Entrance exterior view of the Alvar Aalto House
Alvar Aalto’s House Front View | © Chen Hao

The Alvar Aalto House, located in the Munkkiniemi district of Helsinki, was the center of the famous architect’s life and career. Alvar and Aino Aalto designed the house at Riihitie 20 as their home and architectural office in 1935-36. This building represents a unique combination of Alvar Aalto’s personal life and his professional work and is a testament to his innovative design philosophy. Today, the house serves as a museum, showcasing the life and work of one of the greatest architects of the 20th century. Visitors to the Alvar Aalto House can gain a deeper understanding of Aalto’s design principles and the impact he had on the field of architecture.

The Aalto House Technical Information

I tell you, it is easier to build a grand opera or a city center than to build a personal house.

– Alvar Aalto1

The Aalto House Photographs

Side view of the Aalto residence
© Chen Hao | Rear Facade
Corner view of the house
© Chen Hao | Side View
Door entrance of the Aalto home
© Chen Hao | Entrance
Balcony of Aino Aalto house
© Chen Hao | Terrace
Chimeey / Fire Place of the Aalto villa
© Chen Hao | Fireplace
The Aalto House / Alvar Aalto
© Chen Hao | Living room with Alvar Alto Glass Vase on the coffee table
Double height space of the interior of the house
© Chen Hao | Gallery
The Aalto House / Alvar Aalto
© Chen Hao | Dining Room
The Aalto House / Alvar Aalto
© Chen Hao | Interior
The Aalto House / Alvar Aalto
© Chen Hao | Interior

Alvar Aalto’s House History

In 1934, Aino and Alvar Aalto acquired a site in almost completely untouched surroundings at Riihitie in Helsinki’s Munkkiniemi. They started designing their own house, which was completed in August 1936. Aalto’s architect’s office was in this building until 1955.

The house was designed both as a family home and an office. The two functions can be seen from the exterior. The slender mass of the office wing is in white-painted, lightly rendered brickwork. There are still explicit references to Functionalism in the location of the windows. The cladding material of the residential part is slender, dark-stained timber cladding. The building has a flat roof and a large south-facing terrace.

The natural materials soften the form language of modern architecture. Designing their own home allowed Aino and Alvar Aalto to conduct various structural and material experiments. With its closed street façade facing in different directions, the rooms in this building have been carefully considered. Natural light and orientation of rooms and terraces were important. The main living areas are open towards the south, as well as the garden. The house has four open hearths.

The house combines modern materials and a modern vocabulary of form with tradition and gives nature a foothold in an entirely new way. The building, which was built in almost completely natural surroundings, is an example of Aalto’s design philosophy. Using the natural surroundings as a starting point for his designs became Aalto’s trademark.

The Interiors of The Alvar Aalto House

The interiors were elegantly furnished in every detail. Several meticulously thought features provide a glimpse of the architect couple’s life and their family and highlight the intermingling of living and working facilities. The studio and the family’s living areas have been discreetly separated from each other through material choices. This can be seen in both the façades and the interiors.

Although the house’s streetside elevation is severe and closed-off, it is softened by climbing plants and a slate path leading up to the front door. There are already signs of the ‘new’ Aalto in the Aalto House of the Romantic Functionalist. The plentiful use of wood as a finishing material and four open hearts built-in brick also point to this.

The Aalto House anticipates the Villa Mairea, a luxury residence where Aalto’s creativity could come into full bloom. But in contrast to its larger sister, the Aalto House is a cozy, intimate building for living and working, designed by two architects for themselves, using simple, uncluttered materials. Alvar Aalto lived in the house on Riihitie until his death, and the family used the building long afterward. The place, protected by the Act on the Protection of Buildings, is now part of the Alvar Aalto Museum and is open as a home museum.

The ultimate goal of the architect…is to create a paradise. Every house, every product of architecture… should be a fruit of our endeavour to build an earthly paradise for people.

– Alvar Aalto2

Aalto House Floor plans, Sections, and Elevations

The Aalto House Plans
Floor Plans | The Aalto House
The Aalto House Plans
Floor Plans | The Aalto House
Elevation Plan
Elevations | The Aalto House

About Alvar Aalto

Hugo Alvar Henrik Aalto was a Finnish architect, designer, sculptor, and painter. His work includes architecture, furniture, textiles, and glassware. Aalto’s early career runs parallel with Finland’s rapid economic growth and industrialization during the first half of the twentieth century. Many of his clients were industrialists; among these were the Ahlström-Gullichsen family.

From the 1920s to the 1970s, the span of his career is reflected in the styles of his work, ranging from Nordic Classicism in his early work to a rational International Style of Modernism during the 1930s to a more organic modernist style from the 1940s onwards. His furniture designs were considered Scandinavian Modern. However, what is typical for his entire career is a concern for design as a Gesamtkunstwerk, a total work of art. In that sense, he – together with his first wife, Aino Aalto – would design not just the building but also give unique treatments to the interior surfaces and design furniture, lamps, furnishings, and glassware.

Full Biography | Works from Alvar Aalto

  1. Alvar Aalto: Second Nature by Jochen Eisenbrand (Author, Editor), Pedro Gadanho  (Author), Dörte Kuhlmann & 7 more.
  2. Alvar Aalto: The Complete Work (3 Volumes) by Alvar Aalto