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3 p.m. (Eastern), Tuesday, June 20

Aalto in Brooklyn:

Lessons from a Forgotten Facade

A Virtual Talk with Sofia Singler,

architect and architectural historian


In 1947, Finnish architect Alvar Aalto was commissioned to design a church facade in Finntown, Brooklyn, New York.


In 2018, the drawings for the project—presumed missing for decades—were unexpectedly discovered.

 

This talk outlines the remarkable story of how the long-forgotten drawings surfaced seven decades after their creation, and what they mean to Aalto scholars today.


Alvar Aalto (1898–1976) was one of the world’s most famous architects, who fostered an intimate relationship to the United States throughout his career. He taught at MIT, built major projects in Massachusetts and Oregon, and socialized with American colleagues such as Frank Lloyd Wright. Nothing was known, however, about his mysterious project in Brooklyn, until the drawings surfaced.

 

Although the facade was never built, research conducted at the University of Cambridge in the UK suggests that it enriches scholarly understanding of Aalto’s sacred architecture.


The research, generously funded by a Finlandia Foundation National grant, argues that Brooklyn provided a unique opportunity for Aalto to explore urban church-building in the post-war context, in a Finnish immigrant neighborhood, no less. The Brooklyn project tells us both about Aalto’s approach to religious space, and about the lessons he learned from—and in turn, taught—America.

Click here to register for Aalto in Brooklyn

Dr. Sofia Singler is an architect and architectural historian from Jyväskylä, Finland. Trained as an architect at the University of Cambridge and the Yale School of Architecture, she practiced architecture in Boston, with a focus on educational and industrial buildings, before returning to England to undertake a Ph.D. in architectural history. She is currently a Fellow of Homerton College, Cambridge, where she teaches and researches modern architecture.


Her first book, The Religious Architecture of Alvar, Aino and Elissa Aalto, will be published by Lund Humphries in October 2023. The research for the book was funded partially by a Finlandia Foundation grant.

Aalto Journey Connection

In her talk, Sofia will cross-reference a presentation given by architect Kirk Gastinger (right), for FFN in 2021, “Lost and Found.” It was Kirk’s friend who shared with him a manila folder that held two blueprints she’d found in the file of her late father, Dr. Rev. Bernhard Hillilä. Kirk, in turn, got in touch with Sofia, and together, the two developed the subsequent research project on the missing Brooklyn facade, presented in more detail in her June 20th talk.

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