Maison Bordeaux Le Pecq. Maison Bordeaux Le Pecq / Claude Parent It showcases Parent's theory of the "fonction oblique," which emphasizes ramps, slopes, angles, and minimal walls, allowing space to predominate. (1961) and the Maison de l'Iran (1961-1970) at the Cité Universitaire
Maison BordeauxLe Pecq Architecture de Collection from www.architecturedecollection.fr
Claude Parent, Maison Bordeaux-Lepecq, Bois-le-Roy, 1965 Commande photographique de l'agence Architecture de Collection à l'artiste photographe Laurent Kronental, 2019 Parent created the house in 1963 for an art patron called Andree Bordeaux Le Pecq, who wanted it as her countryside studio and designed most of the interior.
Maison BordeauxLe Pecq Architecture de Collection
This declared that buildings should be all about ramps, slopes and angles, wall-free where possible; that space should predominate over surface.. This declared that buildings should be all about ramps, slopes and angles, wall-free where possible; that space should predominate over surface.. Maison de Mme Bordeaux-Le-Pecq, Bois-le-Roi (Eure) : façade nord-ouest (éch
Maison Bordeaux Le Pecq / Claude Parent. It showcases Parent's theory of the "fonction oblique," which emphasizes ramps, slopes, angles, and minimal walls, allowing space to predominate. The Maison Bordeaux le Pecq is in Bois le Roy, a village in Normandy
Maison Bordeaux Le Pecq / Claude Parent. This declared that buildings should be all about ramps, slopes and angles, wall-free where possible; that space should predominate over surface.. Built by the architect Claude Parent between 1963 and 1965, this house is a striking testimony to modernist architecture