documents textuels
Quantité:
13 file
ARCH242937
Description:
Vidler well opener - drafts of article by Anthony Vidler Leslie Dick, "Nature Near" - drafts Lavin - drafts of article by Sylvia Lavin Dimendberg - drafts of article by Edward Dimendberg Rugoff - drafts of article by Ralph Rugoff Vidler "X" - drafts of article by Anthony Vidler Diller - drafts of article by Elizabeth Diller Urbach - drafts of article by Henry Urbach Appadurai - drafts of article by Arjun Appadurai Lorne Falk Letter from Hong Kong - drafts, clipping Pascucci ANY 18 - drafts of article by Ernest Pascucci, images deco: Project ANY 18 (Pallas House) - drafts of article by Mark Goulthorpe Discussion - transcripts of In ANY Event Symposium
1997
Anyone Corporation, Article Texts, 1997
Actions:
ARCH242937
Description:
Vidler well opener - drafts of article by Anthony Vidler Leslie Dick, "Nature Near" - drafts Lavin - drafts of article by Sylvia Lavin Dimendberg - drafts of article by Edward Dimendberg Rugoff - drafts of article by Ralph Rugoff Vidler "X" - drafts of article by Anthony Vidler Diller - drafts of article by Elizabeth Diller Urbach - drafts of article by Henry Urbach Appadurai - drafts of article by Arjun Appadurai Lorne Falk Letter from Hong Kong - drafts, clipping Pascucci ANY 18 - drafts of article by Ernest Pascucci, images deco: Project ANY 18 (Pallas House) - drafts of article by Mark Goulthorpe Discussion - transcripts of In ANY Event Symposium
documents textuels
Quantité:
13 file
1997
photographies
AP140.S2.SS1.D23.P16
Description:
views of design development, presentation and publication drawings, and views of drawings (not otherwise present in the project documents), including a sketch axonometric showing an alternative design for the glazing of the stairs of the laboratories tower block, two plan obliques for an early design, and a diagrammatic plan and elevations for the workshop roof; includes views of a caricature of the Leicester University Engineering Building as a ship and a view of a letter from the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leicester, T. A. F. Noble, to James Stirling, dated 19th February 1964, concerning an article in the magazine 'New Statesman' by Reyner Banham on the Engineering Building
1959 or after and 1964
Views of design development, presentation and publication drawings
Actions:
AP140.S2.SS1.D23.P16
Description:
views of design development, presentation and publication drawings, and views of drawings (not otherwise present in the project documents), including a sketch axonometric showing an alternative design for the glazing of the stairs of the laboratories tower block, two plan obliques for an early design, and a diagrammatic plan and elevations for the workshop roof; includes views of a caricature of the Leicester University Engineering Building as a ship and a view of a letter from the Vice-Chancellor of the University of Leicester, T. A. F. Noble, to James Stirling, dated 19th February 1964, concerning an article in the magazine 'New Statesman' by Reyner Banham on the Engineering Building
photographies
1959 or after and 1964
documents textuels
Quantité:
15 file
ARCH242906
Description:
Scott, Critic @ Large - drafts of article by Felicity Scott Kwinter FFE - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter Vinken - drafts of article by Gerhrad Vinken Malmo - drafts of article by Jane B. Malmo Eisenman - drafts of text by Peter Eisenman Puglia - drafts of article by Salvatore Puglia Barck - drafts of article by SImone Barck Haverkamp - drafts of article by Anselm Haverkamp Jean-Philippe Antoine - drafts Baldwin - drafts of article by Sandy Baldwin Komar & Melamid - drafts of article by Vitaly Komar and Alexander melamid (reprint) Mike Kelley, Educational - drafts Silva - Letter from Bogota - drafts of article by Armando Silva Carol Jacobs - drafts Haverkamp on Jacobs - drafts of article by Anselm Haverkamp
1996
Drafts of articles
Actions:
ARCH242906
Description:
Scott, Critic @ Large - drafts of article by Felicity Scott Kwinter FFE - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter Vinken - drafts of article by Gerhrad Vinken Malmo - drafts of article by Jane B. Malmo Eisenman - drafts of text by Peter Eisenman Puglia - drafts of article by Salvatore Puglia Barck - drafts of article by SImone Barck Haverkamp - drafts of article by Anselm Haverkamp Jean-Philippe Antoine - drafts Baldwin - drafts of article by Sandy Baldwin Komar & Melamid - drafts of article by Vitaly Komar and Alexander melamid (reprint) Mike Kelley, Educational - drafts Silva - Letter from Bogota - drafts of article by Armando Silva Carol Jacobs - drafts Haverkamp on Jacobs - drafts of article by Anselm Haverkamp
documents textuels
Quantité:
15 file
1996
documents textuels, photographies
Quantité:
15 file
ARCH242914
Description:
Nina Last (book) Review of White Walls Wilson - drafts of article by Mabel O. Wilson Kolbowski - correspondence regarding article by Silvia Kolbowski Bloomer (4000) - drafts of article by Jennifer Bloomer Vanstiphout, on Meier at The Hague - drafts of article by Wouter Vanstiphout Denis Ortiz, Jack's Underground - drafts Linder - drafts of article by Mark Linder Apter, Morocco in B/W - drafts of article by Emily Apter [Ernest] Pascucci, "White Forms, Forms of Whiteness" Cohen - article by Jean-Louis Cohen and Monique Eleb Appadurai - article by Arjun Appadurai Kwinter - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter, correspondence Nelson - drafts of article by Steven Nelson, includes Guggenheim publicity kits with 8 photographs Browser Letter from Black Mountain College - drafts of article by Steven Browser Jazz Responses - includes Letters from New Orleans Images (5 photo contact prints)
1996
Article texts, correspondence, photos
Actions:
ARCH242914
Description:
Nina Last (book) Review of White Walls Wilson - drafts of article by Mabel O. Wilson Kolbowski - correspondence regarding article by Silvia Kolbowski Bloomer (4000) - drafts of article by Jennifer Bloomer Vanstiphout, on Meier at The Hague - drafts of article by Wouter Vanstiphout Denis Ortiz, Jack's Underground - drafts Linder - drafts of article by Mark Linder Apter, Morocco in B/W - drafts of article by Emily Apter [Ernest] Pascucci, "White Forms, Forms of Whiteness" Cohen - article by Jean-Louis Cohen and Monique Eleb Appadurai - article by Arjun Appadurai Kwinter - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter, correspondence Nelson - drafts of article by Steven Nelson, includes Guggenheim publicity kits with 8 photographs Browser Letter from Black Mountain College - drafts of article by Steven Browser Jazz Responses - includes Letters from New Orleans Images (5 photo contact prints)
documents textuels, photographies
Quantité:
15 file
1996
DR1990:0056
Description:
- This watercolour rendering depicts a welcome arch which spans the intersection of two streets. The arch is composed of a large central groin vaulted archway and four smaller groin vaulted archways. The central archway is supported by four compound piers and is surmounted by a dome on a drum. The smaller archways which are surmounted by turrets, span the sidewalks at the street corners and are each supported by a compound pier and three columns. The structure is embellished with Gothic-inspired features such as blind tracery and pointed arches as well as shields, including two inscribed with the letter "L", flags, floral garlands, the British royal coat of arms, a sheaf of wheat and possibly lights. Staffage indicates the large scale of the arch.
architecture temporaire
16 May 1879
Perspective for a temporary welcome arch for the visit of the Marquess of Lorne and Princess Louise to Toronto, September 1879
Actions:
DR1990:0056
Description:
- This watercolour rendering depicts a welcome arch which spans the intersection of two streets. The arch is composed of a large central groin vaulted archway and four smaller groin vaulted archways. The central archway is supported by four compound piers and is surmounted by a dome on a drum. The smaller archways which are surmounted by turrets, span the sidewalks at the street corners and are each supported by a compound pier and three columns. The structure is embellished with Gothic-inspired features such as blind tracery and pointed arches as well as shields, including two inscribed with the letter "L", flags, floral garlands, the British royal coat of arms, a sheaf of wheat and possibly lights. Staffage indicates the large scale of the arch.
architecture temporaire
documents textuels
Quantité:
12 file
ARCH241912
Description:
Dear Reader #13 Andrew Benjamin - drafts Saint-Amand - drafts of Pierre Saint-Amand's review of Allen S. Weiss's Mirrors of Infinity: The Franch Formal Garden and 17th-Century Metaphysics (1995) Farès el-Dahdah - drafts of Letter from Abu Dhabi Ole Bouman - drafts Galiano / Davidson - drafts of article by Luis-Fernandez-Galiano and Cynthia Davidson Kwinter FFE 13 - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter Teyssot - drafts and translations of article by Georges Teyssot Tate Interview - transcript of Richard Burdett and Nicholas Serota interviewed by Cynthia Davidson Keller - drafts of Ed Keller's review of Shusaku Arakawa and Madeline Gins' Architecture: Sites of Reversible Destiny (1995) Herzog Interview - transcript of Jacques Herzog interviewed by Cynthia Davidson Tate Project Descriptions
1995
Drafts of articles
Actions:
ARCH241912
Description:
Dear Reader #13 Andrew Benjamin - drafts Saint-Amand - drafts of Pierre Saint-Amand's review of Allen S. Weiss's Mirrors of Infinity: The Franch Formal Garden and 17th-Century Metaphysics (1995) Farès el-Dahdah - drafts of Letter from Abu Dhabi Ole Bouman - drafts Galiano / Davidson - drafts of article by Luis-Fernandez-Galiano and Cynthia Davidson Kwinter FFE 13 - drafts of article by Sanford Kwinter Teyssot - drafts and translations of article by Georges Teyssot Tate Interview - transcript of Richard Burdett and Nicholas Serota interviewed by Cynthia Davidson Keller - drafts of Ed Keller's review of Shusaku Arakawa and Madeline Gins' Architecture: Sites of Reversible Destiny (1995) Herzog Interview - transcript of Jacques Herzog interviewed by Cynthia Davidson Tate Project Descriptions
documents textuels
Quantité:
12 file
1995
documents textuels
ARCH153533
Description:
Kenneth Frampton's proposal for an Oppositions Book, December 3, 1981 Manuscript by Vincent Scully on Aldo Rossi: "Postcript: The Life of Forms" Folder Oppositions Books : - Memos from Joan Ockman (1981) - Correspondence with MIT Press - Proposed draft of a letter to Roger Conover MIT Press - Publication schedule October 1981- October 1983 - Agenda & minutes of Oppositions Books Editorial Meeting (1981) - 2 MIT Press catalogue, Fall 1981 - Description of Colquhoun's and Rossi's book projects - Fund raising documents. Loose documents : - Letters from Espacio editora (Spain), Dec. 1980 - Agenda for Editors meeting, 25 Nov. 1980 & 24 Feb. 1981 - Letters by Lindsay Stamm Shapiro, Managing Editor - Budget of Rossi's book - Letters from the Graham Foundation, spring 1981 Folder Oppositions Books - Grant Applications : - Application Grant to the Graham Foundation, Dec. 15, 1980 Loose documents : - Agenda of Oppositions Books Editorial Meeting, 27 September 1980 - Correspondence of Lindsay Stamm Shapiro (Polano, Isozaki, etc. - Translation sample of Rossi's Scientific Autobiography Folder Oppositions Books : - Correspondence of Lindsay Stamm Shapiro (1979-1980) - Correspondence of PDE (Bill Hubbard, reproduction rights) - Anatole Senkevitch, translation of Moisei Ginzburg's book - Sample translation of Ginzburg's book - Photocopy of the Russian edition of Moisei Ginzburg's book - Letters of agreements - Correspondence with Kenner Printing Co. - Diane Ghirardo: translation bills (1971) - Prospective Series of Oppositions Books with budget MIT Press catalogue Fall 1979
1971-1983
D. Programmes and Publications, 1978-1981: 5. Oppositions Books
Actions:
ARCH153533
Description:
Kenneth Frampton's proposal for an Oppositions Book, December 3, 1981 Manuscript by Vincent Scully on Aldo Rossi: "Postcript: The Life of Forms" Folder Oppositions Books : - Memos from Joan Ockman (1981) - Correspondence with MIT Press - Proposed draft of a letter to Roger Conover MIT Press - Publication schedule October 1981- October 1983 - Agenda & minutes of Oppositions Books Editorial Meeting (1981) - 2 MIT Press catalogue, Fall 1981 - Description of Colquhoun's and Rossi's book projects - Fund raising documents. Loose documents : - Letters from Espacio editora (Spain), Dec. 1980 - Agenda for Editors meeting, 25 Nov. 1980 & 24 Feb. 1981 - Letters by Lindsay Stamm Shapiro, Managing Editor - Budget of Rossi's book - Letters from the Graham Foundation, spring 1981 Folder Oppositions Books - Grant Applications : - Application Grant to the Graham Foundation, Dec. 15, 1980 Loose documents : - Agenda of Oppositions Books Editorial Meeting, 27 September 1980 - Correspondence of Lindsay Stamm Shapiro (Polano, Isozaki, etc. - Translation sample of Rossi's Scientific Autobiography Folder Oppositions Books : - Correspondence of Lindsay Stamm Shapiro (1979-1980) - Correspondence of PDE (Bill Hubbard, reproduction rights) - Anatole Senkevitch, translation of Moisei Ginzburg's book - Sample translation of Ginzburg's book - Photocopy of the Russian edition of Moisei Ginzburg's book - Letters of agreements - Correspondence with Kenner Printing Co. - Diane Ghirardo: translation bills (1971) - Prospective Series of Oppositions Books with budget MIT Press catalogue Fall 1979
documents textuels
1971-1983
DR1974:0002:005:001-018
Description:
- This album contains four folios of text in Italian concerning the history and architecture of the Museo di fiscia e storia naturale, Florence. The names of the museum's patrons and the parts of the museum have been inserted by a contemporary hand on the lithographs in pen and black ink. The text is followed by ten lithographs, including a perspectival view of the museum, four general plans, two sections, and more detailed sections, plans and elevations of the Tribuna de Galileo designed by Giuseppe Martelli and the Osservatorio Astronomico designed by Gaspero Paoletti. Also included in the album are four manuscripts, all in French: a letter presenting the album to Rohault de Fleury from Vincenzio Antinori, the director of the museum, a transcript of Rohault de Fleury's letters of thanks to Antorini and to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, a note from the Légation de Toscanne in Paris concerning the presentation of the album, and a booklet containing Rohault de Fleury's translation of the album text into French.
architecture
printed between 1845 and 1846, manuscripts written 1846
Presentation album of prints of the Museo di fisica e storia naturelle, Florence
Actions:
DR1974:0002:005:001-018
Description:
- This album contains four folios of text in Italian concerning the history and architecture of the Museo di fiscia e storia naturale, Florence. The names of the museum's patrons and the parts of the museum have been inserted by a contemporary hand on the lithographs in pen and black ink. The text is followed by ten lithographs, including a perspectival view of the museum, four general plans, two sections, and more detailed sections, plans and elevations of the Tribuna de Galileo designed by Giuseppe Martelli and the Osservatorio Astronomico designed by Gaspero Paoletti. Also included in the album are four manuscripts, all in French: a letter presenting the album to Rohault de Fleury from Vincenzio Antinori, the director of the museum, a transcript of Rohault de Fleury's letters of thanks to Antorini and to the Grand Duke of Tuscany, a note from the Légation de Toscanne in Paris concerning the presentation of the album, and a booklet containing Rohault de Fleury's translation of the album text into French.
documents textuels, oeuvres d'art
printed between 1845 and 1846, manuscripts written 1846
architecture
Projet
AP178.S1.1984.PR02
Description:
The project series documents the Punt en Komma social housing project in The Hague, The Netherlands, with some materials related to the Urban plan for Deelgebied Zone 5, Schilderswijk-West. While the records were held in the office’s archives the urban plan for Deelgebied Zone 5 was assigned the number 30/80 and Punt en Komma was assigned the number 30/80 A/B (Punt (A) and Komma (B)). The office assigned the date 1984 for this project. In the mid to late1970s The Hague underwent an urban renewal program and in 1980 Adri Duivesteijn became the alderman responsible for this program. Dissatisfied with the results, in the early to mid-1980s Duivesteijn began a campaign to look at urban renewal as a cultural approach, and was interested in the participatory process that Siza incorporated for the Serviço Ambulatório de Apoio Local (SAAL) in Portugal and the Berlin projects submitted to the International Architectural Exhibition Berlin competition (International Bauaustellung, IBA, circa 1979-1987). After taking a trip to Portugal, Duivesteijn invited Siza to speak with residents of Schilderswijk. The urban plan for Schilderswijk was the first part of a redevelopment plan for the 19th century district and included two four story blocks of 106 apartments, named Punt en Komma. Schilderswijk is in the centre of The Hague and is nearby the Haag Spoor train station. The residents are made up of multi-ethnic communities and included immigrants from Turkey, Morocco, Tunisia, and Portugal. Similarly to the Berlin projects, Siza was faced with cultural tensions between the residents of the area. The urban plan was to take into account the preservation of the neighborhood's identity while accounting for the changes brought on by multi-ethnic communities. As with the SAAL and Berlin projects there was an element of participation from the residents and included the collaboration of a residents association. In the “Plan of Zone 5 of Schilderswijk Centrum…”, found in this project series [AP178.S1.1984.PR02.024.1, AP178.S1.1984.PR02.024.2], it is outlined that meetings were periodically held with technicians appointed by the Department of Urban Planning and Housing of The Hague, the Housing Cooperative, and each of the designers. Siza’s design for Punt en Komma incorporated elements prevalent in Dutch architecture such as the Haagse Portiek. However, he also included components in his design which accounted for the needs of residents living there at the time. One feature which gained much attention was the incorporation of sliding doors in the apartments. Siza included these doors in his design in consideration of the cultural practices of Muslim families. Documenting this project series are drawings, photographic materials, and textual documentation. Among the drawings are plans, elevations, sections, and details, as well as axonometric drawings, such as the proposed design for Deelgebied zone 5 (including Punt en Komma) and drawings of the Haagse Porteik. Photographic materials document both Duivesteijn’s trip to Portugal and Siza’s first trip to The Hague and include photographs, negatives, and slides of the built project, as well as slides of drawings. Note that the photographic materials include photographs related to the housing and shopping complex in Schilderswijk. Textual documentation includes brochures regarding rent increases, a copy of “Stadsvernieuwing als Kulturele Aktiviteit” by Duivesteijn, and information booklets for the residents. Also included are minutes of meeting and correspondence from the Woningbouwvereniging’s-Gravenhage. Among the correspondence are letters regarding construction costs, including a letter from Siza to the local architectural firm Architectengemeenschap Van den Broek en Bakema explaining that he does not wish to modify the detail he specified for the lintels of the Punt building. There is also correspondence from project architect Carlos Castenheira and Duivesteijn and a summary of the meeting between Siza and the Committee of the Corporation for Social Housing (17 April, 1985)[AP178.S1.1984.PR02.025.1] It is important to note that Siza also participated in other projects for this urban renewal program: the housing and shopping complex in Schilderswijk [AP178.S1.1984.PR03], the Van der Vennepark [AP178.S1.1985.PR01], and the residential settlement in Schilderswijk (Plano de Doedijnstraat [AP178.S1.1989.PR03]). All three of these projects are arranged in separate project series.
circa 1981 - 1990
106 habitações, Punt en Komma [Punt en Komma social housing], Schilderswijk-West, The Hague, The Netherlands, (1981-1990)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1984.PR02
Description:
The project series documents the Punt en Komma social housing project in The Hague, The Netherlands, with some materials related to the Urban plan for Deelgebied Zone 5, Schilderswijk-West. While the records were held in the office’s archives the urban plan for Deelgebied Zone 5 was assigned the number 30/80 and Punt en Komma was assigned the number 30/80 A/B (Punt (A) and Komma (B)). The office assigned the date 1984 for this project. In the mid to late1970s The Hague underwent an urban renewal program and in 1980 Adri Duivesteijn became the alderman responsible for this program. Dissatisfied with the results, in the early to mid-1980s Duivesteijn began a campaign to look at urban renewal as a cultural approach, and was interested in the participatory process that Siza incorporated for the Serviço Ambulatório de Apoio Local (SAAL) in Portugal and the Berlin projects submitted to the International Architectural Exhibition Berlin competition (International Bauaustellung, IBA, circa 1979-1987). After taking a trip to Portugal, Duivesteijn invited Siza to speak with residents of Schilderswijk. The urban plan for Schilderswijk was the first part of a redevelopment plan for the 19th century district and included two four story blocks of 106 apartments, named Punt en Komma. Schilderswijk is in the centre of The Hague and is nearby the Haag Spoor train station. The residents are made up of multi-ethnic communities and included immigrants from Turkey, Morocco, Tunisia, and Portugal. Similarly to the Berlin projects, Siza was faced with cultural tensions between the residents of the area. The urban plan was to take into account the preservation of the neighborhood's identity while accounting for the changes brought on by multi-ethnic communities. As with the SAAL and Berlin projects there was an element of participation from the residents and included the collaboration of a residents association. In the “Plan of Zone 5 of Schilderswijk Centrum…”, found in this project series [AP178.S1.1984.PR02.024.1, AP178.S1.1984.PR02.024.2], it is outlined that meetings were periodically held with technicians appointed by the Department of Urban Planning and Housing of The Hague, the Housing Cooperative, and each of the designers. Siza’s design for Punt en Komma incorporated elements prevalent in Dutch architecture such as the Haagse Portiek. However, he also included components in his design which accounted for the needs of residents living there at the time. One feature which gained much attention was the incorporation of sliding doors in the apartments. Siza included these doors in his design in consideration of the cultural practices of Muslim families. Documenting this project series are drawings, photographic materials, and textual documentation. Among the drawings are plans, elevations, sections, and details, as well as axonometric drawings, such as the proposed design for Deelgebied zone 5 (including Punt en Komma) and drawings of the Haagse Porteik. Photographic materials document both Duivesteijn’s trip to Portugal and Siza’s first trip to The Hague and include photographs, negatives, and slides of the built project, as well as slides of drawings. Note that the photographic materials include photographs related to the housing and shopping complex in Schilderswijk. Textual documentation includes brochures regarding rent increases, a copy of “Stadsvernieuwing als Kulturele Aktiviteit” by Duivesteijn, and information booklets for the residents. Also included are minutes of meeting and correspondence from the Woningbouwvereniging’s-Gravenhage. Among the correspondence are letters regarding construction costs, including a letter from Siza to the local architectural firm Architectengemeenschap Van den Broek en Bakema explaining that he does not wish to modify the detail he specified for the lintels of the Punt building. There is also correspondence from project architect Carlos Castenheira and Duivesteijn and a summary of the meeting between Siza and the Committee of the Corporation for Social Housing (17 April, 1985)[AP178.S1.1984.PR02.025.1] It is important to note that Siza also participated in other projects for this urban renewal program: the housing and shopping complex in Schilderswijk [AP178.S1.1984.PR03], the Van der Vennepark [AP178.S1.1985.PR01], and the residential settlement in Schilderswijk (Plano de Doedijnstraat [AP178.S1.1989.PR03]). All three of these projects are arranged in separate project series.
Project
circa 1981 - 1990
Sketch site plan and sketch view of an alternative proposal for the pavilion at UNESCO Headquarters
DR1988:0425
Description:
- Le Corbusier prepared this drawing inscribed "reponse a lettre / de Gropius / recue le 22 Octobre 54" in response to Walter Gropius' suggestion that he too reply to a letter addressed only to Gropius by Eugene Callison, Chief engineer at UNESCO Headquarters, Paris. Callison had requested that Gropius comment on a proposal by the Zehrfuss-Breuer-Nervi team to add a pavilion to the existing UNESCO building. Le Corbusier was dissatisfied with the team's pavilion, which shows a narrow, glazed oblong raised on pilotis (Shapiro, fig. 219). He proposed instead this sketch for a detached pavilion consisting of a roughly-finished, curving wall enclosing a garden, which he sent to Callison, along with a critique of the Zehrfuss-Breuer-Nervi team's proposition. On 26 October 1954, he also sent copies of his proposal to all of the project advisors.
architecture
1954
Sketch site plan and sketch view of an alternative proposal for the pavilion at UNESCO Headquarters
Actions:
DR1988:0425
Description:
- Le Corbusier prepared this drawing inscribed "reponse a lettre / de Gropius / recue le 22 Octobre 54" in response to Walter Gropius' suggestion that he too reply to a letter addressed only to Gropius by Eugene Callison, Chief engineer at UNESCO Headquarters, Paris. Callison had requested that Gropius comment on a proposal by the Zehrfuss-Breuer-Nervi team to add a pavilion to the existing UNESCO building. Le Corbusier was dissatisfied with the team's pavilion, which shows a narrow, glazed oblong raised on pilotis (Shapiro, fig. 219). He proposed instead this sketch for a detached pavilion consisting of a roughly-finished, curving wall enclosing a garden, which he sent to Callison, along with a critique of the Zehrfuss-Breuer-Nervi team's proposition. On 26 October 1954, he also sent copies of his proposal to all of the project advisors.
architecture