le-corbusier-s-unit-d-habitation-art-print-poster-a3-297-x-420mm-eye-for-london-prints image

Wolf & Badger

Le Corbusier’s Unité D'habitation Art Print Poster | A3 | 297 X 420Mm | Eye for London Prints

£28

Colour: Yellow, Red, Blue, Black, White

This striking poster features Le Corbusier's iconic Unité d'Habitation, a symbol of Brutalist architecture. The image captures its bold lines and vibrant facade against a bright yellow background, highlighting the building's colorful geometric forms. Printed on premium 350gsm matte paper with a slight texture, it offers a stylish modern look for any space. Sold unframed, this piece is designed in Brixton and printed in London, arriving securely in a durable postal tube. Perfect for those who appreciate architectural design, it adds a dynamic visual statement to your decor.

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Original Product Description:

Le Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation is arguably the most influential Brutalist building of all time. With its human proportions, chunky pilotis and interior "streets", it redefined high-density housing by reimagining a city inside an 18-storey slab block. Completed in 1952, Le Corbusier’s Unité d’Habitation in Marseille has been blamed for launching a thousand brutalist concrete apartment blocks around the world. (including the mammoth Kanchenjunga tower in Bombay) The Unite d’ Habitation was the first of a new housing project series for Le Corbusier that focused on communal living for all the inhabitants to shop, play, live, and come together in a “vertical garden city.” Le Corbusier believed the tower block was the solution for rehousing the masses that had been displaced during the second world war, and that high rise building could be used to create spacious city homes with the same amenities as a typical street. Unlike a typical apartment block, this arrangement meant that these access corridors – known as "streets" – only needed be accommodated on every third floor. There are just five in total. Sold unframed. Printed on premium 350gsm lightly textured thick Matte Paper. Sold unframed. Designed in Brixton. Printed professionally in London. Mailed in sturdy postal tubes.