The
Athens Charter had a huge impact on planning thought after World War II. However, its influence was more complicated because in the 1950s CIAM attempted to replace the Functional City described in the
Charter with a different
Charter of Habitat.
France In 1946 Le Corbusier received a commission for projects in
La Rochelle and St Dié. The urban plan allowed him to experiment with urban monumentality that had been somewhat underplayed in the
Charter, but as part of the project he proposed eight
Unité d'Habitation flanked by a civic centre. Although these proposals were unbuilt, he had more success in Marseilles where an initial study for three Unités resulted in one being built. In line with the
Charter, the Unité was a north-south orientated block eighteen storeys high set in parkland. There is a public 'street' on levels 7 and 8 that provides various shops, offices and a hotel. On the roof there is a nursery school, a running track and a pool. It opened in 1952 but had begun to influence architects even before it was complete.
United Kingdom The 1949 Housing Act in England paved the way for
Local Authorities to provide a balance of housing types for a range of communities, not just the working class. In the socialist post-war atmosphere, architectural writer
J M Richards praised Le Corbusier's
Unité for "putting clean and healthy housing in a parkland setting". Between 1952 and 1958
London County Council built the
Alton East and Alton West high-rise blocks in Roehampton. Alton East comprised 744 dwellings within mainly 10-storey blocks and Alton West was 1867 dwellings in 5-, 6- and 12-storey blocks. Both projects are set within parkland and have since been
listed. In Sheffield in 1958, the city architect, Lewis Womersley, designed the
Park Hill Estate. The product of an entire
slum clearance, three times the size of the
Unité, dwellings were housed in a series of high-rise structures connected by external decks. These 'streets in the air' are wide enough to incorporate bicycles and
milk floats. Initial success came because whole streets were moved into adjacent dwellings on the new scheme.
Harold Macmillan said it would "draw the admiration of the world". In Scotland, the Department of Housing for Scotland encouraged Local Authorities to build more unified and open schemes. The
Functional City prescribed the separation of industrial zones from residential ones by parkland. This concept suited the regeneration of industrial decay in Scottish cities. From 1956 the
Hutchesontown Gorbals area of Glasgow was redeveloped. The architect
Robert Matthew designed one of the four areas using 18-storey blocks on a north-south axis that ignored local street patterns. The
Golden Lane Estate in London was designed by
Chamberlin, Powell and Bon, who also designed the adjacent
Barbican Estate. It has a variety of dwellings and a good provision of supporting community buildings. Like the Unité it has a terrace on the roof. The Smithsons (Alison and Peter Smithson) were against the four functions explored for the
Functional City, renaming them
House,
Street,
District and
City. In the Golden Lane development the
House became the family unit, the
Street was an elevated access deck but the
District and
City lay outside the project's boundaries. Their work was never built at Golden Lane, but these ideas can be viewed in their book "Urban Structuring".
The Americas Lúcio Costa's conception of the plan for
Brasília saw the city as a manifestation of the Functional City. Like Le Corbusier's Ville Radieuse, it was seen as a method of imposing order, progress and stability to Brazil's new capital. Like Le Corbusier, Costa and
Oscar Niemeyer aspired to produce a city based upon equality and justice. In a variation of the
Functional City, Sert designed married-student housing for
Harvard University in 1964. Known as Peabody Terraces it was made up of three main towers set in lawns and sheltered pedestrian routes. It avoided the usual vacuum at the base by grading the scale between the towers and the lawns.
The rest of the world In Japan in 1957,
Kunio Maekawa designed the Harumi Apartment block in Tokyo based upon the idea of the Unité. Meanwhile, In
Tel Aviv in 1963 CIAM member
Jacob B. Bakema designed a
Functional City proposal based upon Le Corbusier's Algiers scheme. ==Criticism==