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Interconnected Architectural Wellbeing: Laszlo Moholy-Nagy & Siegfried Ebeling

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posted on 2025-10-21, 23:14 authored by Sarah Breen LovettSarah Breen Lovett
This paper investigates how architectural theories from the Bauhaus in the 1920s have the opportunity to influence approaches to wellbeing through the built environment today. Through a literature review, the study examines work and writings by primarily Hungarian artist László Moholy-Nagy and German architect Siegfried Ebeling, as well as their contemporaries and predecessors at the Bauhaus. The research identifies a gap in architectural history where past architectural theories and practices have been underexplored in relation to wellbeing, particularly in early modernist discourse. By analyzing Moholy-Nagy and Ebeling writings, this paper reveals how their work prefigures and expands contemporary concerns in wellness design. The key finding is: in the examined works there are clear links between metaphysical thinking, environmental conditions, construction innovation and wellbeing. This study contributes to architectural discourses by: firstly proposing that metaphysically informed design thinking can offer valuable insights for architectural practices aiming to enhance occupant wellbeing; secondly, recontextualizing historical ideas within present-day design challenges, and thirdly offering future research directions for developing understandings of wellbeing in relation to architecture.

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    ISSN - Is version of 2673-8945 (Architecture)
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    URL - Is published in Published Version of Record

Journal title

Architecture - MDPI

Volume

5

Issue

4

Article number

97

Publisher

MDPI

Language

  • en, English

Translated

  • No

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

School of Architecture and Built Environment

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