Works of laurie baker
-
Upload
rashi-chugh -
Category
Education
-
view
1.435 -
download
10
description
Transcript of Works of laurie baker
WORKS OF LAURIE BAKER
PESENTED BY:RASHI CHUGH
STUDIO 3-B
SSAA
LIFE HISTORY
• (March 2, 1917 – April 1, 2007) British-born Indian architect
• He went to India in 1945 in part as a missionary and since then lived and worked in India for over 50 years
Fig1:Laurie BakerRef: http://www.hindu.com/mag/2007/04/15/stories/2007041500060300.htm
• He obtained Indian citizenship in 1989 and resided in Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum), Kerala.
•In 1990, the Government of India awarded him with the Padma Shri in recognition of his meritorious service in the field of architecture.
•Baker studied architecture in Birmingham and graduated in 1937, aged 20, in a period of political unrest for Europe.
•During the Second World War, he served in the Friends Ambulance Unit in China and Burma.
•Baker lived in Kerala with Doctor P.J. Chandy,
•He received great encouragement and later married his sister
•While Laurie continued his architectural work and research accommodating the medical needs of the community through his constructions of various hospitals and clinics.
INITIAL WORK
•Baker sought to enrich the culture in which he participated by promoting simplicity and home-grown quality in his buildings.
•His emphasis on cost-conscious construction, •An ideal that the Mahatma expressed as the only means to revitalize and liberate an impoverished India
ARCHITECTURAL STYLE• Designing and building low cost,
high quality, beautiful homes
• Suited to or built for lower-middle to lower class clients.
• Irregular, pyramid-like structures on roofs, with one side left open and tilting into the wind.
• Brick jali walls, a perforated brick screen which utilises natural air movement to cool the home's interior and create intricate patterns of light and shadow
Fig2:BRICK JALIRef:http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/my-mentor-laurie-baker
•Baker's designs invariably have traditional Indian sloping roofs and terracotta Mangalore tile shingling with gables and vents allowing rising hot air to escape.
•Curved walls to enclose more volume at lower material cost than straight walls.
•His respect for nature led him to let the idiosyncrasies of a site inform his architectural improvisations, rarely is a topography line marred or a tree uprooted.
•This saves construction cost as well, since working around difficult site conditions is much more cost-effective than clear-cutting
LOW COST CONSTRUCTION
Advantages Energy saving & Eco-Friendly
compressive roofing. Decorative & Highly Economical
Maintenance free
Filler slabs employ replacing 'un-productive' concrete by a 'Filler' material which reduces the weight of the slab and also the cost by reducing the amount of concrete used. Also, since the weight of the slab is thus reduced, lesser steel is required for reinforcement, further reducing the cost
Fig3:FILLER SLABRef:http://www.lauriebakerbuildingcentre.com/
Fig4:JACK ARCHRef:http://www.lauriebakerbuildingcentre.com/
•Advantages •Energy saving eco-friendly compressive roof. •Decorative & Highly Economical for larges spans. •Maintenance free
Advantages •Energy saving eco-friendly compressive roof. •Decorative & Economical •Maintenance free
Funnicular shell
Masonry Dome
THE HAMLET
• This is Baker's home in Trivandrum.
• This is remarkable and unique house built on a plot of land along the slope of a rocky hill, with limited access to water:
• However Baker's genius has created a wonderful home for his family
• Material used from unconventional sources
• Family eats in kitchen• • Electricity wiring is not concealed
DRAWINGS
GROUND FLOOR
FIRST FLOOR
The wall is decorated from broken pottery, pens, glass
Gables for proper air circulation and ventilation
Fig5:DECORATIVE WALLRef: http://lauriebaker.net/
Fig6:CIRCULATIONRef: http://lauriebaker.net/
MRS NALINI NAYAK`S RESIDENCE ULLOOR,
TRIVANDRUM (1971)
Requirements:-• Meeting place.• working place (training).• Open spaces.• Classroom & dormitories.
Generous sprawling ground floor with three floor staking of
pentagon
• The main house is formed by a simple three-floor stacking of the pentagon on nine-inch-thick brick walls
• internally each floor divides into the bedroom, bath and landing
• The additional segment on the ground, forming the living/dining and kitchen, is structured with bays of half-brick thickness, alternating wall and wall and door
Fig5: STACKED PENTAGONRef: http://lauriebaker.net/
• The main house is formed by a simple three-floor stacking of the pentagon on nine-inch-thick brick walls
• internally each floor divides into the bedroom, bath and landing
• The additional segment on the ground, forming the living/dining and kitchen, is structured with bays of half-brick thickness, alternating wall and wall and door
Ground floor plan
1st Floor Plan
2nd Floor Plan
Built furniture of bricksCommon door for entry and bathroom
Sun light merging inwards.
FISHERMEN’S VILLAGEPoonthura ,Trivandrum(1974-75)
CHALLENGES:• Severity of environment in which the tribal's live.• Limitation of resources• Conventional architects stayed away from these projects• Dealing with large insular groups, with set ideas and
traditions.• Dealing with cyclones
DESIGN STRATEGIES
• Exposed brickwork and structure • Sloped concrete roof• Openness in design and individual units offset each
other• Continuous latticework• in the exposed walls
Construction
• Low sloped roofs and courts serve as wind catchers• Open walls function to dispel it
• Long row of housing replaced by even staggering
• Fronting courts catch the breeze and also get view of sea
Dealing With Cyclones:
• Little private rectangle of land in between houses for drying nets , kids play,
• Provides sleeping lofts within and adequate space outside for mending nets and cleaning and drying fish
Open Spaces
PLAN
COMPUTER CENTREUlloor, Trivandrum (1971)
elevation
Solution of Computer Centre Design Problems
Fitting in naturally and harmoniously with the elevations of the twenty five year old institution
Challenges :
• Using principle of lattice wall planning, breezeways and built of natural brick and stone keeping in consideration the electronic sophistication
• He proposed a double walled building with an outer surface of intersecting circles of brick jalis
• Internal shell fulfilled the constraints and controls necessary for a computer laboratory.
• Space between the two walls accommodated the secondary requirements for offices and storage areas.
plan
External lattice
Two storeyed outer wall is stiffened by a series of intersecting circles,
Space used for storage
BIBLOGRAPHY• http://lauriebaker.net/• Ref:http://www.lauriebakerbuildingcentre.com/• Ref:http://www.downtoearth.org.in/content/my-mentor-laurie-baker• http://www.hindu.com/mag/• [Gautam_Bhatia]_Laurie_Baker-_Life,_Works_and_Writ