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1 AH 398 -- 20 th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – October 20, 2011 1. Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennet, Plan for Chicago, 1909, bird-eye view, drawing by Jules Guérin. 2. Cass Gilbert, Woolworth Building, New York 1911-13 and William Van Alen, Chrysler building, New York 1928-30. 3. Walter Gropius, entry for the Chicago Tribune competition, 1922 and Eliel Saarinen, entry for the Chicago Tribune competition, 1922. 4. Raymond Hood and John Howells, Chicago Tribune building, Chicago 1922-25. 5. William Van Alen, Chrysler building, New York 1928-30, exterior and interior details. 6. Shreve, Lamb and Harmon, Empire State building, New York 1931 and Wallace Harrison, Raymond Hood, etc., Rockefeller Center, New York 1931-37, RCA Building. 7. Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue and Carleton M. Winslow, Los Angeles Public Library, Los Angeles 1922-26. 8. Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Nebraska State Capitol, Lincoln, Neb. 1934. 9. Albert Kahn and Ernest Wilby, Ford Highland Park plant, Detroit 1909-20. 10. Albert Kahn Inc., General Motors building, Detroit 1922. 11. Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan, Auditorium building, Chicago 1886-90. 12. Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright house, Oak Park, Ill. 1893. 13. Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright house, Oak Park, Ill. 1893, plan. 14. Frank Lloyd Wright, Winslow house, River Forest, Ill. 1893-94. 15. Frank Lloyd Wright, Ward Willits Wright house, Highland Park, Ill. 1902. 16. Frank Lloyd Wright, Larkin building, Buffalo, N.Y. 1902-06. 17. Frank Lloyd Wright, Larkin building, Buffalo, N.Y. 1902-06, interior. 18. Frank Lloyd Wright, Robie house, Chicago 1908-10, project. 19. Frank Lloyd Wright, Robie House, Chicago 1908-10, plans. 20. Frank Lloyd Wright, Imperial Hotel, Tokyo 1913-22. 21. Frank Lloyd Wright, Taliesin III, Spring Green, Wis. 1926. 22. Frank Lloyd Wright, Barnsdall house, Los Angeles 1916-21. 23. Frank Lloyd Wright, Ennis House, Los Angeles 1924. 24. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman house, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39. 25. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman House, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39, cross-section. 26. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman house, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39, interior. 27. Frank Lloyd Wright, Broadacre City Project, 1934. 28. Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahoney Griffin, Muller house, Chicago 1906-10. 29. Irving Gill, Dodge house, Los Angeles 1915-16. 30. Rudolph Schindler, Lovell house, Newport Beach, Calif. 1926.

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Page 1: Final Sheet

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – October 20, 2011

1. Daniel Burnham and Edward Bennet, Plan for Chicago, 1909, bird-eye view, drawing by Jules

Guérin.

2. Cass Gilbert, Woolworth Building, New York 1911-13 and William Van Alen, Chrysler building,

New York 1928-30.

3. Walter Gropius, entry for the Chicago Tribune competition, 1922 and Eliel Saarinen, entry for

the Chicago Tribune competition, 1922.

4. Raymond Hood and John Howells, Chicago Tribune building, Chicago 1922-25.

5. William Van Alen, Chrysler building, New York 1928-30, exterior and interior details.

6. Shreve, Lamb and Harmon, Empire State building, New York 1931 and Wallace Harrison,

Raymond Hood, etc., Rockefeller Center, New York 1931-37, RCA Building.

7. Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue and Carleton M. Winslow, Los Angeles Public Library, Los

Angeles 1922-26.

8. Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue, Nebraska State Capitol, Lincoln, Neb. 1934.

9. Albert Kahn and Ernest Wilby, Ford Highland Park plant, Detroit 1909-20.

10. Albert Kahn Inc., General Motors building, Detroit 1922.

11. Dankmar Adler and Louis Sullivan, Auditorium building, Chicago 1886-90.

12. Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright house, Oak Park, Ill. 1893.

13. Frank Lloyd Wright, Frank Lloyd Wright house, Oak Park, Ill. 1893, plan.

14. Frank Lloyd Wright, Winslow house, River Forest, Ill. 1893-94.

15. Frank Lloyd Wright, Ward Willits Wright house, Highland Park, Ill. 1902.

16. Frank Lloyd Wright, Larkin building, Buffalo, N.Y. 1902-06.

17. Frank Lloyd Wright, Larkin building, Buffalo, N.Y. 1902-06, interior.

18. Frank Lloyd Wright, Robie house, Chicago 1908-10, project.

19. Frank Lloyd Wright, Robie House, Chicago 1908-10, plans.

20. Frank Lloyd Wright, Imperial Hotel, Tokyo 1913-22.

21. Frank Lloyd Wright, Taliesin III, Spring Green, Wis. 1926.

22. Frank Lloyd Wright, Barnsdall house, Los Angeles 1916-21.

23. Frank Lloyd Wright, Ennis House, Los Angeles 1924.

24. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman house, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39.

25. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman House, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39, cross-section.

26. Frank Lloyd Wright, Kaufman house, Bear Run, Penn. 1936-39, interior.

27. Frank Lloyd Wright, Broadacre City Project, 1934.

28. Walter Burley Griffin and Marion Mahoney Griffin, Muller house, Chicago 1906-10.

29. Irving Gill, Dodge house, Los Angeles 1915-16.

30. Rudolph Schindler, Lovell house, Newport Beach, Calif. 1926.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Richard Morris Hunt

William Ware

atelier système

charrette

Joseph Lyman Silsbee

Ralph Waldo Emerson

Friedrich Froebel

Edward Morse

Ho-o-den Temple

Aline Barnsdall

Edgar J. Kaufmann

William G. Purcell

George E. Elmslie

Webster Tomlinson

Philip M. Lovell

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – October 25, 2011

1. The participants to the CIAM meeting of La Sarraz, 1928.

2. Le Corbusier, plan Obus, project A, Algiers 1932.

3. Le Corbusier, Sur les quatre routes, 1941.

4. Le Corbusier and Jean Prouvé, Écoles volante, 1940.

5. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-53.

6. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-53.

7. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-53, arrangement of the services.

8. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-53, the roof floor.

9. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-52, sections of the type-apartments.

10. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-52, assemblage scheme.

11. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-52, view of an apartment.

12. Le Corbusier, Unité d’Habitation, Marseille 1947-52, the pilotis.

13. Le Corbusier, Le Modulor, second version, 1945.

14. Le Corbusier, Unité d'Habitation "Typ Berlin", Berlin 1957-58, exterior and interior.

15. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1950-54.

16. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, aerial view.

17. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, plan.

18. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, the lateral entrance.

19. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, view of the interior and the external

pulpit.

20. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, interior.

21. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, interior.

22. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, interior of two of the three towers.

23. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, interior of one of the three towers.

24. Le Corbusier, Notre-Dame-du-Haut, Ronchamp 1955, the bells outside the church.

25. Le Corbusier, Convent of La Tourette, Evreux-sur-Arbresle 1956-60.

26. Le Corbusier, convent of La Tourette, Evreux-sur-Arbresle 1957-60, plans.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Action Française

Aix-en-Provence

Giulio Carlo Argan

Bergamo

Berlin-Charlottenburg

Besançon

Bridgwater

Briey-en-Forêt

Father Alain Couturier

Raoul Dautry

Dubrovnik

Eugène Claudius-Petit

Father Ledeur

Firminy Vert

Hoddesdon

Edgar Kaufmann

Hubert Lagardelle

Philippe Lamour

La Sarraz

Logis provisoires

Maisons Montées à sec (MAS)

Maisons Murondins

Hélène de Mandrot

Lewis Mumford

Patris II

François de Pierrefeu

Plans

Rezé-les-Nantes

Ernesto Nathan Rogers

Vichy

Vosges

Pierre Winter

Iannis Xenakis

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – October 27, 2011

1. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46.

2. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, exterior view with the filling

station.

3. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague, 1938-46, perspective.

4. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague, 1938-46, detail of the bas-relief at

the entrance.

5. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, airplane and motorcycle

medallions for roof shell.

6. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, shell-shaped support of the

roof.

7. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, study-model for a

decorative detail.

8. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, main stairwell.

9. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Shell Building, The Hague 1938-46, chair.

10. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Spaarbank (Savings Bank), Rotterdam 1942-57.

11. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Spaarbank (Savings Bank), Rotterdam 1942-57, plan.

12. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Spaarbank (Savings Bank), Rotterdam 1942-57, detail of the

façade.

13. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Dam square, Amsterdam 1947, monument by John Raedecker.

14. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Bio sanatorium, Arnhem 1952-60.

15. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Utrecht Insurance offices, Rotterdam 1954-60, perspective

drawing.

16. Jacobus Johannes Pieter Oud, Utrecht Insurance offices, Rotterdam 1954-60, main entrance.

17. Alvar Aalto, Finnish pavilion, New York World Fair, New York 1938-39, plan of the first floor.

18. Alvar Aalto, Finnish pavilion, New York World Fair, New York 1938-39.

19. Alvar Aalto, Baker House, Cambridge, Mass. 1946-49.

20. Alvar Aalto, Baker House, Cambridge, Mass. 1946-49, plan.

21. Alvar Aalto, Town hall, Säynätsalo 1949-52.

22. Alvar Aalto, Town hall, Säynätsalo 1949-52, plan.

23. Alvar Aalto, Helsinki University of Technology, Espoo 1953-66.

24. Alvar Aalto, Enso-Gutzeit Building, Helsinki 1959-62.

25. Alvar Aalto, Enso-Gutzeit Building, Helsinki 1959-62, detail.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

BIM (Bataafsche Import Maatschappij -

Batavian Import Corporation)

Alexander Jacobus Kropholler

Kirk Roosenburg

Gijsbert Friedhoff

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 1, 2011

1. Rotterdam, before and after the bombing.

2. W. G. Witteveen, plan for the reconstruction of Rotterdam, 1941.

3. Cornelis van Traa, plan for the reconstruction of Rotterdam, 1946.

4. Johannes Brinkman and Johannes Van der Vlugt, Van Nelle factory, Rotterdam 1925-31.

5. Johannes Brinkman and Johannes Van der Vlugt, Sonneveld House, Rotterdam 1929-33.

6. Huig Maaskant and Willem Van Tijen, Rotterdam Wholesale Center, Rotterdam, 1947-53.

7. Jo Van der Broek and Jacob Bakema, commercial district “De Lijnbaan”, Rotterdam 1948-53,

perspective view.

8. Jo Van der Broek and Jacob Bakema, commercial district “De Lijnbaan”, Rotterdam 1948-53,

in the 1950s and today.

9. Germany: war destruction of German cities, 1945.

10. Berlin, devastation on Alexandrinestrasse, in the district of Kreuzberg, 1945.

11. Planungskollectiv, Model of the “Collective Plan”, the area of Berlin-Charlottenburg, Berlin

1946.

12. Planungskollectiv, the “Collective Plan”, Berlin 1946, view of the residential areas and the road

system.

13. Walter Moest, Zehlendorf Plan, Berlin 1945-47.

14. Cover of Amerikanische Architektur seit 1947 (American Architecture since 1947), 1951.

15. Egon Eiermann, textile Factory, Blumenberg 1949-51.

16. Hans Schwippert, Federal Parliament building, Bonn 1948-49, view from the assembly room.

17. Lewis Mumford and a group of German architects and planners, Ansonia, N.Y. ca. 1950.

18. Hans Scharoun, Berlin Philharmonic Concert Hall, Berlin 1956-63.

19. Rudolf Schwarz, St. Anne’s Church, Düren 1951-56.

20. Poster for the Nationale Aufbauprogramm showing the buildings on the Weberwiese, Berlin

1952.

21. Hermann Henselmann, project for Stausberger Platz, Berlin 1951.

22. Richard Paulich, Karl-Marx-Allee, Block C, Berlin 1952 and Egon Hartmann, Karl-Marx-Allee,

Block B, Berlin 1952.

23. Ludwig Persius, Villa Illaire, Potsdam 1844-46.

24. Hermann Henselmann, Weberwiese building, Berlin 1950-51 and Kurt W. Leucht, Karl-Marx-

Allee, Blok D, Berlin 1953.

25. Hermann Henselmann at the construction site of the apartment building on the Weberwiese,

painting by Lothar Howald, Berlin 1952.

26. Egon Eiermann and Franz Schwechten, Kaiser-Wilhelm Memorial Church, Berlin 1961-63.

27. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin 1968.

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28. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin 1968, interior.

Names mentioned during the lecture:

W. G. Witteveen

Cornelis van Traa

Cornelis Hendrik van der Leeuw

Brandeburger gate

Alexanderplatz

Karl Friedrich Schinkel

Brigitte Reimann

Franziska Linkerhand

Winfried Georg Sebald

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 3, 2011

1. Poster encouraging production during the Second World War, 1942 and Advertisement for

General Electric, 1943.

2. Albert Kahn Associates, Detroit Tank Arsenal, Detroit, 1941.

3. Acrylic aircraft canopy, 1940s and Plaskon advertisement, 1943.

4. Charles and Ray Eames, plywood leg splint in use and molded-plywood chairs, 1947.

5. Sign erected near Sojourner Truth housing project, 1942.

6. Hugh Stubbins, Housing FWA Division of Defense Housing, Windsor Lock, Conn. 1942.

7. Marcel Breuer, Veterans’ house project A, 1945 and Veterans’ house project B, 1945.

8. Charles and Ray Eames, Case Studies house #8, Pacific Palisades, Calif. 1945-49, exterior

view and elevations.

9. George Howe, Oskar Stonorov, and Louis I. Kahn, Carver Court housing project, Coatsville,

Penn. c. 1942.

10. William Wurster and Charles Dean, Parker Homes, Sacramento, Calif. 1943.

11. Levittown, New York c. 1950.

12. Walter Gropius, Harvard University Graduate Center, Cambridge, Mass. 1948-50.

13. Cover of the book by Josep Lluis Sert Can our cities survive?, 1942.

14. TAC (The Architects’s Collaborative), Back Bay Center, Boston 1953-56.

15. Walter Gropius and TAC, Emery Roth, Pietro Belluschi, Pan Am Building, New York 1958-

1963, model and view.

16. Elizabeth Mock, If You Want to Build a House, 1946, cover and a vignette.

17. Walter Gropius, Gropius House, Lincoln, Mass. 1938.

18. Marcel Breuer and Walter Gropius, Breuer House, Lincoln, Mass. 1939.

19. Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer, Chamberlain House, Wayland, Mass. 1940.

20. Louis I. Kahn, Yale University Art Center, New Haven, Conn. 1951-53.

21. Louis I. Kahn, Yale University Art Center, New Haven, Conn. 1951-53, first floor gallery.

22. Louis I. Kahn, University of Pennsylvania Richards Medical center, Philadelphia 1957-61, detail

and plan.

23. Paul Rudolph, Art and Architecture building, Yale University, New Haven, Conn. 1959-63.

24. Eero Saarinen, MIT Kresge Auditorium, Cambridge, Mass. 1954-55.

25. Eero Saarinen, MIT Kresge Chapel, Cambridge, Mass. 1955-59, external and internal view.

26. Eero Saarinen, TWA Terminal, Idlewild Airport (now John F. Kennedy International Airport),

New York 1956-62.

27. Gordon Bunshaft for SOM (Skidmore, Owings and Merrill), Lever House, New York 1950-52

and Pepsi-Cola Corporation’s World Headquarters, New York 1956-60.

28. Gordon Bunshaft for SOM (Skidmore, Owings and Merrill), Beinecke Library, Yale University,

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New Haven, Conn. 1960-63, exterior and interior views.

Names mentioned during the lecture:

Glen Martin

Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM)

Oak Ridge

Federal Works Agency (FWA)

Federal Security Administration (FSA)

John Entenza

Joseph Hudnut

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 8, 2011

1. Munio Weinraub with members of his Hashomer Hatza’ir youth group on a camping trip, ca.

1923 (Weinraub is on the far right).

2. Weinraub and Mansfeld, Kibbutz unit, 1940.

3. Weinraub and Mansfeld, Kibbutz units, 1949.

4. Lúcio Costa (and others), Ministry of Education and Health, Rio de Janeiro 1937-42, sketch of

the second project and view of the building.

5. Covers of Brazil Builds and Construção Brasileira, 1943.

6. Cover of the catalogue of the second Bienal of São Paulo.

7. Atilio Corrêa Lima, Seaplane station, Santos Dumont Airport, Rio de Janeiro 1943 and Oscar

Niemeyer, Day Nursery, Gavea, Rio de Janeiro 1943.

8. Le Corbusier, Rio de Janeiro’s master plan, 1929.

9. Juan O’Gorman, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo’s Studio, Mexico City 1931-32, drawing of the

Rivera’s part and view of the building.

10. Aquiles Capablanca y Graupera, Tribunal de Cuentas (Office of the Comptroller), Havana

1952-54.

11. Antonio Bonet, Berlingieri House, Punta Ballena (Uruguay) 1946-47.

12. Martín Vegas Pacheco and José Miguel Galia, Polar Building, Caracas 1952-54.

13. Wallace Harrison and Max Abramovitz, American Embassy, Havana 1952-53.

14. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, model of the Ron Bacardi y Compania Administration building,

Santiago de Cuba 1957-58.

15. Hannes Meyer, project for the Manzana de Corpus Christi, 1946-47.

16. Mario Pani, Miguel Alemán Residential Complex, Mexico City 1949.

17. Guillermo Bermúdez, Unidad de Habitación, Caracas 1951-54.

18. Juan O’Gorman and others, University City, Library, Mexico City 1952.

19. Luis Barragán, Barragán’s studio with a photomural of El Pedregal, Mexico City c. 1950.

20. Luis Barragán, Barragán’s house at El Pedregal, Mexico City 1947-48.

21. Lúcio Costa, Nova Cintra, Bristol, and Nova Caledonia Buildings, Rio de Janeiro 1947-53,

sketches.

22. Lúcio Costa, Nova Cintra, Bristol, and Nova Caledonia Buildings, Rio de Janeiro 1947-53.

23. Oscar Niemeyer, Sketch of proposed buildings, Pampulha 1940.

24. Oscar Niemeyer, Casino, Pampulha 1942, entrance and Casa do Baile (Dancing Hall),

Pampulha 1942, entrance.

25. Oscar Niemeyer, Chapel of São Francisco da Assis, Pampulha 1943.

26. Lúcio Costa (and others), Ministry of Education and Health, Rio de Janeiro 1937-42, interior

with view of azulejos by Cândido Portinari and example of azulejos.

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27. Oscar Niemeyer, Praça dos Três Poderes (Square of the Three Powers), Brasília 1958-60.

28. Lúcio Costa, Master plan of Brasilia, 1957.

29. Oscar Niemeyer, Palace of the Supreme Court, Brasilia 1958-60.

30. Oscar Niemeyer, Cathedral, Brasilia 1959-70, interior view.

Names mentioned during the lecture:

genius loci

Silesia

Bielsko/Bilitz

Josef Albers

Al Mansfeld

Haifa

Kibbutz

MES - Ministério da Educação e da Saúde

Getúlio Vargas

Gustavo Capanema

Philip Goodwin

George Kidder Smith

Ouro Preto

Affonso Reidy

Nelson Rockefeller

Creole Petroleum Company

Office of the Coordinator of Inter-American

Affairs (CIAA)

Fundação Matarazzo

Rosalie Mc Kenna

Pérez Jiménez

Banco Obrero

Ciudad Universitaria

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

(UNAM)

Enrique del Moral

Salvador Ortega

David Alfaro Siqueiros

Parco Guinle

brise-soleil

Roberto Burle-Marx

Minas Gerais

Belo Horizonte

Juscelino Kubitschek

azulejo

Cândido Portinari

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 10, 2011

1. Le Corbusier, “La main ouverte” (The Open Hand), Chandigarh 1951-65 (conception), 1985

(realization).

2. Le Corbusier, Plan of the city of Chandigarh, 1951.

3. Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret, Sector 17, Chandigarh 1954-57 (conception), 1960-2006

(realization).

4. Pierre Jeanneret, Standardized housing, Chandigarh c. 1956, study model and realized house.

5. Le Corbusier, Secretariat, Chandigarh 1953-62.

6. Le Corbusier, Assembly Hall, Chandigarh 1953-63.

7. Le Corbusier, Assembly Hall, Chandigarh 1953-63, view form the public space.

8. Le Corbusier, High Court, Chandigarh 1952-56.

9. Le Corbusier, Assembly Hall, Chandigarh 1953-63, interior view and plan.

10. Le Corbusier, High Court, Chandigarh 1952-56, views of the internal ramp.

11. Le Corbusier, High Court, Chandigarh 1952-56, detail.

12. Le Corbusier, High Court, Chandigarh 1952-56, detail.

13. Le Corbusier, Villa Chimanbhai, Ahmedabad 1953, model.

14. Le Corbusier, Millowners Association building, Ahmedabad 1953-56.

15. Le Corbusier, Villa Shodan, Ahmedabad 1953-56 and Villa Sarabhai, Ahmedabad 1953-56.

16. A.R. Prabhawalkar and Aditya Prakash, Chandigarh College of Architecture, Chandigarh 1961-

64.

17. Shiv Nath Prasad, Hotel Akbar, New Delhi 1965-69.

18. Group portrait at Le Corbusier's atelier, Rue de Sèvres, Paris 1952, Balkrishna V. Doshi at the

centre.

19. Balkrishna V. Doshi, Premabahi Hall, Ahmedabad 1956-72, preliminary sketch and the realized

building.

20. Balkrishna V. Doshi, Institute of Indology, Ahmedabad 1957-62.

21. Balkrishna V. Doshi, ATIRA and PRL low cost housing, Ahmedabad 1957-60.

22. ATBAT-Afrique, Carrières Centrales, Casablanca, c. 1953.

23. Louis I. Kahn, National Assembly building, Dhaka 1962-83.

24. Louis I. Kahn, National Assembly building, Dhaka 1962-83, two views of the prayer hall.

25. Louis I. Kahn, Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad 1962-74.

26. Jeet Lal Mahotra, High School, Chandigarh 1959-60.

27. Balkrishna V. Doshi, Architect’s Studio (Sangath), Ahmedabad 1979-81.

28. Balkrishna V. Doshi, Architect’s Studio (Sangath), Ahmedabad 1979-81, interior view.

29. Balkrishna V. Doshi, Husain-Doshi Gufa, Ahmedabad 1992-95.

30. Stupa, Sanchi (near Bopal, Madhya Pradesh) 5th century BC-1st century AD.

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31. Charles Correa, Gandhi Smarak Sangrahalaya, Ahmedabad 1958-63.

32. Charles Correa, Kovalam Beach Hotel, Kovalam 1969-74.

Names mentioned during the lecture:

Punjab

Lahore

Albert Mayer

Matthew Nowicki

Maxwell Fry

Jane Drew

Jawaharlal Nehru

Simla

Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi

Chinubhai Chimanbhai

35, Rue de Sèvres

ATIRA (Ahmedabad Textile Industry’s

Research Association)

PRL (Physical Research Laboratory)

ATBAT (Atelier des Bâtisseurs)

Vladimir Bodiansky

Georges Candilis

Shadrach Woods

Rawalpindi

Islamabad

Karachi

Bangladesh

Public Works Department (PWD)

Mazharul Islam

M. F. Husain

stupa

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 17, 2011

1. The bombing of Hiroshima, 6 August 1945.

2. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Dymaxion House, 1927-28, model, elevation and plan.

3. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Prototype of the Dymaxion-Wichita House, 1937 (model at the

Ford Museum, Dearborn, Mich.).

4. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Twin Dymaxion Unit, 1940.

5. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Proposed neighborhood of Dymaxion houses, 1940s.

6. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Prototype of the Dymaxion Wichita House, 1946, interior.

7. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Geodesic dome for the US Marines, 1954.

8. Richard Buckminster Fuller, Geodesic Dome at the Moscow Trade Fair, Moscow 1959.

9. Richard Buckminster Fuller, US pavilion at the Expo 67, Montréal 1967.

10. Richard Buckminster Fuller, US pavilion at the Expo 67, Montréal 1967, interior and 1976 fire.

11. Richard Buckminster Fuller, proposal for a Geodesic dome over Manhattan, 1960.

12. Richard Buckminster Fuller, “Cloud Nine floating Geodesic cities”, 1960s.

13. Le Corbusier, Philips Pavilion, Brussels 1958.

14. Le Corbusier, Philips Pavilion, Brussels 1958, construction.

15. Cedric Price, Lord Snowdon, and Frank Newby, London Zoo Aviary, London 1962-64.

16. Rolf Gutrob and Frei Otto, Pavilion of West Germany and Macy DuBois, Ontario Pavilion, Expo

67, Montréal 1967.

17. Frei Otto and others, Main Sports Complex, Olympic Park, Munich 1967-72.

18. Jørn Utzon, Sydney Opera House, Sydney 1957-73.

19. Eero Saarinen, IBM manufacturing and training facilities, Rochester, Minn. 1958.

20. Le Corbusier, Olivetti electronic computing center, Rho 1961-63.

21. Cedric Price, Fun Palace, London 1959-61.

22. Cedric Price, Fun Palace, London 1959-61, interior perspective.

23. Cedric Price, project for the Potteries Thinkbelt, Staffordshire 1964-66.

24. Cedric Price, project for the Potteries Thinkbelt, Staffordshire 1964-66, plan of desire lines-

physical and mental exchange.

25. Cedric Price, Interaction Centre, London 1971-78.

26. Cedric Price, Interaction Centre, London 1971-78, plan.

27. Santiago Calatrava, Lusitania Bridge, Mérida 1991.

28. Norman Foster Associates, Viaduct, Millau 2001-04.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Hiroshima

Nagasaki

Wichita-Beech Aircraft

Quonset

DEW (Distant Early Warning) line

Black Mountain College

Jeffrey Lindsay

Kenneth Snelson

Marcel Lods

Edgar Varèse

“Poème Électronique”

Joan Littlewood

Norbert Wiener

Gordon Pask

Richard Hoggart

Northern Staffordshire

Kentish Town

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 22, 2011

1. Jean Prouvé, prototype for a temporary house, 1945 ca. (re-assembled at the 2000 Venice

Biennale).

2. Cover of Science et Vie, 1950 ca.

3. General Electric Wall Refrigerator Advertisement, mid-1950s.

4. The “Cornell-Kitchen”, 1952, from Glenn H. Beyer, The Cornell Kitchen (1952).

5. Richard Nixon and Nikita Khrushchev at the American Exhibition, Moscow 1959.

6. Victor Gruen, Aerial view of the completed Southdale Shopping Center, 1956.

7. Victor Gruen, Aerial view of the completed Southdale Shopping Center, 1956, interior.

8. Eduardo Paolozzi, “Real Gold”, 1949.

9. Alison and Peter Smithson, The House of the Future, 1956, view across living room and patio.

10. Peter Smithson, Eduardo Paolozzi, Alison Smithson, Nigel Henderson, from the catalogue

"This Is Tomorrow" (design by Edward Wright), 1956.

11. Michael Webb, project for a Furniture Manufacturers Association Headquarters, High

Wycombe 1957-58.

12. Peter Cook (Archigram), Plug-In City, Maximum Pressure Area, 1962-64.

13. Peter Cook (Archigram), Plug-In City, Maximum Pressure Area, 1962-64, section.

14. Archigram, “Instant City” progression, 1968.

15. Archigram, Capsule Pier, 1965.

16. David Green (Archigram), Living Pod, 1966.

17. Cover of Archigram 4 cover illustration, 1964 and article from Archigram, 1964.

18. Archigram, “Instant City visits Bournemouth,” 1968.

19. Renzo Piano and Richard Rogers, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris 1971-77.

20. Richard Rogers, Lloyds building, London 1978-86, interior and exterior views.

21. Cover of Italy: The New Domestic Landscape (1972).

22. Superstudio, “A Difficult Childhood for the Italian Design”, 1970s and “The Continuous

Monument: New York Extrusion”, 1969.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Whitechapel Gallery

Archigram

Warren Chalk

Peter Cook

Dennis Crompton

David Green

Ron Herron

Michael Webb

Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA)

Folkestone

Stanley Kubrick

George Dunning

Terry Gilliam

Emilio Ambasz

Hochschüle für Gestaltung, Ulm

Tomás Maldonado

Nueva Visión

Adolfo Natalini

Cristiano Toraldo di Francia

Roberto Magris

Gian Piero Frassinelli

Alessandro Magris

architettura radicale

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – November 29, 2011

1. Superstudio, “The Continuous Monument”, 1969.

2. The Greater London Plan, 1944.

3. Patrick Abercrombie, West Ham housing, London 1945.

4. Tecton, Penguin Pool, Regent’s Park Zoo, London 1933-35.

5. James Stirling and James Gowan, Ham Common Flats, London 1955-58.

6. James Stirling and James Gowan, Leicester University Engineering building, Leicester

1959-63; James Stirling, Cambridge University History Faculty building, Cambridge 1964-

66.

7. Denys Lasdun, Norfolk Terrace halls of residence, University of East Anglia, Norwich 1962-

68.

8. Denys Lasdun, National Theatre, London 1967-76.

9. Van der Broek en Bakema, “Growing house” project, 1961 and Pampus Plan project,

Amsterdam 1965.

10. Van der Broek en Bakema, Auditorium Building, TU Delft, Delft 1959-66.

11. Yona Friedman, African proposals, 1959.

12. Yona Friedman, La Ville Spatiale (Spatial City), 1958-65, railroad route.

13. Le Corbusier, project for the Venice Hospital, Venice 1964, view of the model.

14. Aldo van Eyck, Municipal Orphanage, Amsterdam 1955-60.

15. Kenzo Tange, Tokyo bay project, 1960.

16. Arata Isozaki, Joint Core System project, Tokyo 1960.

17. Kenzo Tange, Yamanashi Press and Radio Centre, Kofu 1961-67 and Kisho Kurokawa,

Nagakin Capsule Hotel, Tokyo 1977.

18. John Andrews, University of Toronto Scarborough College, Toronto 1963-65, aerial view.

19. John Andrews, University of Toronto Scarborough College, Toronto 1963-65, a classroom.

20. Arthur Erickson, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, B.C. 1963-65.

21. Jean Faugeron with Papineau, LeBlanc, Gérin-Lajoie and Durand, French Pavilion at Expo

67, Montreal 1967.

22. Moshe Safdie, Habitat, Montréal 1964-67.

23. Montréal City Planning Department, Guy Metro Station, Montréal 1962.

24. Montréal City Planning Department, East-West expressway, Montréal 1963.

25. Gerhard Kallmann, Noel McKinnell, and Edward Knowles, Boston City Hall, Boston 1962-

68.

26. Wallace Harrison, Albany South Mall, Albany NY 1973-77.

27. Wallace K. Harrison, Max Abramovitz, Philip Johnson, and Eero Saarinen, Lincoln Center

for the Performing Arts, New York 1957-66.

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28. Wallace Harrison, Albany South Mall, Albany NY 1973-77.

29. Reyner Banham, video still from the BBC documentary “One pair of eyes” (1972).

30. Reyner Banham, Los Angeles: The Architecture of Four Ecologies, 1971.

Names mentioned during the lecture:

London County Council (LCC)

Patrick Abercrombie

J. C. Forshaw

Berthold Lubetkin

Robbins Report

Warwick

Lancaster

Kent

Sussex

Essex

York

East Anglia

Johannes Van der Broek

Jacob Bakema

Dubrovnik

Team X

Marshall McLuhan

Lethbridge University

Coulthard Institute

Nikolaus Pevsner

Sigmund Freud

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – December 1, 2011

1. BBPR, Torre Velasca. Milan 1958, view of the building and a sketch with a view from inside.

2. Carlo Scarpa, Querini Stampalia Foundation, Venice 1961-68.

3. Ignazio Gardella, Casa alle Zattere, Venice 1954-58 and Roberto Gabetti and Aimaro Isola,

Bottega d’Erasmo, Turin 1953-56.

4. Giancarlo De Carlo, Faculty of Education at the Free University of Urbino, Urbino 1968-76.

5. Plan for the Historical Center, Bologna 1969.

6. Aldo Rossi, Gallaratese Apartment Building, Milan 1969-73.

7. Aldo Rossi, Gallaratese Apartment Building, Milan 1969-73, detail.

8. Covers of books The Architecture of the City (1982) and A Scientific Autobiography (1981) by

Aldo Rossi.

9. Aldo Rossi, “Teatro del Mondo”, Venice 1979.

10. Aldo Rossi, Various graphic works, late 1970s.

11. Cover of Aldo Rossi in America: 1976 to 1979, 1979.

12. Peter Eisenman, House II, Hardwick, Vt. 1969-70, external and axonometric views.

13. Aldo Rossi, Housing Units at La Villette, Paris 1990 and Schützenstrasse Housing Unit, Berlin

1995.

14. Robert Venturi, Vanna Venturi House, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia 1959-64.

15. Robert Venturi, Vanna Venturi House, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia 1959-64, plan.

16. Robert Venturi with Cope e Lippincot, Guild House, Philadelphia 1961.

17. Image from the book Learning from Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural

Form by Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour (1972).

18. Robert Venturi and John Rauch, Benjamin Franklin Court, Philadelphia 1972.

19. Philip Johnson and John Burgee, ATT Building, New York 1978-82.

20. Philip Johnson and John Burgee, PPG Place, Pittsburgh, Penn. 1979-84.

21. Charles Moore, Piazza d’Italia, New Orleans 1978-79.

22. Michael Graves, Public Services Building, Portland 1980-82.

23. Léon Krier, Mayer House, Bagnono 1974.

24. Léon Krier, “Atlantis”, Tenerife (Canary Islands) 1987-88, inauguration ceremony and

panoramic view (paintings by Carl Laubin).

25. James Stirling, Neue Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart 1984.

26. James Stirling, Neue Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart 1984.

27. Rafael Moneo, National Museum of Roman Art, Mérida 1980-86.

28. Franco Stella, Berliner Stadtschloss (City Palace), Berlin 2008, competition project.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Gianluigi Banfi

Ludovico Belgiojoso

Enrico Peressutti

Ernesto Rogers

Domus

Casabella

preesistenze ambientali

Istituto Universitario di Architettura di Venezia

(IUAV)

Architectural Review

Istituto Autonomo Case Popolari (IACP)

casa a ballatoio

Graham Foundation for Advanced Studies in

the Fine Arts

Institute for Architecture and Urban Studies

Peter Eisenman

Carlo Cattaneo

Marcel Poëte

Introduction à l’urbanisme. L’évolutions des

villes, la leçon de l’antiquité

Maurice Halbwachs

La mémoire collective

La topographie légendaire des Evangiles en

Terre Sainte. Étude de mémoire collective

Max Planck

Arthur Drexler

Oppositions

October

Skyline

Leo Castelli

Max Protech Gallery

Michael Graves

John Hejduk

Richard Meier

Charles Gwathmey

Internationale Bauausstellung (IBA)

Jean Labatut

Donald Drew Egbert

Graham Foundation

Paul Cope

H. Mather Lippincot

John Rauch

Denise Scott Brown

Kevin Lynch

Helga and Hans-Jurgen Müller

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AH 398 -- 20th Century Architecture (Prof. Paolo Scrivano) – December 6, 2011

1. Daniel Libeskind, Jewish Museum, Berlin 1989-2001.

2. Daniel Libeskind, Jewish Museum, Berlin 1989-2001, functional scheme.

3. Daniel Libeskind, Jewish Museum, Berlin 1989-2001, the underground gallery and the

Holocaust Tower.

4. Daniel Libeskind, Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto 2004-2007, external and internal views.

5. Advertisement by the Royal Ontario Museum about the museum's renovation works, from the

Globe and Mail, February 2004.

6. Zaha Hadid, MAXXI, Museum of 21st Century Art, Rome 2009..

7. Frank Gehry, Gehry House, Santa Monica, Calif. 1979-87.

8. Frank Gehry, Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao 1991-97.

9. Frank Gehry, Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles 1997-2003.

10. Frank Gehry, Walt Disney Concert Hall, Los Angeles 1997-2003, detail.

11. Cesar Pelli, Petronas Towers, Kuala Lumpur 1992-99.

12. Tadao Ando, Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth, Tex. 1996-2002.

13. Peter Zumthor, Hotel Therme, Vals 1996.

14. Will Alsop, Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto 2004.

15. Frank Gehry, Ray and Maria Stata Center, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge,

Mass. 2004.

16. Chart comparing different economic factors in the United States, Australia, Indonesia and Sri

Lanka [from Paolo Tombesi, “Architetti on line a 1 dollaro e 59 l’ora”, Il Giornale dell’architettura

1, 2 (Dicembre 2002), 1, 10].

17. Norman Foster, HSBC Headquarters, Hong Kong 1979-82.

18. Norman Foster, Swiss Re Headquarters, London 1997-2004.

19. Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, Caixa Forum, Madrid 2009.

20. Jacques Herzog and Pierre de Meuron, Caixa Forum, Madrid 2009, details of the façade’s

surface.

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Names mentioned during the lecture:

Computer-Aided Design (CAD)

Hal Foster