Paul David Pearson Alvar Aalto and the International Style. Whitney Library of Design, New York, 1978, pages 203–207.
2.
ThomasVaughan and Virginia Guest Ferriday Alvar Aalto in OregonSpace, Style and Structure, Building in Northwest America, ed. ThomasVaughan, Oregon Historical Society, Portland, Oregon, 1974, p. 656.
3.
Ibid, p. 657.
4.
AlvarAaltoThe Humanizing of ArchitectureSketches, ed. GoranSchildt, MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1978, p. 79.
5.
Pearson, Op. Cit. quoting de Mars, p. 235.
6.
To more fully understand this connection see Stuart Wrede, The Architecture of Erik Gunnar AsplundThe MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1980, pp. 1–124.
7.
KarlFleig, Ed. Alvar Aalto, Band II 1963–1970, Artemis, Zurich, 1971, p. 126.
8.
Pearson, Op. Cit. p. 112.
9.
DemetriPorphyrios, “Heterotopia: A Study in the Ordering Sensibility of the Work of Alvar AaltoAlvar Aalto Architectural Monographs, Academy Editions, London, 1978, p. 11.
10.
SimoPaavilainen, “Classicism of the 1920s and the Classical Tradition in FinlandEdvard Grew, Museum of Finnish Architecture Yearbook, Helsinki, 1979, p. 111.
11.
KirmoMikkolaFrom the Technological to the Humane: Alvar Aalto versus Functionalism. Abacus, Op. Cit. p. 148.
12.
AaltoThe Influence of Construction and Materials on Modern ArchitectureOp. Cit. p. 62.