Functionalism in Modern Architecture: Le Corbusier
Functionalism in Modern Architecture: Le Corbusier
Modern Architecture
“The house is a machine for living in”
Le Corbusier
“It is the pervading law of all things… that form ever follows
function”
Louis Sullivan
“Who ever regrets that the house of the future can no longer be
constructed by craftsmen should bare in mind that the motorcar is
no longer built by the wheelwright”
Mies van der Rohe
Functionalist features:
Building elevated above street level gives ground
back to pedestrians with open civic space for
displaying sculpture to bring sunlight and
garden space into the city
Separation of communal (horizontal)
and office (vertical) spaces.
Communal facilities consist of kitchen, lounge,
cafeteria, medical centre and roof garden.
The blue-green glass and
stainless steel curtain wall
reflects sunlight and reduces
heat build-up in the building,
keeping ventilation costs down
The building is easy to clean and its
clean lines and pristine transparency
advertises Lever Brother’s business as the
world largest manufacturer of soap-detergent.
The pilotis support cantilevered floors that can
be partitioned into flexible, functional working spaces.
The top section contains the service machinery, including window washing
machinery
Walter Gropius, The Bauhaus, Dessau, Germany 1925-26
Functionalist features:
Each distinct function is given its own space and visual expression-
workshops, classrooms, residences, auditorium/cafeteria.
Architectural form is determined by the practical arrangement of functions
Flat roof for use by staff and students as living space
Pilotis allows for free and flexible planning of the floor slabs
Healthy because horizontal windows and curtain walls admit light and air with
views out to the surrounding fields
Fittings and fixtures are all conceived as rational, machine-like elements to be
mass-produced (lighting, radiators, chairs, railings, window frames, door
handles, etc)
Clean lines, white walls, metal frames, flush surfaces, strict geometry,
machine precision. The building was rational and utilitarian, like a machine.
Mies van der Rohe, Seagram Building, New York, 1956-9
Functionalist features:
The building has a tripartite division like the
base, shaft and capital of a column following a
formula prescribed by Louis Sullivan. The
separate functions of street-level entrance
reception; of high rise levels of modular office
spaces; and of the top-most mechanical and
service areas are given distinct architectural
expressions.
The building has a rational functional
appearance with its machine-like precision, its
clean lines, modular components, rigidly
geometric forms and metal skeleton.
Interior spaces were mechanically ventilated,
powered and illuminated. It was a controlled
environment, sealed from the outside by a
bronzed metal and glass skin.
Mies set the building back from the street and
raised it above a pedestrian plaza so as to
admit space, light and nature into the city.
The metal frame allows for each floor to be
open-plan and to be divided with partition walls
independently of the configuration of other
levels. This flexibility accommodates a wide
variety of functions.
The conception of the building as an
assemblage of standardised, mass-produced
components devoid of handcraft and ornament
Louis Kahn, National Assembly Building,
Functionalist features:
Dhaka, Bangladesh, completed 1982
Deep porches surround the complex screened by
concrete walls with enormous geometric
openings. In the humid, tropical atmosphere of
Bangladesh these porches provide shade and cool
air for the interior spaces. They act as a kind of
brise-soleil.
Forms denote functions. The importance of the
national assembly room is symbolised through:
■ its centralised position at the core of the
building
■ it is the tallest space, reaching higher than
the
surrounding functional spaces
■ it is lit entirely from above giving it a spiritual
feeling. Democracy is sanctified.
The octagonal plan is generated by the
requirements of the eight divisions of the
Bangladeshi parliament.
The assembly room and its related servant
spaces are surrounded by eight peripheral
blocks that serve different government func-
tions. Each block is eight levels high and all
are inter-linked by servant spaces: corridors,
lifts, stairs, ramps, and light courts.
Hand-made of concrete, marble and mud brick,
Rogers and Piano, Pompidou Centre, Paris, France, 1977
Functionalist features:
The building uses only half the allotted space,
giving a plaza for street performers and
pedestrians.
Large underground car park and concert halls
Above ground the building has six layers of
continuous space, each divided flexibly by partition
walls according to the different needs.
Structural systems such as the tie rods, cross
bracing and cross beams are visible, exposed,
utilitarian.
Walls are entirely of glass to allow light into the
spaces
Interior space is maximised; all services are coded
and fixed to the exterior of the building: blue for
water; yellow for electrical; green for ventilation and air
conditioning; red or circulation, elevators and escalators.
Inspired by oil rigs, NASA launch pads and science
fiction.
Functionalist Furniture
“ A chair is a very difficult object. A skyscraper is almost easier. That is why
Chippendale is
famous.” Mies van der Rohe, Time Magazine, February, 1957
Modernist architects and designers believed that the shape of furniture should be
determined
by its function and by the materials used. They stripped furniture down to its basic
elements,
using a minimum of parts and eschewing ornamentation of any kind. Even colour is
avoided.
Made of metal and other other high-tech materials, Modernist furniture is black,
white, and
gray and is designed to compliment the functionalist design of the buildings they
furnish.