- Title: UK: Tropical house on the banks of the Thames as part of exhibition
- Date: 3rd February 2008
- Summary: TIME LAPSE VIDEO OF HOUSE BEING CONSTRUCTED OUTSIDE TATE MODERN MUSEUM
- Embargoed: 18th February 2008 12:00
- Keywords:
- Topics: Arts / Culture / Entertainment / Showbiz,Light / Amusing / Unusual / Quirky
- Reuters ID: LVA1DMKT0EW4IW2785L4R52N6JY2
- Story Text: Saved from the sweaty African jungle, the world's first metal flat-pack house - a tropical villa for the people - finds a new home on London's cold and breezy River Thames.
Rescued from the steamy jungles and civil wars of the Republic of Congo, a pioneering 1950's flat-pack house now calls the frosty banks of the River Thames home.
It was designed and manufactured by French designer Jean Prouve as the world's first metal flat-pack home - think Ikea housing for 1950's Africa.
This icon of modernist architecture is now on display in London as part of the Design Museum's exhibition of Jean Prouve's designs.
Set in the cold January shadows of the Tate Modern and with St Paul's Cathedral across the Thames as a backdrop, the "Maison Tropicale" is far away from its natural resting place of Congo's capital Brazzaville, where it has stood rotting in the tropical heat for more than half a century.
Back in the 1940's Prouve had a vision for affordable homes that could withstand the humidity of the jungle. But his design never proved economical and only 3 were ever erected, two in Brazzaville and one in Niger.
Antiques collector Frenchman Eric Touchaleaume has made it his life's mission to find the houses and return them to their former glory. When he finally tracked down the Brazzaville flat-pack building that's now in London it was in a sorry state - dilapidated and bearing the scars of several wars.
"Full of whole bullets, scratched, corrosion," he told Reuters during a tour of the house, "Handicapped but still alive and complete," he said.
"Big emotion, great emotion," he said describing the moment when he first saw the house he'd had his heart set on for 25 years.
Restoring the metal panels was a labour of love that took several years.
Set on concrete stilts the Brazzaville house is made from folded sheet steel and aluminium. Manufactured in France it was flown flat-pack to Africa in attempt to ease the housing shortage in French colonies.
Prouve took an ecological approach to the design and the demands of the climate, with adjustable metal sunscreens and nautical port-hole style windows of blue glass to protect against UV rays.
Revered as a pioneer now, his design was not appreciated by French expats in Congo fifty years ago.
"It's difficult to know why it wasn't a huge success," said Gemma Curtis, curator of the Prouve exhibition at the Design Museum.
"I think one things was perhaps that the aesthetic in the French colonies was not for something that really looks part boat, part aircraft, part space ship - it has a very modern aesthetic which perhaps might not have been attractive to the French middle class conservative bureaucrats,"
Curtin said.
She also said that it proved too expensive to fly the metals panels to Africa rather than use cheaper but less durable local materials.
Despite its humble beginnings the Brazzaville jungle house was recently sold at auction for a massive $5.5 million. It was bought by American hotelier and art collector Andre Balazs.
"I've always loved Jean Prouve as a designer and this is really an ultimate piece of sculpture of his," he told Reuters.
He added that the house is an "Inspiration for future low-impact, environmental housing and the idea here was to use this an inspiration for a resort that minimises its impact on the ... preferably... tropical setting that it will end up in."
Balazs wants to convert the Brazzaville house into an eco-hotel to be set-up somewhere in central America -- he won't say where though.
Maison Tropicale will stay on display outside the Tate until Spring, before going on show in Miami and after that beginning its new life as a hotel. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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