Image 21 of 46 from gallery of Louis Kahn's Indian Institute of Management in Ahmedabad Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu. Photograph by Laurian Ghinitoiu
Wow, some incredible captures of buildings designed by the great architect Louis Kahn, photographed by Naquib Hossain. In fact Naquib has a small website dedicated to Louis Kahn which he has coined a “Visual Archive”, quite fitting for this particular series. If you’ve not seen it before I’d recommend having a browse here, it’s basically a homage to Louis Kahn and his works through a collection of photographs. Interestingly enough ...
The Phillips Exeter Academy Library in Exeter, New Hampshire, U.S., with 160,000 volumes on nine levels and a shelf capacity of 250,000 volumes, is the larg ...
Image 2 of 3 from gallery of The 'Power of Architecture’: Louis Kahn Exhibition. Living Room of the Norman and Doris Fisher House, Hatboro, Pennsylvania, Louis Kahn, 1960-67 / © Grant Mudford
In 1960, Jonas Salk tasked Louis I. Kahn with designing the Salk Institute, a research facility that he envisioned would positively impact humanity
The First Unitarian Church of Rochester, designed in 1959 and completed in 1962, is a prime example of Louis Kahn's design sensibilities.
Image 8 of 15 from gallery of AD Classics: Exeter Library (Class of 1945 Library) / Louis Kahn. Photograph by Flickr - User: Kiel Bryant
“Architecture appears for the first time when the sunlight hits a wall. The sunlight did not know what it was before it hit a wall.” (Louis I. Kahn)
Architecture & design firm AKDA draw inspiration from Kahn’s work to design an imposing brick screen façade—this building’s most prominent feature
Louis Kahn’s Capitol Complex in Dhaka, Bangladesh, is an epic work in the annals of modern architecture that is still shrouded in mystery. Dhaka was a
Renowned for the monolithic masonry of buildings from California to Bangladesh, Kahn turned his obsessions – the natural sciences and primary geometries – into wondrous works of architecture
Overlooking the Pacific Ocean, Louis Kahn's 1965 masterwork integrates architecture, landscape, and science
Wow, some incredible captures of buildings designed by the great architect Louis Kahn, photographed by Naquib Hossain. In fact Naquib has a small website dedicated to Louis Kahn which he has coined a “Visual Archive”, quite fitting for this particular series. If you’ve not seen it before I’d recommend having a browse here, it’s basically a homage to Louis Kahn and his works through a collection of photographs. Interestingly enough ...
The last major work by the maestro of a new global monumentality, the government buildings for the capital of contemporary Bangladesh, was completed years after his death in 1974. While the works were in full development, two of Kahn’s friends and collaborators discussed it with Domus.
Louis Kahn remains an important placemaker in interior design history. He focused on architecture, interior design, and the human experience through user centered planning. Learn more about his life and major works like the Salk Institute.
The First Unitarian Church of Rochester, designed in 1959 and completed in 1962, is a prime example of Louis Kahn's design sensibilities.
Louis Kahn, 1962
Louis Kahn - Chiesa Unitaria di Rochester, Rochester, NY, 1959
Printed on 310gsm Giclée Hahnemühle German Etching 30x45 cm (12x18 inches) is a limited edition of 100 40x60 cm (16x24 inches) is a limited edition of 50 50x75 cm (20x30 inches) is a limited edition of 25 For all limited editions a certificate of authenticity is included
In 1960, Jonas Salk tasked Louis I. Kahn with designing the Salk Institute, a research facility that he envisioned would positively impact humanity
RNDRD | A partial index of published architectural rendering