1. Fuller Houses
    Federico Neder
    Fuller Houses
    R. Buckminster Fuller’s Dymaxion Dwellings and other Domestic Adventures

    With the publication of the Dymaxion House in 1929, Buckminster Fuller became an overnight sensation in the world of American architecture. It was an uncompromising design and spectacularly novel. The living areas were hexagonal and attached around a central supply tower, and the multistory interior was fully climate-controlled. The house was conceived as completely self-sufficient – all the necessary supply modules were contained in the tower. The rooms were equipped with the most modern furnishings and fixtures. The approximately 150 m2 house weighed just 3 tons, cost no more than a car, and was designed to be constructed and dismantled anytime and anywhere. The house reflected Fuller’s basic technological principle, his determination toachieve the greatest possible utility at the smallest possible cost in terms of energy and materials by making use of everything that science and technology have to offer. The author examines and compares Fuller’s Dymaxion House in the context of the international development.

    With a preface by Mark Wigley

    Design: Integral Lars Müller

    16.5 x 24 cm, 6½ x 9½ in, 240 pages, 170 illustrations, softcover (2008)

    ISBN 978-3-03778-141-8, e

    EUR 30.00 / USD 40.00 / GBP 30.00
    Federico Neder

    Federico Neder graduated with a degree in architecture from the University of Rosario, Argentina. He received a Master in Architecture and Applied Arts and a Doctorate from the University of Geneva. His research and articles focus on the history of domesticity and on twentieth century “dwelling machines”. He has lectured at seminars and conferences in France, Spain, Italy, Canada, England and Argentina. Before settling in Switzerland, Neder worked as a film set designer in Los Angeles and at the firm of architect Dominique Perrault in Paris. His installations have been exhibited at the Centre d'art en l’Ile in Geneva (2001 and 2003) and at Cairo Biennial (2004). From 2002 to 2008, Neder was editor of the architecture journal, FACES and was a visiting professor at the Hanoi Architectural University (Vietnam). Presently, he teaches at the University of Geneva.