Raga Jose Fuste/age fotostock
August 27, 2015, marks the 50th anniversary of the drowning death of Le Corbusier, one of the iconic architects of the 20th century. His travels as a young man helped him develop the principles he followed as an architect—and wrote extensively about—over the course of his life. Largely self-taught, he embraced functionalism, the doctrine that a building’s design should be determined by its use. “A house is a machine for living in,” he famously said. In such structures as his soaring wimplelike Notre-Dame-du-Haut (1950–55) in Ronchamp, France, he also pioneered in the use of rough-cast concrete.