9/27/2014

A collection of sketches by Yotam Yered

Chandigarh -
A lecture and overview of the work of Pier Jeanneret, by Indian students in the CCA.




Chandigarh - the Capitol complex:  Le Corbusier.
a composition of  giometric shapes and shadows, made from concrete.









Jantar Mantar: New-Delhi








Ahmedabad: 
Mills owners house - Le Corbusier




New Delhi: Slam visit.

An elevation that looks as if the envelope of the building was removed, leaving is "naked" and show the section, and the life inside.






Derive in Chandigarh


Opening point- sector 11:
Yotam Yered
Liza Schneider
Roni Schanin
Jatin Bedi

working with the chai lady at the informal market

Got inspired by the informality, and desided to trade chai for some information


We destributed questioniers to get to know the people and find out in which sector they live and why the came to this sector



we found out the people came from all the city.


BUT...... also from much farther away.
aperentlly most of them came fot treatment at one of the best hospitals in India.




9/06/2014

Chandigarh College of Architecture (CCA), Chandigarh


‏ 30°45'55.79" N  76°47'02.54" E
Chandigarh College of Architecture
Vidya Path, Sector 12 D, Chandigarh, 160012, India ‎
+91 172 274 0685 ‎

opening session
September 11, 10:00 AM



8/01/2014

Maristella Casciato: Introducing Pierre Jeanneret — architect, designer, educator — in Chandigarh (Mellon Lecture 18 November 2010, Canadian Centre for Architecture)

‪Pierre Jeanneret and Le Corbusier arrive at the dedication of Chandigarh, March 1955‬

Maristella CasciatoCCA Senior Mellon Fellow and Professor of Architectural History, School of Architecture “Aldo Rossi” at Cesena, University of Bologna, speaks on the pivotal contribution of Pierre Jeanneret to the construction of Chandigarh, India:

The Swiss born architect Pierre Jeanneret (1896-1967) is mostly known to the public as the cousin of Le Corbusier. He was associated to the office from 1922 to 1940 and fully participated in designing all major works and competitions. This seminar will present “another” Pierre, without ignoring his previous seminal experience as chef d’atelier at the office in rue de Sévres. My focus will shift to a continent far away from Western culture, i.e. India, specifically after the end of the British rule. I will examine Pierre Jeanneret’s pivotal contribution to the construction of Chandigarh, the new capital of Punjab and the first modern city after Indian independence. 

I will attempt to explain the reasons that convinced Pierre Jeanneret to become the architect coordinator of the Chandigarh project, and I will retrace the steps of his full immersion into Indian culture without betraying his education as a modern architect in Western countries.
This seminar will take out of the shadows Jeanneret’s skill as designer, planner, technician, manager, and educator facing the construction of Indian post-colonial new architecture.

the full lecture is here

Source: http://www.cca.qc.ca/system/items/8449/original/Mellon20-MC.pdf?1331821448
Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA), Mellon Lecture 18 November 2010

The CCA Mellon Foundation Senior Fellowship Program was established in 2001 to encourage advanced research in architectural history and thought. With the generous support of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, distinguished scholars of international repute are appointed Mellon Senior Fellows during residencies of one to eight months at the Study Centre. As part of their residency, Mellon Senior Fellows deliver a public lecture at the CCA.

Chairs by Pierre Jeanneret







Source: http://mondo-blogo.blogspot.co.il/2012/01/pierre-jeannerets-house-chandigarh.html