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Modern architecture
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===International Style (1920s–1970s)=== {{main|International Style (architecture)}} <gallery mode="packed" heights="150"> File:Villa La Roche 2013.jpg|The [[Villa La Roche]]-Jeanneret (now [[Fondation Le Corbusier]]) by [[Le Corbusier]], Paris (1923–25) File:Weissenhof Corbusier 03.jpg|Corbusier Haus in [[Weissenhof Estate]], Stuttgart (1927) File:Weissenhof photo house citrohan east façade Le Corbusier & Pierre Jeanneret Stuttgart Germany 2005-10-08.jpg|Citrohan Haus in [[Weissenhof Estate]], Stuttgart by Le Corbusier (1927) File:VillaSavoye.jpg|The [[Villa Savoye]] in [[Poissy]] by Le Corbusier (1928–31) File:MalletStevensMezy2.jpg|[[Villa Paul Poiret]] by [[Robert Mallet-Stevens]] (1921–1925) File:Villa Noailles (Mallet-Stevens, 1923).JPG|The [[Villa Noailles]] in [[Hyères]] by Robert Mallet-Stevens (1923) File:Villa des frères Martel construite par Robert Mallet-Stevens au 10 rue Mallet-Stevens (Paris), en 1927.jpg|Hôtel Martel rue Mallet-Stevens, by [[Robert Mallet-Stevens]] (1926–1927) </gallery> The dominant figure in the rise of modernism in France was Charles-Édouard Jeanerette, a Swiss-French architect who in 1920 took the name [[Le Corbusier]]. In 1920 he co-founded a journal called ''{{'}}L'Espirit Nouveau'' and energetically promoted architecture that was functional, pure, and free of any decoration or historical associations. He was also a passionate advocate of a new urbanism, based on planned cities. In 1922 he presented a design of a city for three million people, whose inhabitants lived in identical sixty-story tall skyscrapers surrounded by open parkland. He designed modular houses, which would be mass-produced on the same plan and assembled into apartment blocks, neighborhoods, and cities. In 1923 he published "Toward an Architecture", with his famous slogan, "a house is a machine for living in."<ref>Le Corbusier, ''Vers une architecture", (1923), Flammarion edition (1995), pages XVIII-XIX</ref> He tirelessly promoted his ideas through slogans, articles, books, conferences, and participation in Expositions. To illustrate his ideas, in the 1920s he built a series of houses and villas in and around Paris. They were all built according to a common system, based upon the use of reinforced concrete, and of reinforced concrete pylons in the interior which supported the structure, allowing glass curtain walls on the façade and open floor plans, independent of the structure. They were always white, and had no ornament or decoration on the outside or inside. The best-known of these houses was the [[Villa Savoye]], built in 1928–1931 in the Paris suburb of [[Poissy]]. An elegant white box wrapped with a ribbon of glass windows around on the façade, with living space that opened upon an interior garden and countryside around, raised up by a row of white pylons in the center of a large lawn, it became an icon of modernist architecture.{{Sfn|Bony|2012|page=83}}
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