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Le Corbusier and the machine for living


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The genetic code of nearly every modern apartment block, office tower, and city skyline was sparked by a man who started his career with a self-described horror of architecture. This episode is a deep dive into Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, better known as Le Corbusier, the Swiss-French architect who declared that a house is "a machine for living in" and then spent fifty years rebuilding the urban world to match.

We trace his beginnings in La Chaux-de-Fonds, the Domino concrete frame that freed walls from carrying weight, and the Five Points of a New Architecture: pilotis, roof terraces, the free plan, ribbon windows, and the free facade. We unpack signature works including the Villa Savoye, the Unité d'habitation in Marseille, the Notre-Dame du Haut chapel at Ronchamp, and his master plan for Chandigarh in India. We also confront the dark side: the Plan Voisin's proposal to bulldoze central Paris, his entanglements with Vichy France, and the slab-and-superblock urbanism that postwar planners imitated worldwide with mixed results.

Then we look at the Modulor, his standardized human form derived from the golden ratio and Fibonacci numbers, used to dictate the dimensions of his rooms. The episode closes on a sharp question: when you walk into a modern building, was it designed for you, or for a mathematically idealized human who does not actually exist?

Subscribe to pplpod for more deep dives into the people who shaped the built world. Topics: Le Corbusier, modernist architecture, Five Points of Architecture, Villa Savoye, Unité d'habitation, Modulor, Chandigarh, Plan Voisin, urban planning history.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 5/3/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

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