The pavilion was reproduced as a part of a celluloid structure of the “Immeuble Villas” presented at the 1922 Salon d’Automne which was a theoretical project that consisted of 200 identical pavilions that would be assembled into the “Citrohan”. The Citrohan was developed from the idea of car manufacturing which helped to illustrate the motto of “the house is a machine for living in”. The “Immeuble Villas” consisted of an L-shaped living space and an adjoining garden. The living zone consisted largely of a sun terrace one of Le Corbusier’s most widespread symbols throughout the decade. Each villa was accordingly designed as a typical cell-unit just a block of multiple villa-flats consisting of a small dwelling with its own roof-terrace.