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Carradale House. Trellick Tower. Ernő Goldfinger RA (11 September 1902 – 15 November 1987) was a Hungarian-born British architect and designer of furniture. He moved to the United Kingdom in the 1930s, and became a key member of the Modernist architectural movement.
5 de mar. de 2024 · Born into a Jewish family on September 11, 1902, in Budapest, Ernő Goldfinger’s life took a pivotal turn towards architecture after encountering Hermann Muthesius’s “Das englische Haus.” This exposure marked the beginning of a lifelong dedication to modernist architecture and design.
18 de jan. de 2019 · Architect Erno Goldfinger, drew inspiration from the modernist principles of Le Corbusier's Unite d’Habitation for the tower’s dwelling units. Standing at 31 stories and 322 feet tall, the...
- Tim Winstanley
9 de set. de 2014 · In these articles Goldfinger set out a whole theory of architecture and urbanism based on the sensation of space. They are perhaps the first texts to tackle this subject − much discussed in German theory − in English since Geoffrey Scott’s The Architecture of Humanism of 1914.
Ernő Goldfinger (11 September 1902 – 15 November 1987) was a Hungarian-born British architect and designer of furniture. He moved to the United Kingdom in the 1930s, and became a key member of the Modernist architectural movement. He is most prominently remembered for designing residential tower blocks, some of which are now listed buildings.
11 de set. de 2018 · How Ernö Goldfinger brutalised both east and west. The architect built iconic towers on both sides of London - and was immortalised as a Bond baddie. Architecturally minded visitors might lose their bearings when riding on London’s public transport system.
Ernö Goldfinger was born in Budapest, Austria-Hungary [now Hungary], on 11 September 1902. With his family he left Hungary following the communist putsch in 1919. After a year spent at a school in Switzerland, he settled in Paris where he studied architecture and urban planning at the École des Beaux-Arts under Léon Jaussely (1875-1932) and ...