Machines for living  

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 +[[Image:Pruitt-Igoe-overview.jpg|thumb|200px|"[[Machines for living]]:" for various critics, including [[Tom Wolfe]], the '''[[Pruitt-Igoe]]''' housing project illustrated both the essential unlivability of [[Bauhaus]]-inspired [[international style (architecture)|box architecture]], and the ''[[hubris]]'' of [[central planning]].]]
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"'''La maison est une machine à habiter'''" (English: "The house is a machine for living in") stated [[Le Corbusier]] in ''[[Toward an Architecture|Vers une architecture]]'' in 1923. "'''La maison est une machine à habiter'''" (English: "The house is a machine for living in") stated [[Le Corbusier]] in ''[[Toward an Architecture|Vers une architecture]]'' in 1923.

Revision as of 10:06, 11 September 2010

"Machines for living:" for various critics, including Tom Wolfe, the Pruitt-Igoe housing project illustrated both the essential unlivability of Bauhaus-inspired box architecture, and the hubris of central planning.
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"Machines for living:" for various critics, including Tom Wolfe, the Pruitt-Igoe housing project illustrated both the essential unlivability of Bauhaus-inspired box architecture, and the hubris of central planning.

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"La maison est une machine à habiter" (English: "The house is a machine for living in") stated Le Corbusier in Vers une architecture in 1923.

These "Machines for living" illustrated for various critics, including Tom Wolfe, both the essential unlivability of Bauhaus-inspired box architecture, and the hubris of central planning.

The Pruitt-Igoe housing project represented the end of this Corbusier esthetic and the start of postmodern architecture.

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