Saturday, April 30, 2016

Prefabrication experiments - 98 - Micro spaces - Marcel Lods and the modernist tradition

Constructing an optimal protective shelter is a primordial instinct and an extension of the human form. Beyond being a defense device, shelter is an expression of basic ergonomics: cooking, eating, socializing and sleeping all propose specific dimensions and interactions, which formulate architectural space.

Micro-architecture, as a study of small spaces, stems from man’s instinctive needs and has evolved into a specific type of architecture intimately relating body, space and architectural innovation. The obsession with small spaces has integrated architectural education and the focal point of many projects looking to succeed where many generations failed: the manufactured home. Founded on displaying architectural knowledge, craftsmanship and an ambition to precisely choreograph the use of every cubic millimeter of space, the minimal dwelling is also the subject of architectural literature (see Karel Teige minimal dwelling or Le Corbusier’s modulor) and the object of many inspiring architectural designs.

Rooted in early 20th century values many modernist prototypes continue to engage disciplinary discourse. Designed in 1937, Marcel Lods accompanied by Beaudoin and Prouvé designed a bent flat plate light steel prototype mini-house as their examination of a potential industrialized house. The folded plate easily assembled and disassembled weekend house echoed automobile technology and suggested a future articulated to mobile architecture. Perhaps foreshadowing today’s tiny house movement, the tiny, micro, or small home was showcased as an efficient form of individualized living. Built on this modernist heritage the recent 27m3 micro-compact home by Richard Horden or Patkau architects weekend house are part of this conceptual framework that built the long lasting obsession between architects and minimal dwellings.


The relationship between Lod's weekend house and its contemporary descendants exceeds the simple cubic no frills aesthetic as the three projects seek to relate human dimensions and ergonomic spatial design through a seamless link between architecture and built-in functional objects. Each unit of space is optimized technically and logistically. The unified relationship between material, body and space transforms the house into an operable furniture piece allowing the user to activate certain components and become the datum by which the project is defined. The body develops the «tracé régulateur» regulating trait or force of architectural form.

Marcel Lods (left), Patkau architects(center), Richard Horden(right)

No comments:

Post a Comment