


Architonic ID: 20701818
Anno di Lancio: 1905
I Casiers Standard fanno parte del progetto realizzato nel 1925 A
con Pierre Jeanneret per il Pavillon de l’Esprit Nouveau, con cui il
maestro supera il concetto tradizionale di arredamento introducendo,
accanto a selezionati arredi mobili, questi nuovi contenitori modulari
e componibili. Elementi dal design unico e intramontabile, capaci
di organizzare architettonicamente l’ambiente, e formando vere e
proprie partizioni attrezzate. Integrati nella Collezione Le Corbusier®,
Pierre Jeanneret®, Charlotte Perriand®, i Casiers Standard sono
stati rilanciati nel 2016 con una veste contemporanea che esalta
le sue caratteristiche di versatilità e funzionalità. I contenitori sono
attualmente proposti in composizioni fisse basate sul modulo standard
75x75x37,5 dotate di ripiani regolabili in 5 posizioni. Questa versione
è caratterizzata da un sostegno costituto da quattro esili supporti
cromati (pilotis).
Questo prodotto appartiene alla collezione:
Base metallo, Legno derivato, Metallo, Struttura legno derivato
Puoi visitare la pagina del prodotto per queste varianti: basta cliccarci sopra!
Esplora la collezione di cataloghi di Cassina.

Switzerland
Le Corbusier is regarded as one of, if not the most, influential architect, city planner, and even furniture designer of the 20th century. The Cubist movement, along with new modes of industrialisation and functionalism, were both key inspirations for Le Corbusier’s modern architecture and design. Le Corbusier is regarded today as a pioneer, and indeed as an icon of modernity par exellence, both for his theories on design, such as le Modulor, and for his designs of buildings and furniture. The Life of Le Corbusier Charles-Edouard Jeanneret-Gris, aka Le Corbusier, was born in 1887 in La Chaux-de-Fonds in the Swiss canton of Neuchâtel, the son of a music teacher a jewellery enameler. He first started at the School of Applied Arts there as an engraver, but soon began to focus on painting and architecture. He went on to work in various leading architectural firms of the time, including those of Peter Behrens and Auguste Perret. In the context of his designs for buildings, Corbusier developed a special system of proportions, Le Modulor. In collaboration with Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius, he designed the Le Corbusier houses in the Weissenhof Estate, a model community which emerged from the school of Bauhaus design. Le Corbusier died in 1965 in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France, where he had made his home in his later years, spending much of his time at the house of fellow designer and friend Eileen Gray. A museum dedicated to Le Corbusier, the Centre Le Corbusier, was established in Zurich in 1967 after his death. The Cassina LC2, LC3 and LC4 Chairs by Le Corbusier The LC2 chair was designed by Corbusier as part of the avant-garde LC Series as the archetype of the modern chair. It was designed by Le Corbusier in collaboration with the designer Charlotte Perriand and his cousin Pierre Jeanneret in 1927 for the Paris Autumn Salon, and combines formality with comfort. Le Corbusier enclosed internal padding in a highly functional, cage-like frame to create the chair, which was followed in 1928 with the larger LC3 design. The LC4, the archetypal chaise-longue, was also designed during this period, and all were used to furnish Le Corbusier’s houses and villas after that point. The LC2 and other designs are now sold by Cassina and have become part of design history. Chandigarh The Indian city of Chandigarh at the foot of the Himalayas is characterised by Corbusian buildings that are based on the guiding principles set out by Corbusier, and features the use of simple, clear shapes and concrete. After the partition of India in 1947 into two independent states, Pakistan and India, Chandigarh was built as the new capital and government headquarters of the Indian state of Punjab. Le Corbusier was commissioned by the Indian government to raise a planned city for 500,000 people out of the ground. The key feature of his approach was the classification of the city into sectors for work, living and relaxing. The plan, though influential at the time, and now historically protected, was later considered a failure by many, but was groundbreaking at the time of its inception. © by Architonic