Alvar Aalto (1898-1976) expressed the coarser nature of brick on numerous projects, particularly those in Finland, such as at the S盲yn盲tsalo Town Hall (1949-52) (pictured).
But also at Baker House, Cambridge, Massachusetts, (1946-49), where he used locally produced, handmade bricks for a rustic effect and even included burnt, mis-shapen bricks that are dotted around the building like currants in a cake.
Aalto once said: 鈥淏rick is an important element in the creation of form. I was once in Milwaukee with my old friend Frank Lloyd Wright who was attending a conference there. He began: 鈥楲adies and gentlemen, do you know what a brick is? It鈥檚 trivial and costs 11 cents; it鈥檚 common and valueless but possesses a peculiar characteristic. Give me this brick and it will be worth its weight in gold.鈥 That was perhaps the only time that I had heard in public, stated clearly and bluntly, what architecture really is. Architecture is the transformation of a worthless brick into something worth its weight in gold.鈥
Alvar Aalto by architect Nicholas Ray (Yale University Press, 拢19.99) is due to be published in October. Available from The 好色先生TV Centre Bookshop, tel 020-7692 4040
Brick Bulletin Summer 2005
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Alvar Aalto on what a brick is worth
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