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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Laurie_BakerLaurie Baker - Wikipedia

    Lawrence Wilfred "Laurie" Baker (2 March 1917 – 1 April 2007) was a British-born Indian architect, renowned for his initiatives in cost-effective energy-efficient architecture and designs that maximized space, ventilation and light and maintained an uncluttered yet striking aesthetic sensibility.

  2. This website is dedicated to the life and work of this truly multi-faceted yet unassuming man. Laurie Baker architect pioneered vernacular sustainable eco-friendly green architecture in India with brick mud and other local materials. Cost effective low cost reduction poor.

  3. Humble, just as his building materials made of earth, Architect Laurie Baker is truly The Gandhi of Architecture who believed in life and architecture that is simple & true to its context. The English Architect found his affinity to the indigenous lifestyle ever since the early years.

  4. Nov 25, 2019 · Baker’s architecture requires us to reconsider many canonical commitments and conceptualisations that underpin modern architectural practice. While he has been called theGandhi of Indian architecture’, he was perhaps as much its Gaudí too.

  5. List of Architectural Work. Laurie Baker was a prolific builder. So passionate was he about his mission to create shelter for as many as possible that he rarely documented any of his work per any typical architect's norms. Therefore please note that this is definitely a grossly incomplete list and has been pieced together in retrospect.

  6. A Gandhian by nature, Laurie Baker, known as the 'Gandhi of architecture', the ‘master of minimalism’ gave India low-cost building design with maximum efficiency and just the right amount of aesthetics. He offered a unique tradition of architecture that blended man and nature.

  7. Baker on 'Laurie Baker' Architecture. When I came to India in the 1940s as the Chief Architect for the Mission to Lepers my job was mainly to convert or replace old dreaded asylums with proper modern hospitals and to create the necessary rehabilitation and occupation centres as leprosy was no longer an untreatable disease.