The Cabanon is a building designed by Le Corbusier in 1951 and located in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France.
Le Corbusier, designs the Cabanon as a birthday present for his wife Yvonne and they decide to place it in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, on the Côte d'Azur, where he already lived inside the house E 1027, created by Eileen Gray and Jean Badovici in 1927: the peculiarity of this project proposal was established by its very small size. This is a shed with a plan size of 3.66x3.66 m and a height of 2.26 m.
The outside shed is covered with pine bark slats, the interior is completely in wood, with a white, red, green, yellow and blue paneled ceiling. The furnishing studied with millimeter precision applying the rules of the Modulor.
The surface of 14 square meters is therefore essential, no living room and no kitchen, functions that are carried out from the garden with the vision of a "naked man" on vacation "does not need much more than a bed, services, a roof and the view of the sun that shines on the sea »
 
Purchasable drawings
Photogallery
Latest post from the blog
  • Download
  • Free
    for all
  • Free
    for Archweb Users
  • Subscription
    for premium users
  • SINGLE PURCHASE
    pay 1 and download 1
Archweb related