Collection:
|
Archivision Base to Module 13
LocalCollection
Archivision Base to Module 13
Collection
|
Preferred Title:
|
Baker House Dormitory
Work_PrefTitle
Baker House Dormitory
Preferred Title
|
Alternate Title:
|
Baker House
Work_AltTitle
Baker House
Alternate Title
|
Image View:
|
Small picnic area outside of lounge wing with table and grills
Image_Title
Small picnic area outside of lounge wing with table and grills
Image View
|
Creator:
|
Alvar Aalto (Finnish architect, 1898-1976)
Agent_Display
Alvar Aalto (Finnish architect, 1898-1976)
Creator
|
Location:
|
site: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Work_Location_Type_D isplay
site: Massachusetts Institute of Technology (Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States)
Location
|
Location Note:
|
362 Memorial Drive
Work_LocationNotes
362 Memorial Drive
Location Note
|
GPS:
|
42.356712-71.095675
GPS
42.356712-71.095675
GPS
|
Date:
|
1947-1949 (creation)
Work_DateDisplay
1947-1949 (creation)
Date
|
Cultural Context:
|
American
Work_Culture
American
Cultural Context
|
Style Period:
|
Modernist; Twentieth century
Work_StylePeriodDisp lay
Modernist; Twentieth century
Style Period
|
Work Type 1:
|
dormitory (building)
Work_Worktype1
dormitory (building)
Work Type 1
|
Classification:
|
architecture
Work_Classification
architecture
Classification
|
Material:
|
brick; concrete; limestone
Work_MaterialDisplay
brick; concrete; limestone
Material
|
Technique:
|
construction (assembling)
Work_Technique
construction (assembling)
Technique
|
Description:
|
In 1946 Aalto resumed his teaching at MIT but confined his stays there to three or four months in a year. His most important contribution there was the building of Baker House Dormitory (1947-1949). This building of red tiles, with its huge serpentine façade facing the river and steps rising in cascade form on the inner frontage, is the realization of Aalto's dream of flexible standardization, based on nature's principle of individualization: all 260 of the students' rooms with a view over the Charles River have different shapes (some wedge-shaped) and therefore varied interior fixtures and (built-in) furniture (also designed by Aalto). (The dormitory houses 318 undergraduates in single, double, triple and quadruple rooms.) It has been renovated, most recently by Perry Dean Rogers Architects, modernizing the plumbing, telecommunications, and electrical systems and removing some of the interior changes made over the years that were not in Aalto's original design. The building is now wheelchair accessible. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart. com/)
Work_Description_Sou rce
In 1946 Aalto resumed his teaching at MIT but confined his stays there to three or four months in a year. His most important contribution there was the building of Baker House Dormitory (1947-1949). This building of red tiles, with its huge serpentine façade facing the river and steps rising in cascade form on the inner frontage, is the realization of Aalto's dream of flexible standardization, based on nature's principle of individualization: all 260 of the students' rooms with a view over the Charles River have different shapes (some wedge-shaped) and therefore varied interior fixtures and (built-in) furniture (also designed by Aalto). (The dormitory houses 318 undergraduates in single, double, triple and quadruple rooms.) It has been renovated, most recently by Perry Dean Rogers Architects, modernizing the plumbing, telecommunications, and electrical systems and removing some of the interior changes made over the years that were not in Aalto's original design. The building is now wheelchair accessible. (Source: Grove Art Online; http://www.groveart. com/)
Description
|
Collection:
|
Archivision Addition Module Eight
LocalCollection
Archivision Addition Module Eight
Collection
|
Identifier:
|
1A1-AA-BH-D27
Image_OriginalVendor ID
1A1-AA-BH-D27
Identifier
|
Rights:
|
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Image_Rights
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.
Rights
|