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ADOLF LOOS

THE LIFE - THE THEORIES - ANALYSIS OF THE VILLA MUELLER


Joern Besser, Stephan Liebscher
Exchange students at:
University of Bath
from:
Technical University of Dresden

Bath 2005
„… the highest blossom of mental perversity …“

„The crap box at the Michaeler place.“

„This monster of a house….“

Reactions in the newspapers to Loos`s house at the Michaelerplatz (Czech;Mistelbauer,1984)


Table of Content

1. The Person – Overcoming the Ancient Man 7

1.1 Loos’ early years 7


1.2 Visiting the USA and Great Britain 8
1.3 The essence of the Journey 9

2. The Writer – turning- away from the ornament 11

2.1 Speaking into the void 11


2.2 Anyway – “the important happens anyway” 13
2.3. Raumplan (Spatial Plan) 14

3. The Villa Müller 16

3.1 Introduction 16
3.2 Analysis 21
3.2.1. The Site 21
3.2.2 Cubature & Facade 22
3.2.3 Proportions / Rela- tions / Symmetry / Axes 22
3.2.4 Window- Façade- Correlation 28
3.2.5 Windows & Room Correlation 30
3.2.6 Floor Plan 32
3.2.7 Spatial Plan 34

4. Illustrations 45

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6
Adolf Loos understanding one has to bring
the situation of his homeland,
Austro- Hungary, at this time
bourgeoisie emerges in the
cities as the leading class, less
political but definitely cultural
in his mind, one also has to and intellectual. In contrast to
envision the stealthy decay of that the fall of the gentry seems
a multi-national state and to to be unstoppable.
realise the chances for large- The emancipation of the
scale changes created by that. bourgeoisie is strongly linked
While Prussia defeats France to the search for a bourgeois self
in the War of 1870/ 1871 and its expression, but already/
and humiliates it with the yet in 1870 a loss of orientation
coronation of the German dominates this search for a
Emperor in Versailles the up- to- date self expression.
Danube Monarchy is paralysed The art of the emancipation
by its losing of the former of the bourgeoisie got caught
leading role in the Deutschen in copying ancient aristocratic
Bund (German Confederation) forms of expression – creating
to Prussia in the German War the so called Historism.
of 1866. Therefore the hope for a
As well the contrast between modern bourgeois expression
the two parts of the Dual illustrating the breakup into a
Monarchy increases and opens new era was not satisfied.
the door for eruptions of the
smoulding conflicts with the Adolf Loos was born in
slavonian regions of the empire. Dezember 1870 into a lower
1. The Person – Overcom- Due to this Austro- Hungary is middle class but academically
ing the Ancient Man bound by its internal affairs. educated family. As shown
In addition the long lasting before, the time of his birth
1.1 Loos’ early years effects of the bourgeois alone could have triggered
revolution of 1848 mould Loos’ provocative way of live
To breed a visionary like Adolf the society of the Danube and thinking by its general
Loos time has to reach a special Monarchy. Despite anti-
historic configuration. For the bourgeois repressions the

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confusions, geopolitical Loos completes the royal- 1.2 Visiting the USA and
alterations, social changes and imperial vocational school of Great Britain
dualisms. Brno with the Matura.
Changes and breaks also As well, his next stations Loos’ time in America can be
mould the youth of Adolf Loos: of life are also moulded easily described as a “phase
The early death of his father in by unsteadiness and of emancipation”³ in which
1879 forced his mother to deal inconsequence: neither Loos’ he developed himself from
with the family business – a study at the Royal- Saxon a minor, student without
stonemason’s workshop. Due to Technical University in prospects to a modern and
the less time the mother could Dresden will be completed nor complete human being and
spend with the child and the the planned exchange to the gentleman.
mothers permanent pressure Academy of Fine Arts Vienna But not only his human
to assume the business a�er will be carried out. qualities changed in years
leaving school, the now Lusterberger marks Adolf Loos between 1893 and 1896, also his
defective family ties cause an decision of visiting the USA aesthetical ideals succumb to
odyssey of the young Adolf and also respectively the World this metamorphosis.
Loos trough several residential Exhibition 1893 in Chicago as The meeting with the simplicity
schools (Brünn, Iglau, Melk, “the only way out of a situation of items of the American
Reichenberg) 1. Despite without future prospect” applied arts movement, which
inadequate school achievements and the final “waiving of an was be also published later
academic education”². in his writings, and the plain
elegance of the American rural
population caused a “step-
by- step dissociation from
the (former) habits/practice of
aesthetical vision (moulded by
the a�endance at an European
vocational school)”4.
The first “pitiful smile”5 for the
American and English Arts-
and-Cra�s Movement turns
soon into admiration and leads
Illustration 2 - Chicago World Fair 1893
to the realisation/awareness,

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that simplicity, plainness are the The “Modern Man” now 1.3 The essence of the
real expressions of a modern overcomes the “Ancient Man” Journey
occidental culture. and freed Loos thinking from
Important for Loos individual the ballast of the outdated forms
The important the impressions
development were the of culture. Loos writes: “The
of America are for Loos, the
unse�led months of the year biting American and English air
less there are proved facts
1894, in which he became took all my preoccupation (…)
about the exact route and
familiar with the hard and away. Unprincipled men tried
received tangible, especially
poor living conditions of the to malign our time. Always we
architectural, influences. That
European immigrants in New had to look back, always we
there existed buildings which
York. Here he had to waive had to be modelled on another
influenced Loos’ work is visible.
knowingly the material safety time. But my nightmare yields.
For example the comparison of
of his former life. Due to the Yes, our time is beautiful. So
the rounded window corners
fact that a economical crisis beautiful, that I don’t want to
of his Uncle Fredrick’s house
caused a high unemployment live in another. 9
which he saw in 1893 with the
rate in the USA also Loos got Not until the end of 1894 when
similar door design of the 1897
no salaried position and hat Loos found a salaried position
built Ebenstein Fashion Store
to work as dishwasher, floor- as an architectural dra�sman
shows that there are obvious
and bricklayer 6. His tramping in New York, he could think
parallels. But Loos himself
around the USA, the simple jobs about saving money for the
never referred to that.
he did and the meetings with journey back home. But the
But we can take for sure, that
normal (new-) american people, incapacitation by his Mother,
the architecture of the Chicago
who were “changed by a some forced him to leave the USA and
School has carried weight
vital force in this country”7 marks the end of this period of
on Adolf Loos. Astonishing
and found themselves “in the cu�ing the cord.
similarities (three-pieced
special process of clearing out”
horizontal structuring, forms
which frees them from “the
of cornices etc.) of not only one
historic prejudices which made
Loosian project with buildings
their blood thick and poisoned
of Louis Sullivan and the
them while being in their old
occurrence of typical elements
outdated political geography”
of other representatives of the
8
- that all was like a liberation
Chicago School mark this as
from the European traditions.
a plausible conclusion. As a

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important example for that the
Loos- literature points out to the
comparison of the combination
of bay-windows and coloums at
the Fine Arts Building Chicago
(Solon Spencer Beman, 1885)
and The Rookery Chicago
(Daniel Burnham &John
Wellborn Root, 1888) with the
windows of the mezzanine
storey of the Michaelerplatz-
House.10 Also Loos’ pride
of Sullivan’s salutation „my
dear brother in spirit“11 seems
to support the theory of the
Chicago School influence.
Ill. 3 -Philadelphia house, Chestnut Ill. 4 -Entrance door of the Ebenstein
Beside the more uncertain Street, Frederick Loos Fashion store
influences of the American
architecture of that time we with his plain, elegant style is the very existence of them
can say more about America’s emerges as the symbol of the as the essential argument
effect on his way of thinking. In “modern” human being – far against his opponents, the
America we can find the origin away in the future from the (for representatives of the outdated
of his evolutionary theory of Loos) outdated ornaments and moral, art and society in
culture. In his writings he o�en playfulness of the European Europe. Loos’ prominence in
refers to the American natives style. knowing America and England
as a symbol of a lower cultural How far Loos’ later writings on - the “new world” - and his
developed nation due to their his American experiences refer ability to overcome the still
opulent use of ornaments to the true events of his journey existing European traditions
on their items of usage 12. In will never be completely lead to his criticising point of
contrast to that the simple proved. But more important view from the position of a
American farmer, in person as the absolute truth of his
of Uncle Ben and Aunt Anna, experience and conclusions

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culturally “higher” developed Secession. This movement All his essays, some of them
observer with the demand to was part of the European Art were published in his own
educate the people. Noveau. Their ambition was to journal “Das Andere – ein Bla� zur
improve the basic commodity Einführung der Abendländischen
by art. The protagonists of this Kultur in Österreich“ (“The Other
movement were O�o Wagner, – A journal for the introduction
2. The Writer – turning- Joseph Maria Olbrichs and Josef of the western culture into
away from the orna- Hoffman. Austria”), was published 1921
ment in his book „Ins leere gesprochen“
With this environment Loos (“Speaking into the void”) and
was confronted when he 1931 in the extension “Trotzdem”
Loos returned back to Austria,
arrived. It was not possible (“Anyway”). On the basis of
to it`s capital Vienna, in 1896. At
for Loos to establish himself these books it is possible to
this time Vienna was the blatant
immediately as an architect in observe the development of his
contradiction of the modern
Vienna. Due to this, he started theoretical work.
America. It was affected by
to write essays for Viennese
the backwards orienteted
newspapers like the Neue
governance of the emperor
Freie Presse, Die Zeit and Die 2.1 Speaking into the
Franz Joseph I. The society
Waage. In these essays he dealt void
looked back to the previous era
with problems from all social
and was not able to deal with
spheres, like “How long should
the problems and possibilties of Starting with the essay
the hair of women be”, fashion
the new civil society. This was “Lederwaren und Gold- und
or architecture. Thinking in this
also to observe in architecutre Silberschmiedekunst“ (“Leather
wide spectrum he developed
and the dominant architectural goods and the art of gold and
his theory of an unornamental
point of view. The architectural silversmith”), from the 15th
way of design. His theoretical
mainstream was the historism. of May 1898 where he, based
work culminated in his main
In the historism it was common on his American experience,
work “Ornament and Crime”
to use and to imitate the design critised that the Austrian
(1908). Simultaneously to his
mediums of the ancient eras, applied arts copied the ancient
first essay he got the possibility
like the renaissance, for building arts. He a�acks the applied art
to realise some interior designs
houses. There was also another academies and accuses them of
architectural movement in for flats and shops.
doing „reissbre�diletantismus“.
Vienna – the so called Viennese 13
In his opinion they botched

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the design process of the the Viennese architectural chairs, desks and smoking stands
cra�smen and were responsible historism. He sentenced the – all items made by our cra�smen
for the inpureness of the basic simulation of material and in the modern idiom (never by the
commodity by the use of the nailing on of renaissance architects); everyone may buy these
historical ornaments. facades as amoral, because for himself according to his own
Loos verbalised his critic of through this simulation, the taste and inclination.” 16
the ornament more exactly in Viennese try to turn simple
his essay „Das Luxusfuhrwerk“ living houses into palaces. So His most beautiful script
(“The luxury cart”) from the they feign that only aristocrates against the Viennese Secession
3rd July 1898. There he wrote: live in Vienna and not simple is the essay “Vom armen, reichen
civils. Manne“ (“About a poor, rich
Searching the beauty only in the man”) from April the 26th 1898.
form, and make it not depending But Loos was not only He described how an architect
on the ornament, that is the human a�acking the historism, he designed a house, the furnitures,
ambition. 14 also a�acked the Viennese the wallpapers and clothes for a
secession. He criticized their rich man. At the end the man
In this context he also starts ambition to create a strong is complete. He needs nothing
to flesh out his theory against formal and mental connection more, and it is not allowed for
the ornament with the cultural between production, painting, him to have wishes, because he
history. He creates the following architecture and applied is complete and has everything.
sentence: arts. The result should be a So he is a poor, rich man.
Gesamtkunstwerk under the Looking at the work of the Art
“The lower the cultural level, the leadership of the architect. Loos Noveau architcts of this time
more lavish the ornament.”15 dismissed this categorically. He you recognise that Loos didn`t
followed his own rule, which overplay, when he described
He will develop this idea farther he described so: that the architect designed
in his later work “Ornament and special clothes for every room
Crime” to his evolutionary art „ The walls of a building belong – Herny van de Velde did this
theory. to the architect. There he rules at in reality.
will. And as with walls so with any
With the essay “Die potemkinsche furniture that is not moveable. (…
Stadt” (“The potemkin city”) .) The wrought-iron bedstead, table
from July 1898, he a�acks and chairs, hassocks and occasional

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2.2 Anyway – “the impor- economical damage, because The constractional proclamation
tant happens anyway” the fabrication of ornamental of his writings happend 1910.
(Friedrich Nietzsche) basic commodities needs more Loos built his first house - the
manpower and material than house at the Michaelerplatz
His final polemic paper for an unornamental one. The (also known as the Looshouse).
“Ornament and Crime” from working time which should It shows how he thought is ideas
1908, is the aggregation of not be wasted for the ornament, could get reality. The lower part
his theoretical work. Here he should be used to produce more of the house is made out of
describe his evolutionary art products or for the freetime of Cipolini marble. Ornamentless
theory: the worker. Due to that, Loos built, it lifes from the rich
thought, the general social texture of the marble. Over this
“evolution of culture is wealth could be increased. base ist the plain part of the the
conterminous with the removal Wasting material and working house. Only an unornamental
of the ornament from the basic time for the ornament – that is render facade with outcuted
commodity”17 what Loos called a crime. square holes for the windows.
The ending of the house is a
He founded this sentence by The conversion of these high and rampant roof. Loos
looking at the native (papua), revolutionary ideas, which did his building not only
which tatoo themselves. For happened two years later, without the normal ornamental
the native this behavoir is fine, required a disputatious facade arragment, he also did it
but would the modern man character. That Loos was such without the finishing frize from
ta�oo his skin, he would be a a character shows his reaction the classical facade trisection
degenerate or criminal, because to a critic, which he got for his for townhouse of this age. The
the modern man has negotiated essay “Ornament and Crime”: only decoration at the facade
this stadium. In this context are the bronze flower boxes,
he predicated the ornament as „I tell you the time will come when which were the result of a long
“the babble of painting” 18. the furnishing of a prison cell by argument between him and the
His critic of the reawakening the royal upholsterer Schulze or city. This argument was affected
of the ornament is not only by Professur Van de Velde will be by buildingbreaks and the
aesthetic. He also criticized considered an aggravation of the involvement of the public. The
the ornament from the sentence.” 19 displacment of the ornament
economical point of view. He through the texture, which is
predicated the ornament as an observable at this house and

13
also at his other projects, makes 2.3. Raumplan (Spatial of the luxury of ornament.
it possible to see parallels to Plan) His creation of the Raumplan
Mies van der Rohe who also also introduces a new point of
removed the ornament and “My architecture is not conceived view for the composition and
displaced it with texture. Mies in plans, but in spaces (cubes). I connection of rooms. If we
went so far to draw the texture do not design floor plans, facades, follow Julius Posener21 Loos is
for his porjects and selected sections. I design spaces. For me, the last element of the chain
only stones which would fit in there is no ground floor, first Palladio- Le Doux- Schinkel
in his texture plan. floor etc.... For me, there are only and his Raumplan is the
contiguous, continual spaces, descendant of their “bourgeois
The other interesting aspect rooms, anterooms, terraces etc. architecture”. The Raumplan
in this house, but also in his Storeys merge and spaces relate to is the a�empt of Loos to
later houses, is the connection each other. Every space requires a reconcile the demands of the
of the rooms and the way how different height: the dining room classic bourgeois architecture
they communicate to eachother. is surely higher than the pantry, – simplicity and building for
This was his first realised thus the ceilings are set at different usage.
project where you could see the levels. To join these spaces in such In contrast to the term
beginning of the development a way that the rise and fall are “Raumplan” which was firstly
of his Raumplan (plane of not only unobservable but also used by Heinrich Kulka in 1931
volumes). practical, in this I see what is for the idea behind, the “solving
others the great secret, although it the floorplan in space”22, is the
is for me a great ma�er of course. result of a continued process
Coming back to your question, it in the work of Adolf Loos. For
is just this spatial interaction and Loos the theatre with loges
spatial austerity that thus far I is the origin of his Raumplan
have best been able to realise in Dr theory. He states, that “one can
Müller’s house” Adolf Loos 20 only bear the the stay in the
narrow and low-ceiled loges
Adolf Loos merit for the and galleries, because they are
architecture is not only that in an open spatial connection
he developed an architectural to the high, continuous main
language of simplicity and hall.”23
plain elegance in the times

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He also comes to the conclusion, were made aviable by as well
that “one can save space through complex vertical circulation by
connecting a higher main room stairs.
to a lower annexe”24
The first use of the Raumplan
in Loos architecture, as he
said, was in the unbuild
project of the “Ministry of
War” (“Kriegsministerium”) in
Vienna in 1907/08.
Basically it can be said, that for
Loos two things were important
within his Raumplan - firstly a
differentiation of the height of
the ceiling in differently used
rooms, with a strong link to the
privacy which the room should
provide, secondly the creation Ill. 5 - Villa Müller
of room sequences with the
different rooms, with a special Typically in Loos’ houses the
importance on the visual rooms are vertically shi�ed by
connections of the rooms. That a half of the height of a storey
means precisely that more (Tzara House, Moissi House)
private annexes with lower or 2 higher storeys face 3 lower
ceilings are spatially connected storeys in the whole cubature
through stairs, visually trough (Mueller House). The best
view-throughs etc. with higher and most impressive use of
more public rooms. The the Raumplan can be found
different heights of the ceiling in the Mueller House, which
cause a break-through of the was build in 1930 in Prague
established horizontal layering25 for the building contractor Dr.
of the house. This leads to Frantisek Mueller.
complex space structures which

15
3. The Villa Müller One must add that Loos design Despite repeated appeals of
of the Villa Müller was strongly the local building authority
3.1 Introduction influenced by the design of against the measurement of the
the Rufer House, albeit he building footprint, the number
In the autumn of 1928 the considered the construction of of storeys and several design
civil engineer and building the Rufer House with its single elements the original design
contractor Frantisek Müller, middle coloumn as inapplicable of the house could be carried
partner in the successful for the Villa Müller. As well out largely. Loos wit in dealing
building firm Kapsa & Müller, he adopted the main aspects with the building law, which
commissioned Adolf Loos and of the Rufer House as there he showed for example yet in
his associate Karel Lhota to are the overall arrangement the roof design of the Steiner
design the new house for the of utilisation of rooms, the House, and Müller’s experience
Müller family. roof-terrace and the central as building contractor,
Due to the professional representative stair. especially in dealing with the
closeness of the contractors, The first design of the Villa building authority, were in our
a strong affinity of their Müller in 1928 was a simple opinion the main influence on
thinking and other personal cuboid with a 3:2 relationship not ge�ing changed the original
characteristics Loos, in strong of the sides of the footprint design too much.
accordance with Müller, was rectangle of the house. To give
able to design and build the the front and the backside an For an easier access to the
masterpiece of his late work: square appearance though analysis of the Villa Müller we
the conversion of his Raumplan there existed a the strong slope present firstly a virtual tour
into built reality. of the terrain, he decided soon through the building.
Together with Lhota Loos to use his in former houses (e.g.
designed in only two month Moller House) yet formulated
the house which would be design idea of the terrace house.
later to be recognized as the The roof-storey should only be
“pinnacle of his work” (Heinrich carried out on the hill side of
Kulka: Das Werk des Architekten, the house, faced to the valley
Wien, Anton Stroll Verlag, 1931 side he planed a vast terrace,
in: Kleinman, van Duzer, 1994, which lowered the visible
S. 19) facade on that side to a square
appearance.

16
above: Ill. 6 - view to the entrance
right: Ill. 7 - view to the rise to the first level

17
above: Ill. 8 - the hall
le�: Ill. 9 - view from the hall to the staircase

18
above: Ill. 10 - dining room
right: Ill. 11 - boudoir

19
above: Ill. 12 - staircase with skylight
le�: Ill. 13 - roof terrace with skylight

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3.2 Analysis 3.2.1. The Site north a heavy used road and at
least a public thoroughfare (in
The analysis of the Viller the appearance of a stair built
Müller mainly refers to the at the same time when Villa
relations of the measurement Müller was built) delimit the
of the parts of the structure, the site.
storey floor plans and facades. Due to the in North-to-South
The basis of our work are the direction of the slope and the
excellent floor plans, sections alignment of the site to the
and façade prints of Leslie van North-east, there exists a double
Duzer’s and Kent Kleinman’s slope having its lowest point in
book “Villa Müller – A Work of the north-eastern corner of the
Adolf Loos”. We completed and site.
analyzed them graphically with The building itself is more
the help of CAD- and drawing Illustration 14: siteplan extroverted to the North and
programmes as AutoCAD and more introverted to the South
Adobe Illustrator. As well we The site of the Villa Müller is because of it’s exposure on the
created a three dimensional situated in a western district north-facing slope.
model of the rooms (room of Prague, Stresovice, an at One can enter the site from the
imprint or moulded rooms), the time of building the Villa South as well as from the North
to show the relations, views emerging suburb with mainly however the main entrance
and height differences – the free standing residential with the access to the garage
Raumplan - more vivid. houses. Additionally it is is located to the south because
A virtual round tour located on the northern slope of of be�er accessibility and the
through the Villa Müller , as a hill with view to the castle of less used street. From North
well illustrated for a be�er Prague, the Hradshin. Only the a narrow stair over the whole
understanding by the view eastern and south-eastern side length of the western side of
direction in additional floor of the site border on sites with the site provides access to the
plans, ought to give further houses, the remaining sides are house.
insights into the architecture of facing public space. Thus in the The building is moved as far as
the Villa Müller. south-west a smaller road (Nad possible to the western end of
Hradnim Vodojemen) ,leading the site to create a small, more
to a older residential area, in the private area in the garden in

21
the East. Due to the sloping 3.2.3 Proportions / Rela-
terrain this area is terraced tions / Symmetry / Axes
and to secure it from unwanted
insights surrounded by trees. North façade

As already said, the part of the


north façade, visible from the
3.2.2 Cubature & Facade northern road, is nearly square,
if one will accept the absence
The cubature of Haus Mueller of a defined base of the Villa
is roughly based on two Müller.
shi�ed cubes in north-east
alignment and of approx. size The arrangement of the
12x12x12m, which are arranged windows and their combination
that they fit the slope of the to a geometrically similar
site. The displacement of one rectangle clarifies the form
of the cubes by almost half of of the façade and due to the
its depth (5,50m) in nort-east principle of similarity will give
direction explains on one hand the façade a more consistent
the 2:3 ratio of the base and on appearance with a clear
the other hand the partitioning disjunction from the roof storey
of the floor plans into three facade.
parts and the arrangement of As well this effect is supported
the 4 constructive piers. While by the similar and nearly square
the elevation of the north cube appearance of the visible parts
seems to be explicitely arbitrary of the door windows of the
with respect to the slope, it balcony.
becomes clear under closer With a vertical movement of the
investigation that the cube was façade rectangle to the level of
vertically shi�ed by a fourth of the terrace top, a movement by
its size. the minor of the Golden Section

Ilustration 15, 16 - noth facade

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of the rectangle, the upper end dimensions of the building
of the rectangle will mark the defining and so including the
upper end of the building. prominence of the bay of the
dining room.
A further key for understanding A further dividing of the
the interrelations of the height of the minor (m) using
forms within the façade is the Golden Section (M2/m2)
the appearance of the ground reveals the upper end of the
level terrace. The origin of the wall of the outside stair leading
measurement is the form of to the garage. The diagonals of
forward north façade. Not only, the rectangles ((m-M2+m2) and
the top of the terrace marks (m-M2)) created by the dividing
the minor of the height of the are the clue for the aspect ratio
forward northern façade, the of the roof storey. They are
rectangular form of the terrace also the only visual connection
is also geometrically similar to between the lower storeys and
the half of the facade square. the roof storey of the northern
Furthermore the major (M) of façade.
the Golden Section of the width
of the north facade is the width The ground level terrace with its
of the ground level terrace, affiliated form is also important
what explains their elegant for the whole appearance of
integration into the overall the northern elevation of the
picture of the façade. building and its surroundings.
Following this approach Not only due to the absolute
one will recognise that the measurements of the terrace
remaining minor (m) in Loos influences notably the
combination with the height appearance of whole elevation,
of the terrace leads to more but also by repeating its form
connections. A rectangle made in the visually connected
of 3x3 tiles of this measurement walls of the terraced garden in
defines as well the height of the the eastern part of the site. A
façade as the horizontal total movement of the terrace form
Ilustration 17, 18 - north facade

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to the west with the same width symmetry I, of the northern
shows the western end of the façade corresponds with the
Villa Müller and establish an middle axes of the great hall
encrypted symmetry of forms, of the ground floor and the
only to be revealed by knowing restroom of the first floor, both
the context. located behind the façade.
The centre axes of the outer
To explain the visual consistence window of the ground floor
of the northern façade one has correspond with centre axis
also to focus on the form of II of the Dining room and
the balcony in the first upper respectively with the axis of
storey. To create a visual symmetry of the entrance to the
connection of upper storey and Great Hall. Due to the matching
the ground floor Loos formed axes a connection to the outside
the Balcony with the same (northern view) is created for
aspect ratio as the ground level both rooms. Especially when
terrace f it would be carried out entering the Great Hall, a�er
over the whole width of the passing the narrow stairs the Ilustration 19 - north facade

building. Due to the principle suddenly appearing view


of similarity the viewer will outside creates a feeling of
now subconsciously perceive unlimited vastness.
a connection between the two In contrast to the structure of
forms and the appearance the forward northern façade
becomes more consitent. the elevation of the backwards
located façade of the roof
The representative, forward storey is closer to the southern
part of the northern façade is façade. The arrangement of
composed strictly symmetrical, the windows and the vertical
an exception is only the centre axis of the middle
arrangement of the annexes window show a reference to the
such as the terrace and the southern façade and its vertical
outside stairs leading to the axis of symmetry V which is
garage. The vertical axis of moved away eastward from
Ilustration 20 - south facade

24
the northern axis of symmetry South façade child’s playroom with more
by the half of the width of the then one window in the south
representative stair (c) of the Classicistic influences on façade would have li�ed it to
ground floor. The roof storey is Loosian architecture could be the same level of importance
by no means symmetrical. The best viewed in the southern as the Great Hall, a violation
centre axes of the 3 moreover façade of the Villa Müller. But of the hierarchy of rooms Loos
different-sized windows are this means not simply copying could not stand. For the sake
moved away with different or repeating classicistic stylistic of completeness one must add,
distances (2c, c and c/2) from devices as symmetry or that viewed from the contrary,
their equivalents in the lower harmonic sections. They are decomposing of the symmetry
storeys. used very deliberately to create by a missing window will
on the one hand an obviously especially focus the a�ention on
This reveals a severe difference idealistic and classic image the room behind it and maybe
between the roof storey and the which on the other hand is tamper its real importance.
forward part of the northern undermined very shrewd in The regressed le� corner of
façade, a difference which the same moment. Thus the the south façade is a second
was used by Loos, alongside absence of only one of smallest element which undermines
practical consideration, to point windows used in the facades the symmetry in a very
out that the roof storey belongs decomposes the whole notedly special way. Its role is very
more to the southern facade strict symmetry of the façade. well documented in the Loos
than to the northern. In our opinion it also seems literature, so one only has to
Ultimately the rooms of the that Loos had to decide here allude, that it is trick to correlate
forward part of the house were between two principles: a strict the axis of “symmetry” of the
made accessible by the centre symmetry on the on hand and southern façade to the axis of
representative stair, whereas the configuration of only one the service staircase. Due to
the roof storey only could be window for every room in every its obviousness it is also a sign
reached by the service stair façade on the other. The only to point out the artificiality,
behind the southern façade. exception is the Great Hall with the masking effect of the
Consequently the affiliation three windows on the north symmetry of the south facade.
was here already specified façade (but none on the other As shown already on the
by the internal circulation flanking facades!) in to point northern façade also the
infrastructure. out its exceptional position. windows and the entrance
Consequently, equiping the area of the southern façade are

25
combined to create a overall shape of the southern façade.
shape, in this case a rectangle A hinted reference to the interior
corresponding in its aspect of the house can be found in the
ratio with the form of the whole width of the windows of the
façade. The rectangles height staircase. It describes the double
also marks the Golden Section distance of the movement (c) of
of the façade and is identical the two symmetry axes I and
with the Major. V as well as the width of the
In contrast to the northern representative stair.
façade, the southern façade is
more introverted.
West Façade
Alongside the axis of
“symmetry” V there are In comparison to the northern
also other analysing axes on and southern façade, the
the southern façade, which western one seems to be not as Ilustration 21 - south facade

regulate the relations among sophisticated and too reserved


the windows. A horizontal for a representative façade (here
trisection of the overall shape also the site borders to public
of the southern façade defines space).
the outer limitation of the The shape of the roof follows
windows of the “ground level”. roughly the slope of the terrain,
Furthermore it determines whereas it seems that for the
the width of the canopy of the terraced appearance the Golden
entrance area. The centre axes Section was used again. As the
of the ground level windows use of Golden Section is not
in combination with the centre confirmed for the heights of the
axes of the inner windows terraces (relations among them)
of the first floor define the and some of the lengths, it
measurement of the front door. seems that there is no consistent
The centre axes of those inner principle.
windows were determined also
by a trisection, but of the overall
Ilustration 22 - west facade

26
Once again more interesting is unrepresentative side of the
the measurement of the ground site, located representative
level terrace which importance façade. It seems it would fit
has been described already. be�er on the western side of the
Thus the shape of the terrace building. But if one goes more
is again refined from an overall into detail, one will recognise
shape of the façade. that there is a deeper logic, and
As well as in the North elevation not a mistake in Loos design.
the section (here: bisection) The more open facades as there
and triplication of an overall are the northern and the eastern
shape of the façade defines the façade are much be�er secured
prominence of, in this case, the against unwelcome insights by
balcony. surrounding trees and enough
distance/ slope to the public
Ilustration 23 - western facade The Golden Section of a space. In contrast to that the
rectangle enclosing the shape of western and the southern
the building, defines the centre façade have to deal with much
axis of the windows VI. One nearer public spaces and more
can see Loos’ differentiation of opportunities for insights,
the Back and In-Front in this therefore they are carried out
section, the axial gradient of more introverted.
privacy. Thus here the major As also revealed on the western
of the Golden Section describes façade a rectangle enclosing the
the more private part of the façade is the influencing design
house, the minor the more element. Thus the dominant
public (service oriented). element of the façade, the bay
of the dining room, refers with
its measurement to the aspect
East Facade ratio of it.
The bay is also a symbol for the
Ostensibly the eastern façade of importance of the dining room
the Villa Müller comes across in the pa�ern of utilisation of
as a wrongly, because on the the Villa Loos. The location of
Ilustration 24 east facade

27
the bay on the only private side The following pages give a
of the building also points out review over the used sections
the essential function of the of the overall shapes and their
room as a room to gather the reference for the shapes of the
whole family, as the real centre windows.
of the house. Geometrically similar shapes
are always marked with the
same grey scale, the aspect
ratio is mostly shown with
3.2.4 Window- Façade- dimensions on the sides
Correlation

Loos always used window North facade


shapes determined by the
overall shape of the façade The basic idea behind the
(rectangle or shape) and its windows shapes of the north
sections to fit the windows facade is - as for most of the
harmonically into the overall other shaping elements - the
image of the façade. square enclosing the facade.
Diagonals resulting from Similarity in contour between
certain harmonic sections of the windows is achieved
the overall shape (Bisection, by the golden section and
Golden Section (M/m), Octave partitioning into two or four
(Trisection), Quint etc.) and thus sections. Of particular interest
defining the aspect ratio are is the combination of two
the base for the geometrically rectangles forming the ground
similar shapes of the windows. floor terrace, emerging from
Loos’ intention was to intersecting the outline square
reproduce the great in the small in ratio of the Golden Section.
by the deliberate similarity
and thus to let the all the parts The diagonal of the half of the
create a consistent ensemble. original square of the facade
is decisive for geometric
Ilustration 25, 26 - north facade

28
similarities, in particular when All of the other windows shapes
investigating the visible part of are defined by partitioning
the balcony door. A geometric diagonals of the half of the
similarity with this rectangle facade square.
can also be observed in both
the collective windows-balcony
shape and the roof lights of the West facade
ground floor windows.
Again, the diagonals for
geometric similarities between
South facade the window sizes of the west
facade are defined by two major
As for the north facade, the shapes. Of particular interest is
Ilustration 27 - south facade window dimensions of the that the garage door with its
south facade are also governed surrounding immersion has the
by two rectangles. As that same dimensions as the main
facade is plunged into the street entrance of the south facade - a
level by 1m and hence is only theme that Loos also applies to
allusively of square shape, this the dimensions of the anteroom
street level becomes the base in the ground floor.
point of the form-giving square.
This square can be found in a
fi�h of its original size in the East facade
entry area where it appears as
niche for a bench, flanked by The window shapes of
the entrance door on the le� the east facade are in their
and the window to the coal similarities bound to the shape
cellar on the right. The shape of a rectangle that emerges
of the coal window as well as subtractively from the facade.
the windows of the entrance Two rectangles, which shape is
door is both derived from that defined by the size of the part of
square. the south facade that is plunged
into the site, are separated from
Ilustration 28 - west facade

29
the collective facade shape. As furniture, anteroom, bedroom
such, diagonals that emerge of the parents), and therefore
from particular sectioning of even there no coherent concept
the facade, define the base of is observable.
similarity between the window
shapes. Still, one can say that the size
assignment of the windows
What should additionally be follows a hierarchy in almost
noted are the different distances all cases, in which the size
between the windows of the of the windows correlates
dressing rooms and the child’s with the level of importance
room. This distance is caused of the function of the room.
by a translation of the vertical The common rooms, the
window axis of the child’s big saloon, the eating room
room, emerging from the and the bedroom have the
spatial axis of the room itself. biggest windows. As such,
the bedroom can be assigned Ilustration 29 - east facade
a role of representation, even
if only in the architectural
sense. A�er all, Loos did not
3.2.5 Windows & Room
refrain from publishing a
Correlation photography of his first wife’s
bedroom as a presentation of
Generally it can be said that his interior design - the most
the size of the windows only private of all rooms was as
marginally correlates with the such transferred into a public
size of the rooms that are hidden affair. Prepositioned rooms
behind. Hence, no statement and individual rooms of
about those rooms can be made retreat (e.g. boudoir, library,
by bare observation of the guest room) receive medium
facade. In addition, the room windows size, adjoining rooms,
axis aligns with the windows such as storerooms, toilets and
axis only in rare cases (e.g. bathrooms, have the smallest
eating room without built-in

30
windows. The two dressing of representation of the north the windows succeeds, whereas
rooms and the kitchen with the facade (front towards the a decrease of the windows size
obvious and, in comparison, too street with more traffic and towards the top emphasises the
big windows for its function are as such more representative) increased privacy of the rooms.
the only exceptions. However, through its bigger windows
in the light of the gravity that and the smaller windows to If one compares the windows
Loos assigns clothing as an the south, giving cues to the sizes over all facades, an
expression of society (consider, individual rooms and retreats exceptional position of the north
e.g., Men’s Clothing, Foot and adjoint rooms that hide facade can be observed. None of
Clothing, etc.) the size of the behind, a differentiation the there used sizes of windows
windows of the dressing room between the back and the front can be found on any of the other
seems adequate. The reason for by considering the side facades facades, while those feature
the kitchen window size seems gets almost impossible due to its constantly repeated windows
to be purely formal, to obey hinted symmetries. Here, game dimensions (east, south, west
the (almost) symmetrical south rooms and boudoir are equated facade: approx. 2.20x1.20m and
facade. The difference between with adjoint rooms and guest approx. 0.80x1.00m, east, west
the Up and Down (gradient bathrooms. Differentiation facade additionally approx.
of vertical privacy (Risselada, becomes pure speculation. 1.50x1.20m). The balcony door
1989, p28) and the Back and In of the child’s bedroom (but
Front (gradient of axial privacy What can be done easier is a equal in size to the balcony door
(ibid.)), as mentioned by Johan differentiation between the Up of the parent’s bedroom on the
van den Beek in “Adolf Loos - and the Down, which becomes north facade) and the window
Pa�erns of Town Houses”, are particularly visible on the north of the eating room on the
only vaguely noticeable in the and the back side. Naturally, east facade are the noticeable
facades. In fact, the difference even there one may not ask exceptions. Loos’ intention
between the front and the for the use of the rooms that was presumably to emphasis
back, if the north and south hide behind these windows. with the nonrecurring usage
side are considered as such, are Even there, misleading equality of those window dimensions
obvious, whereas difficulty in (kitchen and library, individual the exceptional position of
expressing gradients of privacy man’s leisure room) finds its the rooms behind them. This
occurs when considering the way. Still, adjustment of modus operandi is particularly
east and west side. While one traceable for the windows of
can clearly see the function the Great Hall and the Dining

31
Room because their window the boudoir. The squares over
IV

dimensions are used only for this row contain the Kitchen

1/4 a
those special rooms. and dining room. The hall take
the space of 2 squares, nearly a a a

1/2 a
1/3 of the whole floor plan
plain. The bay window extend

1/4 a
3.2.6 Floor Plan the dining room about the
dimension of 1/4a. I

2a

1/4 a
Compositorial analysis
Loos o�en use a part of the

1/4 a
The floor plan of the house has dimension a to describe the

1/4 a
an aspect ratio of 3 to 2. The long measures of the rooms, but he

1/4 a
side has a canon of 3a and the goes further. When it is possible
short side canon of 2a. That wit he also design the proportion of
it is possible to draw 3 vertical the rooms equivalent to the Ilustration 30 -first floor

rectangles, with an aspect ratio vertical rectangles. Like for


of a to 2a, over the floor plan. example the kitchen with an
The shape of the floor plan has aspect ratio of a to 1/2a, the
also 2 symmetry-axis (I, IV), kitchen niche (1/2a to 1/4a) or IV VIII

but only the axis I, which is the support funnel (which


identical with the facade axis includes a li�) with the same
I, is important for the internal aspect ratio.

1/2 a

1/2 a
structure of the floor plan.
If it was not possible to design

1/4 a
the room in the same proportion
Because the combination of
like the vertical rectangles, he

1/2 a
I

a
this axis with the 3 vertical
based them in another way
rectangles (Ill. 30) lead to an
on the dimension a like for
arrangement of 6 squares. This
example the boudoir. For this
square arrangement is nearly

1/2 a
room he use the dimension a
1/2 a 1/2 a

conform with the functional


in the size of 1/4a to place the
structure of the floor plan. The
first square in the lower right IV

corner is the library, the second Ilustration 31 - second floor

32
walls, the podium of the room floor. The reason for this is the
and also the entrance for the fact that the basement with
stair. the support rooms (laundry,
garage, coal storage etc.) also
I
V
Loos use the same system to influence the ground floor,
VI
design the second floor (Ill.-31). through the heights differences
The symmetrical placed of the stories along the north-
robing-rooms have the same south direction.
proportion like the vertical
rectangle and are also based
IV on the dimension a (aspect ratio Symmetry-axes
III a to 1/2a). An identical sized
rectangle describes the child`s The interesting aspect of the
II playroom and the staircase, house Müller is the interaction,
V consisting of the gallery, the or the missing of an interaction,
I stair well and the stair. Also between the facade axis
VI
the toilet and the bath room and the floor plan axis. As
VII
have the same aspect ratio of aforementioned their are two
1/2a to 1/4a. It is also interesting main symmetry-axis (I and IV).
to see that the axis VIII, which Namely the symmetrical axis
divides one vertical rectangle in I is identical with the facade
IV
the middle ,is identical with the axis I of the north facade, but
III
wall of the bath room, the toilet not with the facade axis V of
and the support funnel. the south facade. There is a
II
hop between these axis. This is
V
The floor plan shows that Loos very good recognisable in the
I
VI followed for the design straight ground floor plan. The entrance
and basic composition rules, situation (the entrance niche)
like in the facade. is symmetrical placed in the
south facade according to the
Loos could not keep up on his facade axis V, but asymmetrical
compositorial conception in in the ground floor plan. For
the basement and the ground the first look there is no relation
Ilustration 32 - roof plan, first floor, ground floor

33
between the facade axis V and symmetrical main axis I. He
the floor plan, but Loos tried repeated this entrance motive
to connect this axis in the floor at the rise for the first floor.
plan by placing the border wall
of the staircase on this axis. He
reflected this border wall at the
axis I and got in this way the
width of the stair. Due to this 3.2.7 Spatial Plan
the hop of the to axis is 1/2 of
the stair width. This dimension The idea of the spatial plan,
is also observable in the roof- which was described in the
a�ic-plan, where it is part of the chapter 2.3, was a�er Loos`s
measures of the skylight. own words realised on its best
in the house Müller. He said:
There are also axes in the
rooms, like the axis III. It is the “...this spatial interaction and
axis of the Hall. Loos supported spatial austerity that thus far I
the axis with 4 hollow corner have best been able to realise in Dr.
pillars, which should underline Müller’s house” Adolf Loos 20
the symmetry of the short
walls of the Hall. To make the spatial interaction 5
in the house Müller easier to
In the context of the axes it is understand, we created a room- 4
6
also necessary to take a closer cast of the important rooms 3
7
look back to the entrance (Ill. 33). The room-cast shows
situation. As aforementioned it that the dominant room of the
1
is symmetrical situated in the house is the hall and assigned
south facade, but asymmetrical to her are the other rooms. The
in the floor plan. However ground floor and the first floor
2
Loos realised, through an ably are the really interesting levels
chosen entrance-motive (a for the intrinsic spatial plan
tripartition), an entrance door (grey tagged in the axonometric
which is exactly situated on the projection). The reason for this
is that Loos situated in the Ilustration 33

34
second level only the private lower sealing then the Hall,
rooms, like the sleeping room, which has a height of approx.
robing-room and the child`s 4,5 m (the boudoir has in its
playroom. Rooms which have upper part a height of only 2,1
the same or similar functions. m). So it is possible to say that
Based on his idea of the two small rooms, and when you
spatial plan Loos gave every count also the entrance room
room a height according to three, are connected to one
the function, so the height big room. Considering the loge
difference between the rooms theatre, which was according
(which leads to the interesting to Loos the original idea of the
room sequences of the spatial spatial plan, there should be
plan) arise only between rooms an open connection between
of different functions, which is the small rooms and the big
not given in the second floor. one to perceive the whole
The vertical organisation from room sequence. Loos realised
public rooms in the ground this open connection with the
floor to the private rooms in staircase and the penetrated
the upper part of the house is walls between dining room,
typical for Loos. hall ad stair. (Cp. tour through
the house)
In the ground floor and the
first floor whereas, Loos placed The diagram of the room-cast
rooms of different functions and in Illustration 34 shows exactly
designed them with different how complex the design of the
heights. Thus he generate a vertical access system has to be,
room sequence which starts to guarantee the function of the
in the entrance room (1) room plan in the house Müller.
and continue to the Hall (2) According to the height jumps
with a height jump of 1,2 m. and the different room heights,
Compared to this hall there are Loos created two vertical access
the boudoir (7) and the dining systems. One is continuous
room (3). Both rooms have a in the height and the other
Ilustration 34

35
not. The continuous system by the use of a complex vertical
is placed at the south facade, access system. The in literature
and connects the house from o�en mentioned confrontation
the basement to the roof. The of two high stories to three
function rooms like the kitchen smaller stories in the house
are linked to this system. The Müller, which should be
non-continuous acess system is characteristic for the spatial
the important one for the spatial plan) is de facto not observable.
Ilustration 35
plan. It provides over platforms Maybe a longitudinal section
the access to the various (Ill. 36) through the vertical
rooms, which differ in height. access system could implicate According to Julius Posener it is
Withal the height differences, such an organisation, but the typical for Loos that the outside
Loos was able to manage third story in this section is of the house and the internal
that the continuous and the only the death end of the access structure differ, because Loos
non-continuous verical access system and is named in the did not develope his houses
system are always connected. floor plan as pantry. Whereas from inside to outside. He
This leads to the fact that some another longitudinal section always wanted that the cubatore
rooms like the boudoir are (Ill. 35) of the house shows a of the house is an intergrated
double developed. height movement of the rooms whole or a sign.
from north to south.
As aforemesntioned are
the border wall of the non- At last it is to say that the spatial
continuous coverage semi- plan in the house Müller is not
transparent. They are designed recognisable at the facade of
a a column row (border wall of the house. Only the differences
the hall) or have windows to in the size of the windows
the rooms (dining room). indicate the different rooms
with their various functions Illustration 36
Recapitulating it is to say but not their height movement
that Loos realised his idea of or their different heights.
the spatial plan with height
jumps between the rooms, the
variation of room heights and

36
37
38
Notes, Quotations and alp ist es von mir gewichen. Jawohl, unsere zeit 23
(Lustenberger, 1994, p.37) „den Aufenthalt
ist schön, so schön, dass ich in keiner anderen in den engen und niedrigen Logen und
References leben wollte.“ Galerien nur deshalb ertragen könne, weil
diese in einer offenen räumlichen Beziehung
1
(Roland L. Schachel in: Rukschcio et 10
e.g.: ( Eduard F. Seckler in: Rukschcio, zum großen, durchgehenden Hauptraum
al. 1989, p. 23 / Lustenberger, 1994, p. 1989, p.257) stünden“
12) 11
(ibid.)
24
(ibid.)“manalsodurchdieVerbindungeines
2
(Lusterberger, 1994, p. 12), „Ausweg aus einer 12
(Glück, 1962, p. 65) höheren Hauptraumes mit einem niedrigem
Situation ohne Perspektive“ & „Verzicht auf eine Annex Raum sparen kann (…)“
akademische Ausbildung”, 13
(Glück, 1962, p. 18) “drawing-table-
diletantism “ 25
(see Posener, 1980, p.38) „horizontalen
3
(Roland L. Schachel in: Rukschcio et al., 1989, Raumschichtung“
p.23), „Emanzipationsphase”, 14
(Glück, 1962; p. 65), „Die schönheit nur in
der form zu suchen und nicht vom ornament
4
(Lusterberger, 1994, p.13 ) „schrittweise Loslösung abhängig zu machen, ist das ziel, dem die
von den (bisherigen, durch den Besuch einer ganze menschheit zustrebt“
europäischen Kunstgewerbeschule geprägten, A.d.A.)
ästhetischen Sehgewohnheiten“, 15
(Glück, 1962; page 65), „Je tiefer ein volk
steht, desto verschwenderischer ist es mit
5
(Glück,1962, p. 15 ) “mitleidige Lächeln” seinem ornament, seinem schmuck.“

6
(Safran; Wang; et al. 1985, p.15) 16
(Frampton, 1992/ 2003; p. 93)

7
(Richard Neutra, Auftrag für Morgen, 17
(Glück, 1962, p. 277), „evolution der kultur
Hamburg, 1962, p. 179 f. ) „die durch irgend ist gleichbedeutend mit dem entfernen des
eine vitale Kraft in diesem Lande verändert ornamentes aus dem gebrauchsgegenstand“
wurden“, 18
(Glück, 1962; p. 277), “das lallen der
malerei”
8
(ibid.) „in jenem Vorgang der
Entrümpelung“, „historischen Vorurteilen, die 19
(Frampton, 1992/2003; p. 96)
in der überalterten politischen Geographie ihr
Blut schwer gemacht und vergiftet hatte“; ibid. 20
(Adolf Loos: Shorthand record of a
9
(Glück, 1962, p.16) „Die scharfe conversation in Plzen (Pilsen), 1930)
amerikanische und englische luft hat
alle voreingenommenheit (…) von mir 21
(Posener, 1980, p.36 f.)
genommen. Ganz gewissenlose menschen
haben es versucht, uns diese zeit zu verleiden. 22
(Lustenberger, 1994, p.36, see Adolf Loos,
Stets sollten wir rückwärts schauen, stets uns Josef Veillich: Trotzdem, Innsbruck, 1931,
eine andere zeit zum vorbild nehmen. Wie ein p.188), „Lösen des Grundrisses im Raum“

39
40
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(Rukschcio; et al., 1989) RUKSCHCIO, Burkhardt; et al. : Adolf Loos – Katalogbuch zur Ausstellung Adolf Loos: Wien, Graphische Sammlungen Albertina,
1989, ISBN 3-85409-165-6
(Safran; Wang; et al. SAFRAN, Yehuda (Ed.); WANG, Wilfried (Ed.), BUDNY, Mildred: The Architecture of Adolf Loos – An Arts Council Exhibition:
1985) Precision Press, 1985, ISBN 0-7287-0475-7
(Schezen, 1996) SCHEZEN, Roberto: Adolf Loos – Architektur: Salzburg/ Wien, Residenz Verlag, 1996, ISBN 3-7017-1031-7
(Schinkel;Lemmer SCHINKEL, Karl Friedrich; LEMMER, Klaus J. (Ed.): Berlin und Potsdam, Berlin-West: Rembrandt Verlag, 1980
(Ed),1980)
(Stewart, 2000) STEWART, Janet: Fashioning Vienna – Adolf Loos` cultural criticism, London – New York: Routledge, 2000, ISBN 0-415-
22176-5
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Illustration Credits

Illustration 2 http://www.mcah.columbia.edu/dbcourses/crary/large/

Illustration 3 GRAVAGNUOLO, Benedetto: Adolf Loos – Theory and Works: London, Art
Data, 1995, ISBN 0-948835-16-8, S.90 right image

Illustration 4 RUKSCHCIO, Burkhardt; et al. : Adolf Loos – Katalogbuch zur Ausstellung


Adolf Loos: Wien, Graphische Sammlungen Albertina, 1989,
ISBN 3-85409-165-6, S.254

Illustration 5 http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/WernerLane/karosserie.htm

Illustration 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11,12,13 KLEINMAN, Kent; DUZER, Leslie van: Villa Müller – A work of Adolf
Loos: New York, Princeton Architectural Press, 1994,
ISBN 1-878271-81-4

Illustration 14: siteplan KLEINMAN, Kent; DUZER, Leslie van: Villa Müller – A work of Adolf
Loos: New York, Princeton Architectural Press, 1994,
ISBN 1-878271-81-4

Ilustration 15 - 36 Joern Besser, Stephan Liebscher 2005

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