Villa Jeanneret-Perret

The Villa Jeanneret-Perret (also known as Maison blanche) is the first independent project by Swiss architect Le Corbusier.[1] Built in 1912 in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret's hometown, it was designed for his parents. Open to the public since 2005, the house is under the patronage of the Swiss National Commission for UNESCO and has been proposed by the Swiss Government for inscription on the World Heritage List.[1]

Villa Jeanneret-Perret
Maison blanche
General information
LocationSwitzerland
AddressChemin de Pouillerel 12, 2300 La Chaux-de-Fonds
Coordinates47°6′22″N 6°48′57″E
Completed1912
OwnerAssociation Maison Blanche
Design and construction
ArchitectLe Corbusier
Awards and prizesIt is under the patronage of the Swiss Commission for UNESCO.
References
www.maisonblache.ch

History

In February 1912, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret opened his own architectural office in La Chaux-de-Fonds, the city where he was born and where he began his career after completing his education at the advanced course of the Ecole d'Art. The architect who later took the name "Le Corbusier" was 25 years old. He had distanced himself from the spirit of Art Nouveau, travelled in Europe and in the Middle East, learned from the masters of modern architecture...The "Maison blanche" was his first independent project and a very personal creation. Jeanneret himself lived and worked in the house from 1912 to 1915. In 1919, the house was sold. It had many owners in the course of the century until 2000, when it was purchased and restored by the "Association Maison blanche" which opened it to the public in 2005.

Design

The Villa Jeanneret-Perret is a witness to the pioneering architecture of the 20th century and the development of Le Corbusier; his characteristic neo-classic style breaks with the regional Art Nouveau and is based on his experience in Paris as a student of Auguste Perret and in Berlin with Peter Behrens.

References

Bibliography

  • Maison blanche, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret/Le Corbusier, ed. Karl Spechenhauser and Arthur Ruegg, Association Maison blanche/Birkhäuser, 2007

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