A tropical house : the Embassy of Switzerland in New Delhi / edited by Bruno Maurer ; with photographs by Ariel Huber and Walter Rüegg.
Material type:
- 9783856763268 (hbk.)
- Embassy of Switzerland in New Delhi. 1957-1963
- 23 949.4073 TRO 004116
- PB38.E8 M38 2011
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Indian Institute for Human Settlements, Bangalore | 949.4073 TRO 004116 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 004116 |
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947.0841 MIE 012852 October : | 947.0860922 ALE 008938 Second-hand time : | 949.405 SWI 007106 Swissnex '14, annual report / | 949.4073 TRO 004116 A tropical house : | 949.5 BER 022122 Black Athena : The Afroasiatic roots of classical civilization / | 949.61803092 PAM 007465 Istanbul : memories of a city / | 949.6198014 CRO 009870 Constantinople : |
Includes index.
The Swiss Embassy in New Delhi is the architectural symbol of a special political relationship. Switzerland recognized India immediately after it became independent in 1947, and in 1948 was the first country to sign a treaty of friendship and establishment with the young democracy. The new embassy building in the diplomatic district of Chanakyapuri was officially opened in 1963, in the presence of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. Hans Hofmann (1897–1957) was directly commissioned to design the impressive building. With his experience in using the semantic potential of modern architecture to express ‘Swissness’ in large buildings, he enjoyed the reputation of being a national architect. His posthumously constructed embassy building in New Delhi is an outstanding example of prestige Swiss architecture in the twentieth century, but at the same time it also shows a deeper engagement with local cultural, constructional and climatic conditions. Against the background of today’s ‘global architecture’, it is a model case.
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