The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

12
The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau

Transcript of The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Page 1: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen

Kathleen Brousseau

Page 2: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Ralph Adams Cram1863-1942

Page 3: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Oxford University

Cambridge University

Page 4: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Cope and Stewardson, Princeton University, Blair Hall, 1896-1898

Page 5: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Ralph Adams Cram, Graduate College, Princeton University,1909

Page 6: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Eero Saarinen1910-1961

Page 7: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Walter GropiusBauhaus

Page 8: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

Eero Saarinen, Yale University, Ezra Stiles and Morse Colleges, 1962

Page 9: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.
Page 10: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.
Page 11: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

“The greatest assets that a university has are beauty and harmonious surroundings. In a

sense, universities are the oases of our desert-like civilization…as the monasteries of the Middle Ages, they are the only beautiful,

respectable pedestrian place left.”

Page 12: The Collegiate Architecture of Ralph Adams Cram and Eero Saarinen Kathleen Brousseau.

“ a place where the community life and spirit were supreme, the rest secondary: a citadel of learning and culture and scholarship.”

“citadels of earthly, monolithic masonry buildings.”