a synthesis of the garden city, and the model of the city proper. ‘From the ‘horizontal’ garden city, …the concept of the individual dwelling unit and the relationship between architecture and nature; from the city proper he distilled the notions of complexity of density…’ 1
To further describe the concept of Unite d’Habitation
‘The aims of the Unite d’Habitation, declared by Le Corbusier were two fold, “The first: to provide with peace and solitude before the sun, space and greenery, a dwelling which will be the perfect receptacle for the family. The second: to set up in God’s good nature beneath the sky and the sun, a magisterial work of architecture, the product of rigor, grandeur, nobility, happiness and elegance.’1
No city or community is complete without the functions and services that accompany housing. Corbusier’s concenpt of “The extended dwelling”1 is evident in the design of the Unite. “Implicit with Le Cobusier’s notion of the Unite as a vertical garden city is the ideal that the community should be self-supportive… the collective mechanical services and social amenities, such as the nursery school, day care
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Closing Thoughts, Observations and Connections –
The Unite is often regarded as an architectural masterpiece. The first example of brutalism, and one of the most graceful, truly achieved a great majority of what Corbusier set out to accomplish. The building is successful in providing dwelling units on a scale that was necessary for the time that it was built. The ‘complex density’ allowed for the generous surrounding area of park land that was a quality
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As often happens in the field of architecture, and the development of projects, the constraints of site, budget, ‘actual’ user, available material, etc. the ideal that
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“The sun gets in everywhere, as does the air. The garden is paved with red tiles, its walls are hung with ivy and clematis; laurels and other shrubs cluster thickly in large cement pots ; the place is gay with flowers ; this is a real urban garden easy to keep up. There is a table sheltered from the rain where the household can eat ; one can converse or rest in the open.”2
As you can see in the image of the terrace, about all that is left is the red tiles, and barely enough room to ‘rest in the open’. In the framework of my thesis and its foundation in the squares of Savannah, keeping the garden is an extremely important part of the equation.
Additionally, Corbusier’s ‘streets’ of the project, are the hallways, and as hallways they are nothing more. They are described by visitors as gloomy, and dark,
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In preliminary proposals that included more additional buildings, the public space was located at the ground level. Shops, clubs, restaurants, pools, community space could all be accessed without entering the building. I think it is unfortunate that in the final design these spaces became integrated into the building in a fashion that was less than accessible to the public at large. It is difficult to find data on the success of the ‘shopping street’ on the seventh and eighth floors of Unite. The lack of recent descriptions, and a tourists description of, “(on) the third and fourth levels, an airy Japanese-inspired gallery is a sudden surprise”10 ,would lead me to believe that the shops, besides a small grocery, are no longer there. This may be due to the lack of access. It may however have been a different story if they were located at ground level as was originally proposed. Additionally, the rooftop
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There are many great things to be learned from examining the Unite d’Habitation as a work of architecture in and of itself. More importantly though are, Le Corbusier’s theories behind the design and development of the building. The vertical garden city, the extended dwelling are all important and relevant theories still today. Though, as is evident, and even to a greater extent in some of the later Unites in Berlin, and what became a model for social housing in the U.S., what in the end finally gets built is not always the unadulterated fruit of the intent of the architect or his theories.
References:
1. Jenkins, David. Unite D'Habitation - Le Corbusier. London: Phaidon P Limited, 1993.
2. Le Corbusier. The City of Tomorrow and Its Planning. Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 1987. Originally Published by Payson & Clark Ltd NY 1929
3. Le Corbusier, as edited by Stanislaus Von Moos. Le Corbusier Before Le Corbusier. New Haven: Yale UP, 2002.
4. Wikipedia contributors, "Unité d'Habitation," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Unit%C3%A9_d%27Habitation&oldid=198023947 (accessed April 5, 2008).
5. Library of Congress and American Memory – 09/26/2002 http://memory.loc.gov/learn/features/timeline/depwwii/depress/hoovers.html (accessed April 5, 2008)
6. Berman, Jay - 1999 for Galinsky.com “Unité d'habitation Flatowallee 16 Berlin-Westend, Germany” http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/unitedhabitation/index.htm (accessed April 5, 2008)
7. Glinn, Simon – 2001 for Galinsky.com, “Unité d'habitation (Cité Radieuse) 280 boulevard Michelet 13008 Marseille, France” http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/marseille/index.htm (accessed April 5, 2008)
8. Divizia, Caudio – 2006 for Galinsky.com, “Espace Le Corbusier Rue de Saint-Just-Malmont 42700 Firminy, France” http://www.galinsky.com/buildings/firminy/index.htm (accessed April 5, 2008)
9. Wikipedia contributors, "Athens Charter," Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Athens_Charter&oldid=188990011 (accessed April 5, 2008).
10. Arfin, Ferne “More About Marseille's Hotel Le Corbusier” March 24 2007 http://gofrance.about.com/od/provence/a/Lecorbusier_2.htm (accessed April 5, 2008)
Images: All are from; “Unite D'Habitation - Le Corbusier”. With the exception of the photos of the Hoovervilles which come from “Library of Congress and American Memory” and the photo of the corridor which is from “Unité d'habitation Flatowallee 16 Berlin-Westend, Germany”
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1 comment:
Kerrick:
Your refence to the evolution of Unite de Habitation is a refreshing comparison to what "really" goes on in these places. Use and abuse are common unless the inhitant truly wish good architecture to remain. Great job! I Especially like your reference to the terrace garden- I have always wondered if the roof garden faired the same!
Tom B.
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