The highest building was designed by André Lurcat. It
is a very sculptural block of 4 row houses that serves as the entrance to the
model housing estate. As is common in Vienna the name and year of completion
are displayed in large lettering on the side of this building.
The rounded shapes of the Lurcat building are not
often associated with modernism, although in the 1920s Bauhaus also
incorporated an expressionist tendency. The cubist treatment of the building
mass is what is generally known as modernism. It later became the international
style, when it spread beyond northwest Europe into Great Britain, the Americas
and Australia.
Terraced housing also became more sculptural. Every
architect reacted to the design of the neighbouring property. In the middle two
cubes with windows seek to define the very basis of a dwelling. On either side
of these are more expressive houses. The long window band on the left is very
typical of Bauhaus.
The basis of the still recognisable modernist idiom
are a cubist treatment of the building mass in combination with flat roofs and
the absence of eaves. The clean lines are enhanced by the regular placement of
the windows.
Although post war modernisme (the international style)
is best known for the white or slight grey colour of the facades, in earlier
modernism no such dictate concerning a lack of colour existed. Especially in
Germany and the Netherlands many architects experimented with block colouring
on the walls. Here an example by the Dutch architect and designer Gerrit
Rietveld, who was well known for his grafic work using primary colours in
blocks.
A part of the wall around the white entrance is
painted white to emphasise the entrance and at the same time give better
proportion to the whole facade. The windows are often recessed into the outer
walls of the building to compensate for the reflection of sunlight of the light
walls and also to emphasise the window shape.
Monotony is avoided by using blocks of colour on the
separate dwellings within a row of terraced housing. Also the building line and
building height varies to add interest. The roofline is, however, kept at the
same level to unify the separate dwellings into a single urban block (or unit).
The baroque tradition in Germany and Austria in
colouring the wall in soft tones of pink, yellow, green and blue is also picked
up in some of the buildings in the Werkbund Siedlung.
This semidetached house displays a new form for this
well known housing type. This single storey building (in effect a bungalow) has
a roof terrace. The entrances are emphasised by higher glazed sections that
flood the low building with light. Providing natural daylight, fresh air and
easy access to nature (in the form of a garden, a public park or allotments)
was an important premise of the Bauhaus-movement.
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