Louis I Kahn
Louis I Kahn
Louis I Kahn
BACKGROUND
Born in 1901 in Estonia, Russia, Louis Isadore Kahn is considered to be one of the most
influential architects of the second half of the twentieth century throughout the world. Louis
Kahn migrated to the U.S. along with his family in his early years (in 1905).
After completing his graduation from the University of Pennsylvania in 1924, Louis Kahn started
his career as a draughtsman and later worked as head designer in several other firms in
Philadelphia.
Until 1947, Kahn had worked with a series of partners, after which, Kahn set up his
independent/private practice.
It was during this year, that Kahn also began with his influential teaching career at  Yale
University as Chief Critic in Architectural Design and Professor of Architecture (1947-1957) and
then at the University of Pennsylvania as Professor of Architecture (1957-1974).
Kahn was bankrupt when he died at the age of 73, his small Philadelphia practice $500,000 in
debt.
INFLUENCES:
Kahn wanted to redefine the bases of architecture through a re-examination of structure, form, space, and light;
abstained from the international style modernism.
Kahn turned his back on this traditional approach and pursued innovation by redefining the use of structure, light,
form and space.
"Louis Kahn described his quest for meaningful form as a search for "beginnings," a spiritual resource from which
modern man could draw inspiration".
It is widely believed that Louis Kahn, who was then a Resident Architect at the American Academy in Rome, was
extremely impressed by the astonishing architectural feats of Greeks, Egyptians and the Romans and this triggered
the change in his approach of designing the buildings.
Louis Kahn (right) in front of a model of the City Tower Project in an exhibition at
Cornell University, New York, February 1958
Louis Kahn: the brick whisperer
Believed his materials had a stubborn sense of their own destiny , if you are ever stuck for
inspiration, ask your materials for advice.
"You say to a brick, 'What do you want, brick?' And brick says to you, 'I like an arch.' And
you say to brick, 'Look, I want one, too, but arches are expensive and I can use a concrete
lintel.' And then you say: 'What do you think of that, brick?' Brick says: 'I like an arch.'"
For Kahn, form did not necessarily follow function; nor did his projects celebrate all the new
possibilities of industrial materials.
Created from monolithic masonry, and drawing on primary geometries with great circles,
semi-circles and triangles sliced out of their weighty walls, his buildings exude a timeless
presence.
Silence
&
Light
Yale Art Gallery (1951-53),
Light joint-over triangular stairs
The more prominent features of this building include the hollow concrete tetrahedral
space-frame that allows for the omission of ductwork while also reducing the standard
requirements regarding floor-to-floor height.
Bottom section of metal formwork for the
concrete ceiling structure,
Yale University Art Gallery.
Philip Exeter Academy
The project was based on a
simple concept: library users
were invited to select a book and
then go to the windows to read in
the natural light. Based on this
idea, the building is divided into
three layers: at the centre is a
large entrance hall, as a site of
encounter and exchange, from
which the surrounding holdings
of 250,000 books can be seen.
They are housed within what
Kahn used to call a "concrete
donut" to protect them from the
sunlight. A 'brick donut' finally
surrounds that core, containing
more than 200 naturally lit library
carrels.
The Capital Complex at Dhaka
Geometry : measurable and immeasurable
The entire complex is
fabricated out of poured
in place concrete with
inlaid white marble,
which is not only a
modernist statement of
power and presence, but
is more of a testament to
the local materials and
values.
The National Assembly Building sits
as a massive entity in the Bengali
desert; there are eight halls that are
concentrically aligned around the
parliamentary grand chamber, which
is not only a metaphor for placing
the new democratic government at
the heart of the building.
The geometric shapes found on the different faces of the façade add a dramatic
impact to the overall composition of the building.
Kimbell Art Museum
Despite the complexity of this
process the design
development was more
section than plan-based.
This is documented by
numerous studies of semi-
elliptical, semi-circular or
even V-shaped vaults.
The starting point for Kahn's scheme
of concrete vaults was the idea to
bring the change of day, weather,
and seasons into the museum.
By a skylight slot at the apex of each
vault and wing-like aluminium
reflectors beneath, the gallery space
is animated with diffuse ever-
changing natural light in which
artworks are best viewed.
Gallery level plan
Semi-basement plan
Shadow joints occur between
the concrete structure and the
travertine infill, be- tween
steel window frames and the
concrete walls, between
interior door frames and their
panel infills. Light joints occur
between the cycloid curves of
the vaults and the beautifully
tensioned infill curves at the
wall ends of the vaults.
SALK INTITTUTE When the famous medical scientist and bacteriologist decided to build a
laboratory on a coastal cliff north of San Diego, a friend, after attending a lecture
by Kahn on 'Order in Science and Art,' recommended him as architect.
The design of the court with
its study towers facing the
sea remained undetermined
until the Mexican architect
Luis Barragán, having been
invited by Kahn to visit the
site, proposed keeping it as
an open plaza.
MATERIAL SENSIBILITY:
Kahn was known to appreciate the appearance and feel of different materials that he
used in his work.
Kahn is also known to have used brick and concrete extensively and his innovative usage
of these materials demonstrated his talent to the world.
" as far as architecture is concerned, the old systems of proportion belonged to a formal
order which is dead and buried at a time when the source of unity in architecture is in
the social sphere, in other words, in the architect's program. “
Louis Kahn must be credited for re-introducing various concepts which most of the
modern architects had deserted like:
centralized spaces, using extensive geometric principles : symmetry, balance, hierarchy,
harmony of forms
OF SILENCE AND LIGHT
Louis Kahn gave to architecture new and timeless concepts of shadow and light, texture,
structural solids and voids, and the expressive power of symbolic geometry from minimal to
monumental scales.
Kahn’s concept of the shadow joint later evolved into the light joint
IIM, Ahmedabad