Urban Radical Open Architecture Plan
Introduction
The Radiant City (French: La Ville Radieuse pronounced), was an unbuilt planned city project, designed by the French-Swiss architect Le Corbusier.[1][2] First presented in 1932; This city was initially conceived for Moscow.[3] The ideas for the construction of this project were expressed in the book of the same name in 1933.[4] l'Unité d'Habitation de Marseille, carried out almost twenty years later, is also known as 'Cité Radieuse'.[5].
The ideas of La Ville Radieuse strongly influenced the writing of the Athens Charter of the International Congress of Modern Architecture of 1933, a document whose great rhetoric and idealism praised the virtues of cities and residential areas with giant towers, given a long shadow over urban planning in the years after the Second World War.
One of the greatest successes in public housing schemes in Britain and Mexico, the West Alton Estate in Roehampton (1958) and the Conjunto Urbano Nonoalco Tlatelolco (1958-1962) in Mexico City were conscious attempts to achieve the Ville Radieuse in Britain and Mexico.
The proposal, according to Le Corbusier, could increase the capacity of urban areas and, at the same time, improve the urban environment and the efficiency of the city. The thoughts and design principles incorporated in the La Ville Radieuse proposal quickly became a model for post-war architects. This constitutes one of the major and controversial urban design doctrines of European modernism "Modernism (art)").
History
Modernist urbanism was greatly influenced by Le Corbusier with the Ville Radieuse plan of 1933, with which he promised a future with sunlight, fresh air and green areas for the city's inhabitants.
Le Corbusier's new city would consist of giant apartment blocks and large garden spaces. This is a powerful vision of utopia, in the immediate post-war period, when the housing of families in Victorian neighborhoods returns, converting from slums to clean places, and modern apartments, which was a political priority.
La Ville Contemporaine, which is known as "The Contemporary City of Three Million Inhabitants" was designed by Le Corbusier for the center of Paris and was first shown in November 1922 at the city's Salon d'Automne. It was designed to accommodate at least six times the population of central Paris at the time. According to Le Corbusier, the design of La Ville Radieuse represents an indisputable ideal of personal freedom. He believed that many cities at the turn of the century were chaotic and inefficient; He therefore came up with the proposal of La Ville Radieuse which had the following objectives: