Lego villa savoye - 21014 Instruction Manual

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Though a pioneer of modern architecture, Le Corbusier 
was more than just an architect. He was also a famous 
writer, painter and urbanist, and the designer of some 
of the most iconic furniture of the 20th century. In a 
career that spanned five decades he created a body 
of work that is still revered and respected today. 
He was born Charles-Édouard Jeanneret on October 6, 
1887 in La Chaux-de-Fonds, a small city in northwestern 
Switzerland only five kilometers (3.1 miles) from the 
French border. His father, Georges Edouard Jeanneret, 
was a watch engraver and enameller, while his mother, 
Marie Charlotte Amélie Jeanneret-Perret, was a music 
teacher. From an early age Le Corbusier was attracted 
to the visual arts and studied at the local Art School.
In 1907 he traveled to Paris, France, and worked 
in the office of Auguste Perret, the French pioneer 
of reinforced concrete. By 1908 he was studying 
architecture in Vienna, Austria, with Josef Hoffman, 
before moving to Berlin, Germany, in 1910 to work for 
the architect Peter Behrens. It is believed that during 
his stay in Berlin Le Corbusier met both Mies van der 
Rohe and Walter Gropius.
At the outbreak of World War I, Le Corbusier returned 
to Switzerland to teach at his old school. It was during 
this period that he also worked on the theoretical 
architectural studies that would become the foundation 
for his future work. On returning to Paris he opened 
his own architectural practice with his cousin Pierre 
Jeanneret, and by 1920 had adopted his pseudonym 
of Le Corbusier. Over the next decade, Le Corbusier 
further refined his theories on Purism, including his 
famous “Five Points” of architecture, and would put 
them into practice building a series of modernist villas 
in and around Paris. This period culminated in the 
design and construction of Villa Savoye.
Throughout the 1930s and after World War II, Le 
Corbusier expanded his ideas on urban planning, and 
attempted to realize his work on projects in Marseilles, 
France and in a new capital city that was being built for 
the states of Punjab and Haryana in India.
When Le Corbusier died on August 27, 1965, he left 
behind a substantial body of work that spanned five 
decades, including journals, books, iconic furniture 
designs and ground-breaking architecture such as 
Villa Savoye.
Le Corbusier
© Fondation Le Corbusier
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