Showing posts with label La Maison Tropicale: Visuals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label La Maison Tropicale: Visuals. Show all posts

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Adventures of Les Maisons Tropicales






Fifty years passed for La Maison Tropical in Brazzaville, Congo, before it was taken by Eric Touchaleaume, a famous art dealer of Paris. Le Maison was later sent to New York for an auction and the larger half was bought by hotelier and entrepreneur Andre Balazs for five million dollars. The smaller half was sent back to France and is now on display at the Tate Modern in London.


Edited by Helena Dini Dec 11 4:28 PM
Edited by Jennifer Lim Dec 11 6:27 PM

Friday, December 9, 2011

Structure Images






Bibliography
Eric Touchaleaume. Jean Prouvé # Les Maisons Tropicales. Paris: Port des Champs - Elysees, 2006.


Edited by Helena Dini Dec 11 4:46 PM

Locations of Les Maisons Tropicales


The two locations in Africa where les Maisons Tropicales were built

Eric Touchaleaume. Jean Prouvé # Les Maisons Tropicales. Paris: Port des Champs - Elysees, 2006.
Edited by Helena Dini Dec 11 4:56 PM

The First Prototype: The Tropical House in Niamey, 1949







Elements of the tropical house.

Ventilation


Since La Maison Tropicale was built in a tropical climate it features an ingenious natural ventilation system. It uses the heat on the roof of the house to draw in fresh air through openings in the walls and up into the ceiling. There are also adjustable sunshades around the veranda, double-skinned insulated walls and sliding doors with lovely little circular portholes of blue glass.

Veranda
- wrap around
- sunscreen with manually adjustable aluminum slots

Facade
-two alternating types of aluminum panels
-some fixed some solid
-others sliding and fitted with portholes and circular ventilation and rotary blades

Roof
-aluminum panels is separate from metal ceiling therefore a double roof airflow
-ridge beam assembly form a longitudinal roof lantern protected from the sum that also generates a flue action which removes hot air.

Bibliography
Eric Touchaleaume. Jean Prouvé # Les Maisons Tropicales. Paris. Port des Champs - Elysees, 2006
The Poetics of the Technical Object p208

Les Maisons Tropicales: Videos



Details of a tropical house

Re-construction of the Tropical House


Experiencing the Tropical House

Thursday, December 8, 2011

Reconstruction of La Maison Tropicale at Tate Modern

Unique Expression of Radical Architectural Vision

"Some people like to look at art, others like to sit on it" - Alex Cole

Just over ten years ago, in the Republic of Congo, a forgotten building was found. It was a prototype of Jean Prouve's prefab homes to be built for the French Colonies. It was in a sorry state of dilapiation. The house was dismantled and sent back to France. Bullet holes from numerous conflicts were repaired during its restoration to Prouve’s original 1951's vision. Jean Prouve is now championed as a genius because of the enormous influence his elegant economy of design had on the twentieth century. Recently, Andre Balazs a patron of the arts, purchased the structure. In a partnership between Balazs, the Design Museum and Tate Museum the building was reconstructed on the grounds of the Tate Contemporary Art Gallery. It was part of a comprehensive overview of Jean Prouve's work in the United Kingdom during his time with the Design Museum. The exhibit introduced the British public to Prouve's unique furniture, architecture, photos, films and drawings. Visitors could experience first hand Prouve's radical vision of functionalism. The Tate Museum viewed his design as both conceptual art and historical artifact. It was seen as a manifestation of the visionary thinking that shaped our contemporary aesthetics and design values.


THE TIME-LAPSE FILM OF LA MAISON TROPICALE BEING BUILT AT TATE MODERN




Design Museum. "Design Museum ." Time-lapse film of La Maison Tropicale being built at Tate Modern. http://designmuseum.org/media/item/72725/1045/TIMELAPSE-ANGLE-1-medium-res.mp4 (accessed December 8, 2011).

Design Museum. "Design Museum." The Poetics of the Technical Object. http:/
http://www.facebook.com/l.php?u=http%3A%2F%2Fdesignmuseum.org%2Fexhibitions%2F2008%2Fprouvehouse&h=uAQH_QWyF (accessed December 8, 2011).

Tate Modern. "Tate Modern." Maison Tropicale for Design Museum at Tate Modern.
http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/maisontropicale/default.shtm:// (accessed December 8, 2011).


History of La Maison Tropicale


- In 1939, Jean Prouve did a drawing of a facade where many of the same characteristics that were to appear on the final houses delivered to Africa: louvered venetian blinds and a ventilated, dual layered ceiling.

- In 1949, Jean Prouve was commissioned by Paul Herbe to build The first Maison Tropicale, which was prominently exhibited on the banks of the Seine before being disassembled and flown to Niamey, in Niger, where it housed a secondary school headmaster Despite the short time of 5 months needed for the house to be built, the cost of the house is too significant and was called off. The complications of the concrete structure resulted for the house to not be available for occupancy till 3 months after the parts arrived on July 1949.

- The Brazzaville house (1952) was intended as both the Information Bureau for Aluminium Français and the home of its director. the Niamey house was placed on a concrete slab, while the two Brazzaville houses were placed on pilings.

- The smaller one of the Brazzaville houses became an office for the Bureau Régional d’Information de l’Aluminum Français and was partitioned into a Director’s office, a secretary’s office, and a waiting room. The larger one became a residence for the commercial director of Aluminum Français, Jacques Piaget, and was partitioned into a master bedroom plus two smaller bedrooms, a kitchen, and a bathroom.



- Only 3 maison Tropicales were ever shipped to french colonies in africa, and the project ended there because of the high cost of transporting the materials from France to Africa. The three houses were left abandoned until the 1980's.

- The houses in Brazzaville were rediscovered in 1982 by Patrice Bartoli, a former government architect; in the 1990’s, he found out that the owner of the Brazzaville houses planned to tear them down. The three Prouvé tropical houses, still in situ in the Republic of Congo, were found in a severely damaged state due to the civil war and lack of maintenance, riddled with bullet holes.


  

- In 1997, Eric Touchaleaume and Robert Rubin began to devise a "rescue" plan to transport the structures out of the country, as the houses were under the threat of being torn down and sold component by component.

- In 2001, Robert Rubin instigated a rescue operation for one of the buildings in Brazzaville to Paris, where it was erected back.
- André Balazs acquired La Maison Tropicale in June 2007 from Christie's International auction house in New York City.

- In celebration of the first major exhibition of Jean Prouvé's work in the UK at the Design Museum, he has loaned the house for display outside Tate Modern, from February 5th, 2008. It will reside in London until the Spring, whereupon it will find a new home in the Tropics.


- Les Maisons Tropicales are the culmination of twenty years of experimentation by Prouvé into the prefabrication and industrial production of buildings.



Composed by Jennifer Lim & Jonas Chin

Window details of Maison Tropicale

 
   





Edited by Helena Dini Dec 11 2011 10:34 AM