Tumgik
#Fernand Pouillon
loeilareaction · 10 months
Text
Tumblr media
Fernand Pouillon, logements à Diar es Saâda, Algérie.
Photographie de Léo Fabrizio.
65 notes · View notes
spyskrapbook · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
"La Tourette", Square Protis, Rue Saint-Laurent, Esplanade de la Tourette, Marseille, France [1948-53] _ Architect: Fernand Pouillon _ Photos by: Spyros Kaprinis [26.05.2024].
"Remarked very positively at the time by the Ministry of Reconstruction, this project will play an important role in the subsequent attribution to Fernand Pouillon of the buildings on the quay of the port. He himself writes how this study marked an important date in the history of construction. For the first time an architect thinks as an organizer, financier, engineer, inventor and artist, and achieves the lowest construction price ever seen. During the creation of this set F. Pouillon validates his sensations and his previous knowledge, implements ideas - which he had the opportunity to forge during his collaboration with Eugène Beaudoin during the war - on town planning and the insertion of a project in an emblematic landscape, experimented with the site coordination office, the principle of which he had just invented and which no one would do without now, created the solidarity group of companies (legal structure which has continued to the present day), studies in the smallest details the costs of construction simultaneously with the design, invents the technical sheath that we know, the cast stone (hard stone plates which replace the facade formwork), insulation phonics between apartments by the insertion in wavy waves of lengths of thick fabric between the partitions, the anti-mistral spanner (a cardan system), etc. No vertical reinforced concrete framework."
4 notes · View notes
zacharialend · 2 years
Text
Though how it came to pass remains a mystery, Scorsese’s Goncharov was screened for the public, just once, in 1978. The print had somehow found its way to the Middle East (my sources mention arms dealer, forger and art thief Leonid Minin as a possible vector of its transport from Europe), and was shown in November at a small theater in the Iraqi region of Uqbar.
Arabic subtitles were not provided, though the audience does seem to have been a rather cosmopolitan one for such a small venue, including as it did several highly placed members of the Al-Bakr regime, poet and then-director of the Iraqi Cultural Center Dayzi Amir, French architect Fernand Pouillon, and, notably, Argentine fabulist Jorge Luis Borges.
3 notes · View notes
raoullemercier · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media
2021 Marseille, immeuble 2 rue Saint-Laurent et 5 rue Saint-Thomé, 1953 René Egger et Fernand Pouillon architectes
1 note · View note
francepittoresque · 4 months
Photo
Tumblr media
PATRIMOINE | Belcastel (Aveyron) est l’un des « Plus beaux villages de France » ➽ https://bit.ly/Patrimoine-Belcastel Cette cité médiévale préservée a longtemps accueilli les pèlerins, qui franchissaient son pont pour rejoindre l’église Sainte-Madeleine. Le bourg brille également par sa forteresse défensive du XIe siècle, restaurée dans les années 1970 par le grand architecte Fernand Pouillon
27 notes · View notes
gepetordi1 · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Amphitheater by Fernand Pouillon in Tipasa, Algeria
2 notes · View notes
highlands11 · 1 month
Text
TO BE OR NOT TO BE ON HOLIDAY (4): CONNAISSEZ-VOUS l'ARCHITECTE FERNAND POUILLON?
on oppose souvent architecture "traditionnelle" et "contemporaine". Certains architectes ont démontré que tout pouvait se combiner...
Temps de lecture : 1 heuremots-clés : Architecture, Alger, Marseille, reconstruction, typo morphologie Chers lecteurs, « L’œuvre de Fernand Pouillon, l’architecte ” le plus recherché de France ” après avoir été emprisonné et s’être mystérieusement échappé dans les années soixante, semble aujourd’hui être passée en arrière-plan. Il a pourtant construit en 50 ans plus de 5 millions de mètres…
1 note · View note
dmdunamancer · 7 months
Text
instagram
Theatre, Golden Horn (Corne d'Or) Complex (built by Fernand Pouillon in 1968), in Tipaza, Algeria [photograph by Leo Fabrizio]
0 notes
montsalo · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
case study ~ climat de france by fernand pouillon
collage treating the identity of climat de france in our time, by using history and literature
0 notes
basquiatwowo · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Hotel M'Zab, Ghardaïa, Algeria, Fernand Pouillon, 1970
180 notes · View notes
setdeco · 5 years
Text
Tumblr media
FERNAND POUILLON, Hôtel Corne d‘Or, Tipasa, Algeria, 1968
12K notes · View notes
exhaled-spirals · 3 years
Text
« The site loomed into view like a wide clearing of bright sunlight in a forest. The rock [...] lay waiting for the morning when a fresh series of blows was to impress on it the superior right of man. And the land knows that these blows cannot be halted. Men decided “it shall be here,” whereupon trees were felled, the thorny undergrowth burnt, [...] and the rock laid bare to be carved [...].
Later on, our venture will seem quite natural. A house of men or of priests is at home in natural surroudings; [...] its existence is justified by the road which winds towards it from afar. However, every human settlement has its origins in a choice. [In] a certain spot which is part of a whole environment, there we say, “This is where it shall be. We will enclose a portion of this space between walls, organize our lives inside them and, confining ourselves to this area, we will spend each day cultivating and maintaining this little space we have taken from nature.”
So, in his valley or his plain or on his peak, man occupies the land, clears a piece of earth or rock and shuts in the impalpable. This land is to be a home, a different, important world, sought out by man to be his place of defence, where he can take shelter and turn his mind inwards.
After the providential cave [...], man began building artificial shelters. Then he began to want these to be beautiful [...]. Amidst all the fascinating variety of nature, [...] his hopes are centred on an object fifty feet long, thirty feet wide and fifteen feet high [...], not much in terms of space, but almost everything in terms of his heart. »
— Fernand Pouillon, The Stones of the Abbey
19 notes · View notes
raoullemercier · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
2021 Marseille, immeuble 2 rue Saint-Laurent et 5 rue Saint-Thomé, 1953 René Egger et Fernand Pouillon architectes
0 notes
derearchiviatoria · 3 years
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Climat de France housing complex Algiers, Algeria 1954–1959 Fernand Pouillon (1912–1986), architect Adam Caruso (1962–), drafter, model
4 notes · View notes
walker-diaries · 4 years
Text
Tumblr media
6 notes · View notes
pelomundodascidades · 4 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Fernand Pouillon, Climat de France, housing, Babel Oued, Alger, 1954.1957
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fernand_Pouillon https://www.fernandpouillonheritage.org/e-projects
2 notes · View notes