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Plywood House

47.5283 7.59254

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Jacques Herzog & Pierre de Meuron 1985

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en October 2011

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Aterlierhusene

55.722604 12.524668

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FACTS
LIGHT AND SPACIOUS
BY VIBEKE ANDERSSON MØLLER (16 STORIES)
In 1943, architect Viggo Møller-Jensen built some homes with studios known as Atelierhusene especially designed for artists. The client was a social housing association called Foreningen Socialt Boligbyggeri. The houses comprise three rows of two-storey terraced houses that flank two sides of a small lake near Utterslev Lake. Two rows are for families of artists whereas the third is intended for younger, mainly single artists. There are 21 houses altogether and each has a 35-square-metre artist's studio. Though brick-built, the houses feature facades that vary between thin plaster and boarding. The roofs are made of corrugated fibre cement. The communal garden was designed by landscape gardener C.Th. Sørensen.
Not a public pla

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

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Fredensborg Houses

55.9755747 12.3945474

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1962-1963

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

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Gunnløgsson House

55.875746 12.549374

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arquitecto:
Halldor Gunnløgsson

Halldor Gunnløgsson was son of the merchant Halldor Johannes Gunnløgsson and the actress Else Sten. He graduated from senior school in 1937 and continued at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, School of Architecture, in Copenhagen, from which he graduated in 1942. Among his teachers were Kay Fisker and Steen Eiler Rasmussen. Just after his final examinations during the Second World War he left for Sweden and stayed in the neighbouring country during the years 1942-44.
During his career he travelled to North and South America, Japan, and the Near East, and the inspiration found on these trips are delicately conditioned to a Scandinavian design fundamental to his buildings. He spent his teaching career at the School of Architecture of the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts in Copenhagen, where he was initially employed as an instructor, before becoming a lecturer in 1956. He was appointed professor in the building arts in 1959, and dean in 1969. From 1961-62 he was employed as a Visiting Professor at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United States. Gunnløgsson was one of the leading figures in the Danish modernist architecture, especially in the field of detached houses. His personal interpretations of the modernist Western-American and the traditional Japanese architectural traditions were shaped by a consciousness of specific local qualities and demands. Using materials like wood and stone combined with a limited range of colours the impression of his works is simple and minimalist, though at the same time very precious.

www.meamnet.polimi.it/archive/029/029m1.html

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

'me encanta, uno de mis favoritos'5.0

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Seven Houses

55.8734709 12.5510713

saved by 2 people: there is one review

1961-1962
Jørgen Bo

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

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Jacobsen Houses

55.7746275 12.5916089

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Address: Strandvejen 413, 2930 Klampenborg
Constructed: 1951
Function: Residential and commercial
Architect: Arne Jacobsen
Landscape architect: Arne Jacobsen
Client: Arne Jacobsen
Rebuilt: The house has been restored and returned to Realea A/S from 2005-07
Description:
The house is part of the terrace houses, Søholm, South of Bellavista at Strandvejen in Klampenborg.

The houses are built in staggered rows and with the units divided by a middle section which makes each house stand out as an independent composition.
The buildings were erected between 1945 and 1953 in three stages, each with its own type of houses all designed by Arne Jacobsen.

The house was planned both as a private home and as a studio for Arne Jacobsen himself. He lived and worked in the house from 1951 and until his death in 1971.
Through his many different types of work from buildings to furniture and handicrafts, Arne Jacobsen (1902-1971) positioned himself strongly and personally in Danish architecture and design. The 18 terraced houses in the Søholm complex together with the Bellavista, the Bellevue Teatret and the Bellevue Badet in Klampenborg all contributed to giving Arne Jacobsen his international breakthrough.

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

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Kingo Houses

56.0314118 12.5782758

saved by one person: there is one review

1958-1960

ie School of Architecture lo descubrió en September 2011

'me encanta, uno de mis favoritos'5.0

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