Eladio Dieste

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cristo Obrero Church in Atlántida, Uruguay
Cristo Obrero Church in Atlántida, Uruguay

Eladio Dieste (1917-2000) was a Uruguayan engineer and architect who made his reputation by building a range of structures from grain silos, factory sheds, markets and churches, all in Uruguay and all of exceptional elegance. There were several architects in South and Latin America who were working in the modernist idiom, such as Carlos Raul Villanueva in Venezuala and Felix Candela in Mexico, but Dieste, was one of the few to bring architecture and structural engineering into close proximity, especially in the service of sometimes humble commissions. His buildings were mostly roofed with thin shell vaults constructed of brick and ceramic tiles. These forms were cheaper than reinforced concrete, and didn't require ribs and beams. In developing this approach, even in comparison with modernists the world over, he was an innovator.[1] Dieste is quoted about his use of materials and structure:

There are deep moral/practical reasons for our search which give form to our work: with the form we create we can adjust to the laws of matter with all reverence, forming a dialogue with reality and its mysteries in essential communion... For architecture to be truly constructed, the materials must be used with profound respect for their essence and possibilities; only thus can 'cosmic economy' be achieved... in agreement with the profound order of the world; only then can have that authority that so astounds us in the great works of the past. [2]

Dieste's search for 'cosmic economy' lead him to experiment with the Gaussian vault which relies on its own surface for strength and stiffness. In other words, the vault is its own beam. With regard to structure Dieste stated:

The resistant virtues of the structure that we make depend on their form; it is through thiei form that they are stable and not because of an awkward accumulation of materials. There is nothing more noble and elegant from an intellectual viewpoint than this ; resistance through form. [3]

Many of the techniques that he developed to achieve these forms, such as pre-stressing of brickwork and moveable formworks, were in advance of contemporary techniques in the developed world.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Anderson, Stanford. Eladio Dieste: Innovation in Structural Art, (New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2004).
  2. ^ Quoted from Modern Architecture since 1900, page 575.
  3. ^ Quoted from Eladio Dieste - The Engineer's Contribution to Contemporary Architecture, page 21.

[edit] Sources

  • Curtis, William (2002). Modern Architecture since 1900. Phaidon. ISBN 0-7148-3356-8. 
  • Pedreschi, Remo (2000). Eladio Dieste - The Engineer's Contribution to Contemporary Architecture. Thomas Telford. ISBN 0-7277-2772-9. 

[edit] External links

In other languages