Walter
Gropius not only taught at Weimar Germany's Bauhaus, he
even designed the building in Dessau. His Fagus Shoe Factory
Design in Germany and his work at the Bauhaus influenced
an entire generation of Modern Architects. Eventually he
found himself in the United States, designing houses with
old colleague Marcel Breuer, teaching at Harvard University
and designing the occasional megastructure such as the Pan
Am Building atop Park Avenue in New York City.
Fagus
Shoe Factory
(1911) Alfeld an der Leine, Germany
The Fagus Shoe Factory became more than just a shoe factory.
A truly modern building designed by one of the forerunners
of Modernism, it introduced all those things (like an industrial
based design aesthetic) we now take for granted.
Click here to learn all about the Fagus Shoe Factory. If
you can't read German then maybe you won't be learning as
much as just absorbing what you can and looking at all the
pretty pictures
Bauhaus
(1926) Dessau, Germany
Walter Gropius was part of an all star Bauhaus staff (including
Marcel Breuer, Paul Klee and Vassily Kandinsky, among others)
during the height of Germany's (artistic) glory days between
those consecutive, destructive World Wars.
Gropius was so integral to the Bauhaus that he was the one
who designed their building in Dessau, it opened in 1926
and stayed open until it was forced to close (for all the
obvious political reasons) in 1933.
Click
here to learn more than you probably wanted to about the
Bauhaus, Dessau and all those legends who once taught there
Walter
Gropius
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
1883
born Berlin, Germany
1919 Bauhaus
1969 died Boston, MA, US