Auguste Perret 1874-1954
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Transcript of Auguste Perret 1874-1954
Auguste Perret1874-1954
A pioneer in reinforced concrete construction.
The chronological contextof Perret’s architectureChronological context in Architecture
- Modernism to Postmodernism -1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
First generation
modernists
Second generation modernists
Third generation
modernistsThe pioneers of modernism.
They each treated form, space,
structure, materials and ornament in
novel ways.
These were the architects of ‘high
modernism’- the universal
International Style- as well as the
fashionable Art Deco period.
These were the architects of
Postmodernism.
They reacted against the orthodoxy of
high modernism.
Peter Behrens - Berlin Walter Gropius Frank Gehry
Auguste Perret - Paris Le Corbusier Philip Johnson
C. R. Mackintosh - Glasgow Mies van der Rohe Charles Moore
Otto Wagner - Vienna Gerrit Reitveld I. M. Pei
Adolf Loos - Vienna William Van Allen Michael Greaves
Louis Sullivan - Chicago Napier Art Deco architects Louis Kahn
Frank Lloyd Wright - Chicago and mid-western states of USA Robert Venturi
The context of his architecture
Geographical context:
Auguste Perret was a French architect based in Paris. He worked in partnership with his brother Gustave Perret.
Paris
Context continued…Historical and social context:
Auguste Perret was an important pioneer of the modern movement. His most significant buildings were constructed in reinforced concrete in the years between 1902 to 1922.
He was the youngest of the first generation of modernists being only 28 when he built his first major building, his family-owned apartments at 25 bis Rue Franklin, Paris in 1902. Like Frank Lloyd Wright in America, he had a long career and died well into the 1950s when modernism was at its height.
Perret studied for a brief time in the academic Ecole des Beaux Arts, the conservative, classical-revival design school of the period. But he left this formal architectural training early to work with his father and brother in the family’s concrete construction business. These two early experiences shaped two stylistic characteristics of Perret’s work:1) His use of classical proportion and symmetry2) His functional approach to design and construction in reinforced concrete. Apartments, 25 bis Rue Franklin, Paris,
1902.
Context continued… Auguste Perret was one of the very first
architects to give a modern architectural expression to reinforced concrete. Modern cement-based concrete was patented in 1867 by the French gardener Joseph Monier, but during the Victorian period it remained hidden behind stone façades and veneers because it was considered a crude building material. In the 1890s Francois Hennebique introduced the trebeated structural system of reinforced concreting, but it was with Auguste Perret that this new, industrial material became expressed architecturally on the facade of buildings.
Up till 1908 the young Le Corbusier worked in Perret’s architectural practice. From him Le Corbusier learned about:● using reinforced concrete to create skeletal structures for building● using classical proportions and composition in modern design● using standardised components in design and
construction● a geometric approach to design and the flat
roof as living space.
Hennebique’s system, developed in 1892,
for structural continuity in reinforcing
concrete posts, beams and slabs.
PerretLe Corbusier
Stylistic features of Perret’s buildings
As a pioneer of the architecturally expressed reinforced concrete frame, Perret’s buildings feature large areas of glazing on the non-weight-bearing walls. Internal spaces are open and generous and often lit by skylights.
Perret’s buildings are often described as ‘stripped classical’. They have the symmetrical, balanced and harmonious proportions and rhythms of classical architecture, often with abstract references to columns and cornices. He stripped away the ornament and detailing indulged in by the Beaux Arts classical-revival architects of the day. These qualities give his buildings formality and dignity.
Perret’s buildings have a rational functionalism. Concrete is left raw, though sometimes with coloured or patterned elements to them. His designs arose out of modern functional considerations rather than aesthetic ones.
The significant Perret building.
Apartments, 25 bis Rue Franklin, Paris, 1902
Stylistic features of Perret’s Rue Franklin Apartments
The non-weight-bearing walls are ex-
pressed as slightly-recessed infill panels
of floral-patterned ceramic tile.At street level the Perrets had their architecture
studio. This large, open space exposed the uprights of the
concreteframe and became forerunners of Le Corbusier’s
pilotis.
U-shaped front façade inspired by statu-
tory light courts at the rear of Parisian
apartment buildings.The trabeated, rectangular concrete
frame throughout building is notexposed directly, but is expressed
bythe plain tiles on the façade.
The rectangular frame allows for roof terraces on setbacks of upper apartments.
Stylistic features of Perret’s Rue Franklin Apartments
At the sixth storey apartment a reinforced concrete
frame breaks free of the wall surface. This looks forward
to the airy, transparent effects of the International Style.
Glazed openings are as large as zoning laws allowed.
The concrete frame allows for thin wall partitions and
maximum interior space.
A full appreciation of the building’s form can be gained
only by moving across its entire façade. This experiential
dimension to architectural form and space is modernist.
Dining room
Drawing room
Bedroom