The work of human creative genius
The Hotel Tassel is an elegant urban house with facade defined around centered, stacked oriel bay windows and balcony. Designed by Victor Horta – the architect to initiate the Art Nouveau style, the building was built for the Belgian scientist and Professor Emile Tassel. Because of Horta’s highly innovative plan, the old urban house was inscribed as UNESCO World Heritage List in 2000. This building is generally considered as the first Art Nouveau building in Brussels.

The Hotel Tassel considered some of the most outstanding pioneering works of architecture at the end of the 19th century. The architect made a break with the past here by using stone and the modern material, metal, in domestic architecture, brilliantly illustrating the transition from the 19th to the 20th century in art, thought and society. The modernity of building is signaled by the vast use of glass. The facade includes classical elements like moldings and columns but here some of the columns are iron, not stone. The Hotel Tassel of Victor Horta is a striking example to the radical new approach of Art Nouveau in the closing years of the 19th century.

Architect: Victor Horta
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Built Date: 1892 to 1893
Building Type: large house
Construction System: iron, wood, cut stone facade
Context: urban
Style: Art Nouveau
Tags: architecture • Belgium • Brussels • Hotel_Tassel • UNESCO • urban • Victor_Horta
Tweet
Related Posts





