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Journal of Urban and Landscape Planning #3/2018 URBAN CHALLENGES GERMAN CHURCH ARCHITECTURE Boștenaru Dan Maria,1 Meilă Alexandra2 1, 2’Ion Mincu’ University of Architecture and Urban Planning, Bucharest (ROMANIA) maria.bostenaru-dan [at] alumni.uni-karlsruhe.de, secretarsefuauim [at] uauim.ro Abstract. This paper presents the heritage of Germans in Romania (Danube Swabians and Transylvanian Saxons) in relationship with the regions of emigration in the home country of Germany. Nowadays there are institutions dealing with the effects of immigration on art and architecture, including research institutions and museums, and the paper makes reference to these. Also, Italian research is interested in the province of Dacia and many conservation methods come from those lessons, while many of the buildings in the home country were inspired by Italian journeys. The heritage was subjected to disasters over time (earthquake, fire, war among others) and is facing abandonment today, for which reason conservation and management of these heritage buildings is important. This conservation includes also digital conservation, such as CAD virtual reconstruction and laser scanning. The confessional history has been different, with the Saxons arriving before the church Reformation and becoming protestant, while the Swabians arrived as part of the Counter-Reform of Emperor Maria Theresia of the Habsburgs. This, and the position of the dominant architecture programme for the respective periods of history of architecture determined the position of the churches of different confessions in the city. 2017 500 years of Reformation were celebrated, which made the question of confession actual and the agreement today between Christians. Also, the basic professions of the immigrants influenced how the church architecture spread from urban to rural areas. -
NEMZETKÖZI 2015 MAKOVECZ-KONFERENCIA Makovecz 80 – International Conference Makovecz Imre 80
NEMZETKÖZI 2015 MAKOVECZ-KONFERENCIA Makovecz 80 – International Conference Makovecz Imre 80. születésnapja tisz- teletére a Makovecz Imre Alapítvány, a Magyar Művészeti Akadémia (MMA) és a Kós Károly Egyesülés szervezésében egynapos nemzetközi konferenciát ren- deztek 2015. november 23-án a Pesti Vigadó Makovecz Termében. A rendezvé- nyen, melynek szakmai felelőse az egykori tanítvány, Csernyus Lőrinc építész volt, Makovecz Imre munkásságának nemzet- közi hatásáról és megítéléséről, illetve utolsó, nagyszabású tervének, a Szent Mihály-templom megépülésének esélyei- ről hangzottak el előadások. A konferen- cia folytatása volt annak a megkezdett folyamatnak, melynek célja Makovecz Imre munkásságának elsősorban nemzet- közi szinten való megítélése, illetve elhe- lyezése az egyetemes művészettörténeti kánonban. Az első ez irányú komolyabb lépés Paolo Portoghesi olasz építész és művészettörténész az MMA által négy A MEGÉRTÉS nyelven (magyar, angol, olasz, francia) kiadott tanulmánya volt. Az Országépítő folyóirat a konferenciáról készült magyar ELVEZETHET és angol nyelvű kiadványával folytatni kí- vánja a megkezdett utat. A TISZTELETIG, A BÜSZKESÉGIG, ÉS A TELJES BEFOGADÁSIG. Címlap: MAKOVECZ, Imre Felső-krisztinavárosi templom, rajz St. Michael church, sketch Budapest, 2004 ELŐSZÓ FOREWORD "UNDERSTANDING NEMZETKÖZI 2015 CAN LEAD PEOPLE MAKOVECZ-KONFERENCIA Makovecz 80 – International Conference TO RESPECT, PRIDE AND TOTAL ACCEPTANCE." MARTIN IMRE MAKOVECZ DRAHOVSKÝ On the occasion of the 80th birthday of Imre Makovecz, Szlovákia the Imre Makovecz Foundation, the Hungarian Academy First, architect Martin Drahovský from Košice, Slovakia presents the activity of of Arts and the Kós Károly Association organized a one-day Imre Makovecz as a builder of communi- ties and an organiser in the neighbouring international conference in the Makovecz Room of the Vigadó countries, primarily in Slovakia. -
Engagement: Imre Makovecz’S Work Within the Faluházak Project During the 1970S and 1980S
Disclosing the Value of Makovecz’s Work. The Value of the Contribution of Architecture to Cohesion and Social Engagement: Imre Makovecz’s Work within the Faluházak Project During the 1970s and 1980s. Martina Giustra Ph.D. candidate – Marcell Breuer Doctoral School – PTE University of Pécs Tutors József Sisa Professor - Department of Planning and History of Architecture University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Sándor Dévényi Professor - Department of Arhitecture and Urban planning University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Pierluigi Catalfo Professor - Department of Economics and Business University of Catania, Faculty of Economy Contents 1. Introduction 2. An Overview of the Hungarian Organic Architecture – Imre Makovecz 3. Constructive and Typological Characteristics in the Architecture of Imre Makovecz 3.1 Public and Cultural Buildings 3.2 Religious Buildings 3.3 Commercial and Touristic Buildings 3.4 Private Houses 4. The Social Dimension of Imre Makovecz's Organic Architecture: Material and Immaterial Heritage 5. Evaluating the Impact Related to the Organization Cultural Initiative Using Historical, Heritage and Architectural Resources. 6. Case Studies 6.1 Zalaszentlászlo Faluház 6.2 Bak Faluház 6.3 Kakasd Faluház 6.4 Administrative Aspects and Local Governance 6.5 Cultural Planning, Organizational and Decisional Aspects 6.6 Funding Cultural Life 6.7 Notes on Recent Conservative Restorations and Building Performances 7. SROI – Social Return on Investment Methodology 7.1 SROI Methodology: -
LOUSTAU-DISSERTATION-2015.Pdf (1.620Mb)
Devotions of Desire: Changing Gods, Changing People at a Transylvanian Pilgrimage Site The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you. Your story matters Citation Loustau, Marc Roscoe. 2015. Devotions of Desire: Changing Gods, Changing People at a Transylvanian Pilgrimage Site. Doctoral dissertation, Harvard Divinity School. Citable link http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:15821961 Terms of Use This article was downloaded from Harvard University’s DASH repository, and is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material, as set forth at http:// nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:HUL.InstRepos:dash.current.terms-of- use#LAA Devotions of Desire: Changing Gods, Changing People at a Transylvanian Pilgrimage Site A dissertation presented By Marc Roscoe Loustau To The Faculty of Harvard Divinity School In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Theology In the subject of Religion and Society Harvard University Cambridge, Massachusetts October 2014 © 2014 Marc Roscoe Loustau All rights reserved. Michael D. Jackson Marc Roscoe Loustau Devotions of Desire: Changing Gods, Changing People at a Transylvanian Pilgrimage Site Abstract This dissertation describes how desiring subjects make devotional worlds in times of radical change. I argue that what is centrally at stake for people who pass through the Şumuleu Ciuc (Hungarian: Csíksomlyó) pilgrimage site in Transylvania, Romania is the question of what makes a good Catholic in relation to the Virgin Mary. Disputes about this question revolve around notions of the desiring subject: What role should forms of sexual, material, and affective self-interest – or lack thereof – play in the life of Mary’s devotees and the life of the Mother of God herself? This formulation of desire and change as intersubjective and relational processes involving divine and human beings breaks new ground among dominantly sociological and symbolic studies of religious change in contemporary Eastern Europe. -
CURRICULUM VITAE BOTOND BOGNAR Hom Professor And
CURRICULUM VITAE BOTOND BOGNAR Home: 2204 Fletcher St Professor and Edgar Tafel Endowed Chair in Architecture Associate, Center for Advanced Study University Scholar Associate, Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies Associate, Institute for East Asian Architecture and Urbanism (AIEAAU) Laureate, Cultural Appreciation Prize of the Architectural Institute of Japan (AIJ) School of Architecture and Center for East Asian and Pacific Studies University of Illinois University of Illinois Urbana, IL 61801-6915 117 Temple H Buell Hall 230 International Studies Building Champaign, IL 61820 Champaign, IL 61820 Tel: (217) 333-1883 Tel: (217) 333-7273 Fax: (217) 244-2900 E-Mail: [email protected] Home: 2204 Fletcher St, Urbana, IL 61801 (217) 384-0675 EDUCATION: MA in Architecture and Urban Planning. Graduate School of Architecture and Urban Planning (GSAUP), University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). September 1981. Postgraduate Study: Department of Architecture, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Japan. October 1973 - April 1975. MArch Architectural Masters School, Budapest Technical University (in collaboration with the Hungarian Institute of Architects), Budapest, Hungary, September 1972. BArch (First Professional Degree), School of Architecture, Budapest Technical University, Budapest, Hungary. July 1968. (1963-1968) ADDITIONAL STUDIES: School of Human Behavior, United States International University, San Diego. Non-degree Status. No degree obtained; January 1979 - June 1979. Computer Programming, Basic Course, Fujitsu Company, Ltd., Tokyo, -
Tézis Melléklet
Disclosing the Value of Makovecz’s Work. The Value of the Contribution of Architecture to Cohesion and Social Engagement: Imre Makovecz’s Work within the Faluházak Project During the 1970s and 1980s. Martina Giustra Ph.D. candidate – Marcell Breuer Doctoral School – PTE University of Pécs Tutors József Sisa Professor - Department of Planning and History of Architecture University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Sándor Dévényi Professor - Department of Arhitecture and Urban planning University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Pierluigi Catalfo Professor - Department of Economics and Business University of Catania, Faculty of Economy 1 Appendix 1. Project 1969 – 2011: - Public and Cultural Buildings Cultural Centre, Sárospatak 1972-76 Funerary Chapel, Farkasrét Cemetery, Budapest 1975 Community House, Tokaj 1977 Centre for Environmental Education, Mogyoróhegy, Visegrád 1984-88 Cultural Centre, Szigetvár 1985 Village Centre, Bak 1985 Gym of the Junior High, Visegrád 1985 Village Centre, Kakasd 1986 Árpád Vezér Secondary School, Sárospatak 1988 Hungarian Pavilion for the Expo, Seville 1990 Theatre, Lendva 1991-93 Municipal Swimming Pool, Eger 1993 Stephaneum, Catholic University Audutorium, Piliscsaba 1995 Theatre, Makó 1996 Bus Station, Makó 2008 Thermal Baths for the City, Makó 2009 - Religious Buildings Lutheran Church, Siófok 1986 Catholic Church, Paks 1987 Catholic Church II, Százhalombatta 1995 Catholic Church, Csíkszereda 2001 Ecumenical Chapel, Devecser 2011 - Commercial and Touristic Buildings Department Store, Sárospatak 1969 Restroom and Shops, Szentendre 1973 Bungalows and Camping Site in Mogyórohegy, Visegrád 1976-77 Ski Lift House, Dobogókő 1979 - Private Houses Richter House, Budapest 1983 Imre Makovecz Foundation House, Budapest 2010 2 Special Acknowledgments A Biographical Note on the Author On the first page: Imre Makovecz’s freehand drawings. -
Budapest & Beyond
presents The Fifth Annual President’s Tour Budapest & Beyond A Cultural Journey to Hungary an exclusive presentation of September 20 to 28, 2011 Dean Dalton Tours Hosted by Dr. Robert and Marianne Ivany D ear Friends of the University of St. Thomas, In addition to tours of a lovely 18th-century palace and Budapest's modern architecture, we will take an enchanting Marianne and I are pleased to invite you to join us for the trip to the wine-growing area of Eger, and an all-day cruise University of St. Thomas' Fifth Annual President's Tour. up the Danube by riverboat to Visegrád, Esztergom and For seven days we will explore one of Europe's most Szentendre. We will also attend three musical performances beautiful and historic cities, Budapest, and discover the at venues as diverse as the Hungarian National Opera music, art and architecture of this remarkable capital, House and the new Béla Bartók Concert Hall. Please turn divided by the fabled Danube River. the page for more detailed descriptions of Dean Dalton, the voice of classical music at this once-in-a lifetime trip. KUHF Radio, and his wife, Zsófia, have Dean Dalton will be happy to answer any organized a memorable tour for us. I am questions you may have and to assist you sure you will enjoy the unique perspective with your travel arrangements. He can that Zsófia and I, both native Hungarian be reached at 713-893 -7107 or speakers, will provide. [email protected]. We will be staying at the beautiful Marianne and I look forward to sharing Kempinski Hotel, just steps from the this Hungarian adventure with you. -
Disclosing the Value of Makovecz's Work
Disclosing the Value of Makovecz’s Work. The Value of the Contribution of Architecture to Cohesion and Social Engagement: Imre Makovecz’s Work within the Faluházak Project During the 1970s and 1980s. Martina Giustra Ph.D. candidate – Marcell Breuer Doctoral School – PTE University of Pécs Tutors József Sisa Professor - Department of Planning and History of Architecture University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Sándor Dévényi Professor - Department of Arhitecture and Urban planning University of Pécs, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology Pierluigi Catalfo Professor - Department of Economics and Business University of Catania, Faculty of Economy 1 Contents 1. Introduction 2. An Overview of the Hungarian Organic Architecture – Imre Makovecz 3. Constructive and Typological Characteristics in the Architecture of Imre Makovecz 3.1 Public and Cultural Buildings 3.2 Religious Buildings 3.3 Commercial and Touristic Buildings 3.4 Private Houses 4. The Social Dimension of Imre Makovecz's Organic Architecture: Material and Immaterial Heritage 5. Evaluating the Impact Related to the Organization Cultural Initiative Using Historical, Heritage and Architectural Resources. 6. Case Studies 6.1 Zalaszentlászlo Faluház 6.2 Bak Faluház 6.3 Kakasd Faluház 6.4 Administrative Aspects and Local Governance 6.5 Cultural Planning, Organizational and Decisional Aspects 6.6 Funding Cultural Life 6.7 Notes on Recent Conservative Restorations and Building Performances 7. SROI – Social Return on Investment Methodology 7.1 SROI Methodology: Criticality and Strengths 8. Analysis, Data Processing, Application and Results Under SROI Methodology of the Selected Case Study: Bak Faluház 9. Findings and Conclusions References Special Acknowledgments A Biographical Note on the Author 2 On the first page: Imre Makovecz’s freehand drawings. -
Turn of the Century Architecture in Transylvania, Romania and Its Influences from the Architecture of Hungary
Structural Repairs and Maintenance of Heritage Architecture XII 21 Turn of the century architecture in Transylvania, Romania and its influences from the architecture of Hungary M. Bostenaru Dan “Ion Mincu” University of Architecture and Urbanism, Bucharest and Foundation ERGOROM ‘99, Bucharest, Romania Abstract A common feature of turn-of-the-century architecture in Hungary was the innovation in the façades, but there was innovation in the use of construction materials as well. István Medgyaszay promoted the introduction of a special form language to do justice to the employment of reinforced concrete. The architect not only conducted theoretical discourse, but also put into practice these thoughts in buildings like the theatre in Veszprém, Hungary. Other buildings use a form language adequate for reinforced concrete, such as the multi-story block of flats on Népszinház Street, Budapest, Hungary, by the architect Béla Lajta. Such uses of different materials for a form language which would have required reinforced concrete are not singular in the architecture of the time, as other considerations such as material costs or the development of the technique played a role. Numerous architects who studied or worked in Budapest built in Transylvania, now Romania, at the turn-of-the-century. The city most marked by such buildings is Oradea. In Oradea the Moskovits Palace uses for the first time the Hennebique technique with floors out of plates with reinforced concrete nervures. Also, in other cities of Transylvania there are buildings of Hungarian architects, such as Cluj-Napoca or Târgu Mureş. In Cluj-Napoca we remark on the architecture of Károly Kós, whose original architecture involves folk elements and has inspired one of the best known architects of today: Imre Makovecz. -
In Partnership with Community Culture International Scientific Conference
In Partnership with Community Culture International scientific conference 15–16 May 2019 Lakitelek CONFERENCE PAPERS 2019 1 In Partnership with Community Culture International scientific conference 15–16 May 2019 Lakitelek CONFERENCE PAPERS Edited by: Erika Kalmár National Institute for Culture Manuscript preparation: Katalin Kovács National Institute for Culture Copy editor: Tímea Tölcsér Typesetting: Zoltán Király Project beneficiaries: Open Air Museum of Ethnography, Museum Education and Methodology Centre Consortium partners: NMI Művelődési Intézet Nonprofit Közhasznú Kft. and National Széchényi Library Online version: 2 Contents I. EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................... 7 II. PROGRAMME............................................................................................................................ 9 11:10 – 12:30 Section Lectures ........................................................................................13 12:30 – 13:00 Plenary summery of the sections ..............................................................13 13:00 – 13:15 Closing remarks– Árpád Kárpáti director, NMI National Institute for Culture, Directorate for Priority Programmes ........................................................................13 III. ABSTRACTS .............................................................................................................................15 Mogens Godballe: director, Nordfyns Folkehøjskole (Denmark):..............................................15