🌿✹ Stepping into a masterpiece where glass meets jungle: welcome to Casa de Vidro, Lina Bo Bardi’s iconic 1951 residence in São Paulo’s Morumbi neighborhood.
This isn’t just a house—it’s a bold declaration of harmony between modernist transparency and the wild beauty of the Mata Atlñntica. Elevated on slender pilotis, wrapped in floor-to-ceiling glass, the home literally floats among the trees Lina herself planted over decades. Inside and outside dissolve into one breathtaking dialogue: sunlight filters through leaves, curtains dance with the breeze, and every room feels like an invitation to live more openly, more connected to nature.
Designed as her own home (together with Pietro Maria Bardi), it became a creative sanctuary for artists, thinkers, and visionaries. Today, preserved by the Instituto Bardi / Casa de Vidro, it stands as a timeless reminder that great architecture doesn’t dominate the landscape—it embraces, elevates, and protects it.
Lina once said architecture is “an adventure in which people are called to intimately participate as actors.” Walking through these spaces, you feel exactly that: invited to participate in something revolutionary.
Who else dreams of a home this poetic? Drop a 🌳 if this kind of integration inspires you, or tag a friend who needs to see this Brazilian modernist gem!
#CasaDeVidro #LinaBoBardi #GlassHouse #ModernistArchitecture #BrazilianArchitecture #SĂŁoPaulo #ArchitectureLovers #MidCenturyModern #NatureAndDesign #IconicHomes
Faculdade de Arquitetura e Urbanismo lança primeiras ediçÔes digitalizadas da revista “Habitat”
- cijnusp
https://jornal.usp.br/cultura/faculdade-de-arquitetura-e-urbanismo-lanca-primeiras-edicoes-digitalizadas-da-revista-habitat/
#Cultura #Arquitetura #LinaBoBardi #Revistahabitat
Faculdade de Arquitetura e Urbanismo lança primeiras ediçÔes digitalizadas da revista “Habitat”

Criada pela arquiteta Lina Bo Bardi e publicada entre 1950 e 1965, a revista tem agora suas primeiras 15 ediçÔes disponibilizadas on-line

Jornal da USP

THE STORY OF ART WITHOUT MEN
#KatyHessel

Nachkriegskunst in Brasilien

Lina Bo Bardi - Architektin
(1914 - 1992)

MASP, Entwurf (Museu de Arte de SĂŁo Paulo)

Das Museum ist ein scheinbar frei ĂŒber dem Boden schwebender Betonquader. Die GemĂ€lde sind an Glasscheiben aufgehĂ€ngt, wodurch die Bilder zu schweben scheinen.

Bildquelle:
https://nieuweinstituut.nl/en/projects/art-on-display/lina-bo-bardi
und
https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Museu_de_Arte_de_S%C3%A3o_Paulo#/media/Datei:MASP_S%C3%A3o_Paulo_(cropped).jpg

#TheStoryOfArtWithoutMen #WomanArt #WomanArtist #Frauenkunst #Kunst #LinaBoBardi

SESC Pompeia, Arq. Lina Bo Bardi.
#architecture #LinaBoBardi #SaoPaulo #bluesky

Valéria P. Cirell House
Architect: Lina Bo Bardi
Brazil (Sao Paulo)
1958

"...The craftsmanship of construction solutions distanced the project from Lina’s other works, mainly made up of steel, reinforced concrete, and glass structures. The ValĂ©ria house is more organic, which is shown by the strong integration with the gardens..."

https://hiddenarchitecture.net/valeria-p-cirell-house/

#organic #architecture #linabobardi #brazil #saopaulo #1950s #garden #holiday #courtyard #veranda #pool #vegetation #morumbi #tropical

Valéria P. Cirell House - Hidden Architecture

The Valéria Cirell house is very different from other traditional residences from the 50s and 60s. Buit with a large geometric volume and a rustic facade, this residence, located in the Morumbi neighborhood of São Paulo, was designed by Lina Bo Bardi for her friend Valéria P. Cirell in 1958. The program includes a living [
]

Hidden Architecture

"A community-oriented architect, Lina Bo Bardi embraced the principles of modernism to design public buildings that remained connected to Brazil’s past." - My latest for JSTOR Daily discussing the work and legacy of Lina Bo Bardi.

#Architecture #ArchitecturalHistory #LinaBoBardi #ModernArchitecture #Brazil

https://daily.jstor.org/lina-bo-bardi-architect-of-brazilian-modernism/

Lina Bo Bardi: Architect of Brazilian Modernism - JSTOR Daily

A community-oriented architect, Lina Bo Bardi embraced the principles of modernism to design public buildings that remained connected to Brazil’s past.

JSTOR Daily
German Postwar Modern

On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of Lina Bo Bardi’s passing I took a book off the shelf that back in the day opened my eyes and got me all excited about her architecture: Olivia de Oliveira‘s...

German Postwar Modern

Bardi's Bowl Chair by Lina Bo Bardi for Arper

Dezeen Showroom: Arper has collaborated with the Venetian textile company Rubelli to create a limited-edition version of Bardi's Bowl Chair by modernist architect Lina Bo Bardi.

Designed in honour of Bo Bardi's recent Golden Lion for Lifetime Achievement in memoriam, awarded during the 17th Venice Architecture Biennale, the new version of Bardi's Bowl Chair is made in a numbered edition of 500.

Bardi's Bowl Chair is available in two Rubelli textile options, with Lollipop having a 50s-style print

The iconic chair comes upholstered in a choice of two colourful Rubelli fabrics – Lollipop and Eureka – chosen because of their similarity to Bo Bardi's work.

Recalling 1950s prints, Lollipop has a geometric pattern conjured in loose brushstrokes of red and mustard yellow, while Eureka features similar colours woven into a textured fabric.

The Eureka textile is woven from a multicoloured mix of threads

Both are paired with cushions upholstered in orange Rubelli fabrics – Lollipop with with Ralph and Eureka with Nap.

Bo Bardi designed the semi-spherical chair in 1951 and in 2012 Aper started manufacturing it, balancing the original design with contemporary advances in technique and production.

Product: Bardi's Bowl Chair
Designer: Lina Bo Bardi
Brand: Arper
Contact: [email protected]

About Dezeen Showroom: Dezeen Showroom offers an affordable space for brands to launch new products and showcase their designers and projects to Dezeen's huge global audience. For more details [email protected].

Dezeen Showroom is an example of partnership content on Dezeen. Find out more about partnership contenthere.

The post Bardi's Bowl Chair by Lina Bo Bardi for Arper appeared first on Dezeen.

#furniture #chairs #all #donotshowonthehomepage #design #dezeenshowroom #seating #arper #linabobardi

Bardi's Bowl Chair designed by Lina Bo Bardi for Arper

Arper has collaborated with the Venetian textile company Rubelli to create a special, limited-edition version of Bardi's Bowl Chair by Lina Bo Bardi.

Instante CientĂ­fico

Jornal de Divulgação Científica Matinal by Rubens Pasa