“Aircraft”: Renowned French Architect Le Corbusier’s 1935 Book on Aviation

Title – Aircraft
Author – Le Corbusier
Publisher – The Studio Ltd, London
Year – 1935
The book “Aircraft” was authored by the famous architect Le Corbusier. The book explores his profound fascination with aviation and the machine-civilization era. He celebrated the functional, stripped-down elegance of aircraft parts. He discussed the “bird’s-eye view” as a completely new way of perceiving the world and urban landscapes.

On October 22, 1929, renowned French architect Le Corbusier boarded the inaugural flight of Aeroposta Argentina, a pioneering airmail and passenger service connecting Buenos Aires with Asunción, Paraguay. Piloted by a French aviator, this early aviation journey marked more than a remarkable travel experience; it became a transformative moment in Le Corbusier’s creative life. At a time when commercial aviation was still in its infancy, the experience of viewing cities, landscapes, and human settlements from the sky offered the architect an entirely new perspective on space, movement, and modernity.

The act of flight left a profound impression on Le Corbusier, shaping both his architectural philosophy and artistic expression in the years that followed. Observing the world from above reinforced his fascination with geometry, urban planning, and the relationship between man-made structures and the natural environment. This aerial perspective would later echo in his writings, sketches, and visionary architectural concepts, making aviation not merely a mode of transport but a catalyst for one of the 20th century’s most influential creative minds.

One of Le Corbusier’s famous works was the Chandigarh Master Plan (India) in 1950: Following India’s independence, he spearheaded the design and urban layout of the new capital city of Chandigarh, personally drafting iconic government structures such as the Palace of Assembly and the Secretariat. Click image to enlarge.