This
prototype house was intended for mass production for urban living. Thus, to be easily
produced and replicated in linear series, fabricated and assembled similar to
machines. In essence, Maison Citrohan was to work efficiently like an
automobile and function effectively as a machine for living.
This
three storey maisonette unit comprised of parking, garage and boiler room at
ground level. Second floor double height living and dining space gets flooded with
light by a double height window that was manufactured with industrial glass. Attached
is garden space. A large balcony wraps around the front and sides on the first
floor level. The Kitchen and maid’s room are at the rear. Some sleeping accommodations
are on the gallery of the living room which is accessed by an internal spiral
stair. The roof level encompasses sun terrace at the front and bedrooms and
bathrooms at the rear.
This
house was key in developing “5 points of new architecture” below. These were later
repeated by Le Corbusier.
1.
Pilotis
2.
The Free Plan
3.
The Free Façade
4.
Ribbon windows
5.
The roof garden
Each
unit was to be stacked vertically or horizontally to create small housing
blocks, planned for standardization but with flexibility for mass production.
Domino structural system is applied in reinforced concrete construction. The
cylindrical posts or pilotis frees the ground plane, frees the external walls
to be non-load bearing walls. Thus frees the façade, allowing variation in
location and flexible sizes of windows.
Spatial
continuum of above elements, pure form and volume, rectangular floor plan, aesthetically
sparse interior, built-in furniture other than chairs and tables are few main
characteristics of this house. Movable furniture were made with tubular frames.
Interior and exterior displays modernist white stucco walls. Roof garden
connects inhabitants directly with nature.
Sources:
Max Risselada, Raumplan versus Plan libreed (Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2008 p.)
Le Corbusier, Toward An Architecture
http://faculty.baruch.cuny.edu/jmaciuika/documents/08%20Le%20Corbusier.pdf
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