Dream of the factory-made house: Walter Gropius and Konrad Wachsmann
Publisher: MIT Press, 1984001: 4162ISBN: 0262081407Subject(s): Prefabricated buildingsDDC classification: 721.04497 HERItem type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | MAIN LIBRARY Book | 721.04497 HER (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 070546 |
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721.04496 SCH Glass construction manual / | 721.04497 BAH Prefab : adaptable, modular, dismountable, light, mobile architecture / | 721.04497 ERI Controlling Design Variantsl Modular Product Platforms | 721.04497 HER Dream of the factory-made house: Walter Gropius and Konrad Wachsmann | 721.04497 PRO Prefabrication : structures and elements | 721.04497 STA Component design / | 721.04498 BIL Imagine 02 deflatables / |
Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:
This is the story of what came to be known as the "packaged house," one of the few architect-inspired attempts to manufacture and market a prefabricated home. The plan began in the 1940s as a major collaborative effort between Walter Gropius, then at the height of his fame, and Konrad Wachsmann, a rising star-both in exile from their native Germany. For both men, this was the culmination of many years of experience in the field of industrialized housing and an unparalleled opportunity to make their long-cherished dream of a factory-made house a reality. How did this venture, which seemed to have everything going for it, turn out to be such a dismal failure? The answers to that question make this one of the most fascinating studies in the annals of modern architecture. Gilbert Herbert's analysis of the bold undertaking has within it not only the elements of personal drama, as far as Gropius and Wachsmann are concerned, but it unfolds consequences of more drastic significance for the development of industrially-produced housing the world over. Both architects represented a formidable combination of ability and experience; both had contributed significantly to the theory and practice of prefabrication, and had devised a system that was technically impeccable. That "only a small number of these immaculately conceived and engineered houses was actually sold" was not only a great disappointment for them, it was a grave shock to the whole movement for industrially-produced housing. The facts of the Gropius-Wachsmann case-now fully disclosed with extensive visual documentation-are instructive in themselves. But the real significance of this book lies in its ability to relate the facts to the history of industrialized housing and to the modern architect's confrontation with technological, economic, and social forces. Gilbert Herbert is Mary Hill Swope Professor of Architecture at the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology. He is also the author of The Synthetic Vision of Walter Gropiusand Pioneers of Prefabrication: The British Contribution in the Nineteenth Century.
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