Open Concepts: Le Corbusier's Free Plan
The term ?open concept? is popular with house-flipping television shows and real estate descriptions for lofts or contemporary style homes. However, the phrase is absent from the architect?s lexicon, likely due to a much more robust vocabulary and archive of precedents for describing the continuity of space in a domestic environment. This video is the second in a series that breaks down various ?open concepts? in architecture. The first video was dedicated to the ?Organic Plan? of Frank Lloyd Wright and this one takes a closer look at the ?Free Plan? of Le Corbusier. Through comparisons with Wright and supported with examples from the Five Points of a Modern Architecture, ?Free Plans? are presented as a unique way of understanding the coherence of space.
The term ?open concept? is popular with house-flipping television shows and real estate descriptions for lofts or contemporary style homes. However, the phrase is absent from the architect?s lexicon, likely due to a much more robust vocabulary and archive of precedents for describing the continuity of space in a domestic environment. This video is the second in a series that breaks down various ?open concepts? in architecture. The first video was dedicated to the ?Organic Plan? of Frank Lloyd Wright and this one takes a closer look at the ?Free Plan? of Le Corbusier. Through comparisons with Wright and supported with examples from the Five Points of a Modern Architecture, ?Free Plans? are presented as a uniqu...
The term ?open concept? is popular with house-flipping television shows and real estate descriptions for lofts or contemporary style homes. However, the phrase is absent from the architect?s lexicon, likely due to a much more robust vocabulary and archive of precedents for describing the continuity of space in a domestic environment. This video is the second in a series that breaks down various ?open concepts? in architecture. The first video was dedicated to the ?Organic Plan? of Frank Lloyd Wright and this one takes a closer look at the ?Free Plan? of Le Corbusier. Through comparisons with Wright and supported with examples from the Five Points of a Modern Architecture, ?Free Plans? are presented as a uniqu...
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