SOUTH BAY DIGS | Digital Edition Online

October 6, 2023

DIGS is the premiere luxury real estate lifestyle magazine serving the most affluent neighborhoods in the South Bay and Westside of Los Angeles, California.

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A R C H I T E C T U R E + D E S I G N P R O F I L E | L U D W I G M I E S V A N D E R R O H E " A 515 feet tall, while tinted plate glass, also at full height, ran between the beams. At each floor, skinny metal spandrel panels were placed horizontally to shroud the components that lay beneath. Unprecedented at the time—and still glamorous and efficient 65 years later— Mies planted a seamless 38 floors on Park Avenue in a perfect expression of the International Style. One can mentally time- travel to when such forms never existed to grasp the curious feeling of discovery one would feel when faced with the vision of the Seagram Building for the first time; much like in 1908 spotting a brand-new Ford Model A speed by while still plodding along on horse and buggy. Consistent with the radical innovation of lone, logic will not make beauty inevitable," architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe told LIFE in 1957. "But with logic, a building shines." And in his case, revolutionarily so. Perhaps no one better understood how to positively exploit the potential of technology and engineering than van der Rohe, a founding father of Modernist architecture who was central to the Great Age of the Skyscraper during the 1950s and 1960s—a time when many city landscapes would shift from horizontal to vertical. His most famous commission was the Seagram Building (1958), a lean NYC tower famously sheathed in a bronze-and- glass curtain wall system—a singular Mies innovation that would usher in a new, prism- like look to high-rise buildings. It was a first on many fronts: A series of bronze I-beams spanned the full height of the building, at From left. Photo of Mies van der Rohe. Credit: By Hugo Erfurth, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. In center, A rare residential project by Mies, the famous Edith Farnsworth House, completed in 1951. Credit: By Victor Grigas, licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0. creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/legalcode. Inset, Part of Mies' Five Famous Projects—a curvilinear glass skyscraper project, 1922 (Image of the lost model at MOMA). • Credit: Photo by Art is a Word, Public domain, via Creative Commons. 26 DIGS.NET | 10.6.23

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