Claude-Nicolas Ledoux (1736-1806) is today regarded as chief
representative of French revolutionary architecture. With his
extraordinary inventiveness he projected the architectural ideals of his
era. Ledoux's influential buildings and projects are presented and
interpreted both aesthetically and historically in this book. His
best-known projects - the Royal Saltwords of Arc-et-Senans, the
tollgates of Paris, the ideal city of Chaux - reveal the architect's
allegiance to the principles of antiquity and Renaissance but also
illustrate the evolution of his own utopian language. With the French
Revolution, Ledoux ceased building as his contemporaries perceived him
as a royal architect. He focused on the development of his architectural
theory and redefined the vision of the modern architect.