Spreading knowledge globally about new systems was instrumental in bringing industrialization principles to the normalized construction of massive amounts of housing during the postwar era. The impetus for standardisation to increase housing supply was directed by the diversification of production. Everything from framing materials, to doors and windows, all of which had been produced in artisans' workshops were now being made in a factory setting. This novel approach to making was suggested by production methods promoted by parallel industries sustained by new tools and materials. Mechanization influenced global construction methods and, in some way, even inspired architects to become protagonists in their own countries to showcase industrialization’s potentials.
An interesting case study in this globalized cross-pollination is the impact Alvar Aalto had in bringing American framing models to Finland. Collaborating with forestry vertically integrated giant Ahlström, Aalto was familiar with the company’s understanding of oversees innovations concerning sawmills and dimensional mass production. To push this collaboration further and because of his growing reputation, Aalto was invited to teach at MIT in 1940 where he also learned from the Bemis Foundation, a pillar of research toward building standardisation in the USA. Albert Farwell Bemis, the research foundation’s founder partnered with the MIT to explore modernising construction methods, specifically through dimensional coordination.
Aalto’s time in USA was short but intense while MIT and outlined timber framing standardization principles for affordable housing. When he returned to Finland, he continued his partnership with Ahlström developing a series of AA houses based on the principles he had learned in his transatlantic mission. Finland was undergoing a housing crisis as many new towns had to be built to accommodate displaced populations from ceded territories. The transformation of Finnish building culture from onsite intensive craftsmanship to high levels of prefabrication differed from the American model in as much as it contributed to inventing a new player in the Finnish context: the integrated home builder. The American model remained highly fragmented divided up amongst multiple stakeholders. The AA system deployed technological dimensional coordination principles, identified as flexible standardisation as the homes could be serialized as well as lightly customized though repeating underlying framing systems, details and components.
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Alvar Aalto's AA type houses |