• Unité d'Habitation of Berlin. Le Corbusier’s contribution to the International Building Exhibition 1957. It is a version of a building that he had previously built in...
  • After the Second World War, people have faced a lack of housing. Le Corbusier designed the Unité dHabitation project to offer a solution to this problem.
  • The Unite dhabitation of Marseille, the first commission received by Le Corbusier from the French State, is one of his most iconic projects and one of the basic...
  • With its proportions, chunky pilotis and interior streets, Le Corbusier's Unité d'Habitation is arguably the most influential Brutalist building of all time.
  • Corbusier himself built four more Unité dHabitations in Europe. The Rough concrete he used ‘béton brut’ became the signature of the style known as Brutalism.
  • Despite its functionalist name, his first “Unité dhabitation de grandeur conforme” (or: “housing unit of standard size”) was designed to start an inspiring new...
  • The Unités d'habitation are among the most famous works of Le Corbusier. As part of a larger and more radical approach, these huge housing units have...
  • Unité dHabitation, 18-story residential block in Marseille, France, that expressed Le Corbusier’s ideal of urban family lodging.
  • Le Corbusier saw the Unité dHabitation as a “vertical city,” with shopping streets on the 7th and 8th floors.