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Mies was a knockoff of Walter Gropius. Mies took over the Bauhaus when the Nazis started dictating how it was run...part of which was getting rid of Gropius. Gropius landed at Harvard where he shaped the Graduate School of Design for many years.

When it turned out that working with the Nazis was a bad idea, Mies wound up at the Armour Institute with a big budget. As a practical business matter, it was a good client to land. But personally, I find Mies's work competent but not great. Phillip Johnson's glass house predate's Farnsworth and Gordon Bunshaft's Lever House is a master piece executed with a sense of human scale, while the bronze I-Beams on Seagram's across the building are a decorative affectation on a building lacking proportion and it's plaza has all the charm of a field of fire.

I once worked with a graduate of IIT's architecture program [anecdote is not data]. All I can say is that 4.5" = 6'-0" isn't a good choice for drawing a construction detail. It also shows why states require practical experience and an exam in addition to any schooling in order to become a licensed architect. Actually, this is what it mostly shows. Architecture education in general is poor preparation for professional practice and IIT is accredited just like other schools. But that's a rant for another day.




Hah... Perfect HN. The only comments on a post about the Indian IIT are about the little college in Illinois.


I find that unfortunate too and wish there were more substantive discussions about India and other parts of the world.




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