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Bauhaus Dessau Model, Germany

By Walter Gropius
(via: architecturalmodels)

Bauhaus Dessau Model, Germany

By Walter Gropius

(via: architecturalmodels)

(Source: )


Link
Fagus Factory - Eduard Werner & Walter Gropius
Built in Germany between 1911 and 1913, the Fagus Factory was designed chiefly by Eduard Werner.  Walter Gropius contributed to the design of the facade of the building. The building served the majority of its service life as a shoe factory and still stands today.

Fagus Factory - Eduard Werner & Walter Gropius

Built in Germany between 1911 and 1913, the Fagus Factory was designed chiefly by Eduard Werner.  Walter Gropius contributed to the design of the facade of the building. The building served the majority of its service life as a shoe factory and still stands today.


Link
Gropius House - Walter Gropius
The Gropius House is Walter Gropius’s personal residence.  It was constructed after the German native and founder of Bauhaus fled to the United States from Nazi-controlled Germany.  It is located in Lincoln, Massachusetts.

Gropius House - Walter Gropius

The Gropius House is Walter Gropius’s personal residence.  It was constructed after the German native and founder of Bauhaus fled to the United States from Nazi-controlled Germany.  It is located in Lincoln, Massachusetts.


Link
Bauhaus
Bauhaus refers to a building, a school for architecture, and an architectural movement in post-World War I era Germany and Eastern Europe.  The building itself was designed by Walter Gropius in 1925 as an architectural school aiming to create functional buildings and furniture for Germany after it lost World War I and suffered economic collapse.  Bauhaus-style designs, which evolved into “International Style” in America, featured cubic designs with simple color schemes, much like the Bauhaus building above.

Bauhaus

Bauhaus refers to a building, a school for architecture, and an architectural movement in post-World War I era Germany and Eastern Europe.  The building itself was designed by Walter Gropius in 1925 as an architectural school aiming to create functional buildings and furniture for Germany after it lost World War I and suffered economic collapse.  Bauhaus-style designs, which evolved into “International Style” in America, featured cubic designs with simple color schemes, much like the Bauhaus building above.


Link