Wettbewerbsliste 2017
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Hitler's Germania: Propaganda Writ in Stone
Bard College Bard Digital Commons Senior Projects Spring 2017 Bard Undergraduate Senior Projects Spring 2017 Hitler's Germania: Propaganda Writ in Stone Aaron Mumford Boehlert Bard College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2017 Part of the Architectural History and Criticism Commons This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License. Recommended Citation Boehlert, Aaron Mumford, "Hitler's Germania: Propaganda Writ in Stone" (2017). Senior Projects Spring 2017. 136. https://digitalcommons.bard.edu/senproj_s2017/136 This Open Access work is protected by copyright and/or related rights. It has been provided to you by Bard College's Stevenson Library with permission from the rights-holder(s). You are free to use this work in any way that is permitted by the copyright and related rights. For other uses you need to obtain permission from the rights- holder(s) directly, unless additional rights are indicated by a Creative Commons license in the record and/or on the work itself. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Hitler’s Germania: Propaganda Writ in Stone Senior Project submitted to the Division of Arts of Bard College By Aaron Boehlert Annandale-on-Hudson, NY 2017 A. Boehlert 2 Acknowledgments This project would not have been possible without the infinite patience, support, and guidance of my advisor, Olga Touloumi, truly a force to be reckoned with in the best possible way. We’ve had laughs, fights, and some of the most incredible moments of collaboration, and I can’t imagine having spent this year working with anyone else. -
Vision Und Konstruktion 9
Elefantenhaus, Zoo Zürich U-Bahn-Viadukt, Symposium Berlin Tragwerksplanung Spannbetonfaltwerk- dach, Mülimatt Golfklub Yeogu, Südkorea Vision und Konstruktion 9. Oktober 2015 UdK Berlin EXPO Pavillon, Südkorea Mit freundlicher Unterstützung von: Titel: Coop Himmelblau, EZB-Bank Frankfurt, Copyright ISOCHROM Titel: Tragwerksplanung 2015 Tagesprogramm, 9. Oktober 2015 Anmeldung (Bitte bis zum 21.09.2015 per Post oder Fax unter 0351/795 74 97 19 bzw. unter www.bauakademie-sachsen.de) 9.00 - 9.15 Vision und Konstruktion Name, Vorname Vision und Konstruktion Volker Schmid, TU-Berlin, Christoph Gengnagel, UdK Berlin, Das Tragwerksplaner Symposium – Vision und Konstruktion themati Christian Müller, CMIB Berlin siert anhand herausragender nationaler und internationaler Beispie- Anschrift le die kreative Arbeit der Ingenieure, ihre Ideen bei der Trag werks- 9.15 - 10.00 entwicklung und der Konzeption von Gebäuden. Besonders interessiert leicht, lang, hoch – Bauten in und aus Berlin dabei der adäquate Umgang mit den unterschiedlichen verwendeten Boris Reyher, schlaich bergermann und partner, Berlin Telefon/Fax Materialien, ebenso wie die praktische Umsetzung des Tragwerkskon- zepts auf der Baustelle. Der subjektive Zugang der planenden Ingeni- 10.00 - 10.45 eure und ihre Ideen und Standpunkte werden von den international Europäische Zentralbank in Frankfurt E-Mail bekannten Vortragenden vorgestellt und laden zur Diskussion ein. Manfred Grohmann, Bollinger + Grohmann, Frankfurt a. M. Das Symposium wendet sich vor allem an Bauingenieure, konstruktiv -
Hans Kammler, Hitler's Last Hope, in American Hands
WORKING PAPER 91 Hans Kammler, Hitler’s Last Hope, in American Hands By Frank Döbert and Rainer Karlsch, August 2019 THE COLD WAR INTERNATIONAL HISTORY PROJECT WORKING PAPER SERIES Christian F. Ostermann and Charles Kraus, Series Editors This paper is one of a series of Working Papers published by the Cold War International History Project of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C. Established in 1991 by a grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Cold War International History Project (CWIHP) disseminates new information and perspectives on the history of the Cold War as it emerges from previously inaccessible sources from all sides of the post-World War II superpower rivalry. Among the activities undertaken by the Project to promote this aim are the Wilson Center's Digital Archive; a periodic Bulletin and other publications to disseminate new findings, views, and activities pertaining to Cold War history; a fellowship program for historians to conduct archival research and study Cold War history in the United States; and international scholarly meetings, conferences, and seminars. The CWIHP Working Paper series provides a speedy publication outlet for researchers who have gained access to newly-available archives and sources related to Cold War history and would like to share their results and analysis with a broad audience of academics, journalists, policymakers, and students. CWIHP especially welcomes submissions which use archival sources from outside of the United States; offer novel interpretations of well-known episodes in Cold War history; explore understudied events, issues, and personalities important to the Cold War; or improve understanding of the Cold War’s legacies and political relevance in the present day. -
Retallick (Page 1)
1 Architecture about Architecture/ The wisdom to know the difference? Peter Retallick Key Words: Ethics, Psychology, Philosophy, Third Reich Abstract of the paper In this paper I examine whether “design wisdom” is a prerequisite for self-fulfillment or self-actualization. I refer to various philosophers and I look at the life of Albert Speer. He was an architect in the Third Reich and had a close relationship with Hitler. A combination of flawed personalities made these two a team. Speer brought his design skills to work for National Socialism and in so doing gave them a sort of imprimatur or cachet. There is a brief description of Speer’s journey into the centre of power and the result for him was a twenty-year jail sentence. My thesis is that Speer’s involvement in this is archetypal and lessons can be learned from his experience. He was not a thug, mediocre or incompetent. Submission Part 1 Wisdom is sometimes defined as a wise outlook, plan or course of action, common sense and good judgement. It follows that design wisdom has some functional component connected with the act of designing. In all of these things responsibility is an implicit component. For design practice it could include such a wide range of issues and permutations that a personal design manifesto is endless. The designer is constantly coming into contact with new situations and people, and he or she needs to find a path that satisfies creative desires as well as providing a degree of accountability. Peter Singer offers a definition that I believe is helpful because it brings a plethora of ideas down to something concrete. -
Backgrounder: Siemensstadt 2.0 Berlin
Backgrounder Berlin, January 8, 2020 Siemensstadt 2.0 Berlin: Participants in the urban development competition In the summer of 2019, Siemens and the State of Berlin selected and invited 18 architecture and urban planning firms to participate in the urban development competition for Siemensstadt 2.0 in Berlin. Seventeen firms took part. The teams had close to three months to create their designs, working together with – if necessary external – landscape architects and other experts for traffic, infrastructure, protection of historic buildings, and sustainability. AS+P Albert Speer + Partner (Frankfurt am Main) Architecture, urban planning, traffic and open space planning, and the planning of cultural, educational and sports facilities, airports and trade fairs – so diverse is the expertise of the architectural firm founded by Prof. Albert Speer. Over the years, the firm – with its 200 employees – has developed, among other projects, the Audi IN campus in Ingolstadt as a research and development center, and a new residential district on the site of a former military barracks in Darmstadt. AS+P created the urban planning concept for the Siemens Campus in Erlangen. www.as-p.de ASTOC Architects and Planners (Cologne) When developing master plans for entire cities or urban districts, ASTOC covers every aspect from the project’s social-spatial qualities down to the details of each individual house. The firm, with its 80 employees, followed this principle with its Europacity Berlin project, which it handled all the way from winning the urban design competition to planning the individual buildings. The firm has also secured its reputation as a developer of new urban districts with projects in Regensburg (Marina Quarter) and Hamburg (Holzhafen Quarter). -
Neubau Der Siemens-Konzernzentrale in München 11/3
wa 9/2011 – 25 Neubau der Siemens-Konzernzentrale in München 11/3 Neubau der Siemens-Konzernzentrale in München New Building of Siemens’ Corporate Headquarters in Munich Auslober/Organizer 1. Preis/1st Prize Wettbewerbsaufgabe Siemens Real Estate, München Henning Larsen Architects, Kopenhagen Die Hauptverwaltung des Siemens Konzerns Mette Kynne Frandsen · Louis Becker befindet sich seit der Nachkriegszeit am Wit- Koordination/Coordination Peer T. Jeppesen · Henning Larsen telsbacherplatz im Nordwesten der Münchner AS&P Albert Speer & Partner GmbH, Jacob Kurek · Lars Steffensen Altstadt. Neben dem historischen Palais Ludwig Frankfurt a. M./Berlin/Hannover Mitarbeit: Kostas Poulopoulos · Werner Frosch Ferdinand befinden sich weitere Gebäude des Wettbewerbsart/Type of Competition Silke Jörgenshaus · Vanda Oliveira Altbestandes im Bereich zwischen Wittelsba- Wettbewerb als konkurrierendes Verfahren mit Bianca Ulzurruri · Carl Lyneborg cherplatz bzw. der Kardinal-Döpfner-Straße im 12 eingeladenen Teilnehmern nach einem vor- Christian Schjøll · Jie Zhang · Nico Schlapps Osten und dem Altstadtring im Westen, sowie geschaltetem Screeenin aus über 100 Büros Omar Dabaan · Martin Wrå Nielsen zwischen der Jägerstraße im Norden und der Fachberater: Werner Sobek GmbH & Co. KG, Finkenstraße im Süden. Termine/Schedule Frankfurt Siemens plant, die Hauptvewaltung des Kon- Kolloquium 11. 02. 2011 L.Arch.: Vogt Landschaftsarchitekten, München zerns auf dem 10.850 m2 großen Kernareal des Zwischenpräsentation 22. 03. 2011 Brandschutz: hhpberlin Ing. für Brandschutz heutigen Altbestandes einschließlich Palais zu Abgabetermin Pläne 04. 05. 2011 GmbH, Berlin konzentrieren. Die hier bestehenden Gebäude Abgabetermin Modell 11. 05. 2011 Fachberater: INNIUS RR GmbH, Frankfurt entsprechen nicht mehr den Anforderungen an Endpräsentation 29. 06. 2011 moderne Büroarbeitsflächen. Aus diesem Grund Preisgerichtssitzung 30. 06. 2011 2. -
THOMAS REINER, P.E. Licensed Professional Engineer: CA, CT, FL, MA, NJ, NY, PA, TX (CT, TX Inactive) [email protected]
THOMAS REINER, P.E. Licensed Professional Engineer: CA, CT, FL, MA, NJ, NY, PA, TX (CT, TX Inactive) [email protected] www.talwegstudio.com EDUCATION University of California, Berkeley. Berkeley, California Master of Science in Civil Engineering, May 2007 Master of Architecture, May 2007 Universität Stuttgart. Stuttgart, Germany Fulbright Fellowship, Sep. 2005 – July 2006 Institut für Leichtbau Entwerfen und Konstruieren (ILEK) The Institute for Lightweight Design and Construction University of Arizona. Tucson, Arizona Bachelor of Architecture, magna cum laude and Honors, May 2001 Universität Stuttgart. Stuttgart, Germany Arizona‐Baden Württemberg Exchange Program, March – Aug. 2000 PROFESSIONAL Professional Engineer, California. License #C75211 LICENSING Professional Engineer, Connecticut. License #PEN.0028146 (Inactive, but can be re‐activated) Professional Engineer, Florida. License #84973 Professional Engineer, Massachusetts. License #54139 (Structural) Professional Engineer, New Jersey. License #5376700 Professional Engineer, New York. License #094767 Professional Engineer, Pennsylvania. License #086167 Professional Engineer, Texas. License #112350 (Inactive, but can be re‐activated) NCEES Record #17‐175‐26. (NCEES record may be used to obtain P.E. licenses for other states as required for project work) PROFESSIONAL Talweg Engineering Studio D.P.C., New York City, May 2017 ‐ Present EXPERIENCE Principal . Aleisa Family Khozama II Residences, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (2018‐ongoing) Architect: Worksbureau . Beyond Office Renovation, New York City. (2018‐ongoing) Architect: Condition . Aleisa Family Mahdeya Residences, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. (2017‐18) Architect: Worksbureau ARUP, New York City, Jan. – April 2017 Senior Engineer (Temporary Contract) . Mexico City New International Airport, Mexico City, Mexico. (2017) Architect: Foster + Partners with Fernando Romero Knippers Helbig Inc., Stuttgart, Germany & New York City, Oct. 2010 – Dec. -
A Model to Interpret Bio-Inspired Design and Its Impact on Design Curricula
A MODEL TO INTERPRET BIO-INSPIRED DESIGN AND ITS IMPACT ON DESIGN CURRICULA A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate School of Engineering and Sciences of İzmir Institute of Technology in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE in Architecture by Cansu GÜNAYDIN October 2019 İZMİR ACKNOWLEDGMENTS First, I want to thank Prof. Dr. Fehmi Doğan, my supervisor, who shared his experience and knowledge. I want to thank him not just for the thesis; he supported me throughout my whole process with his physical and mental presence. I'm grateful to him for all the things which he presented me with sincerity and tolerance. Secondly, I would like to thank especially my co-advisor Dr. Altuğ Kasalı, who was a great mentor leading me towards the academic path and wishfully contributed a lot to my thesis with his invaluable ideas. I would also like to thank to my thesis committee members Assoc. Prof. Dr. Tonguç Akış and Assoc. Prof. Dr. Aslı Ceylan Öner for their valuable time, comments and suggestions. Thanks to my all of friends for their invaluable support and motivation during the study. Last but not least, I want to thank my dear family, for their endless trust, motivation and lifelong support, simply for being my family. I’m grateful them for everything in my life. Thanks to all of them! ABSTRACT A MODEL TO INTERPRET BIO-INSPIRED DESIGN AND ITS IMPACT ON DESIGN CURRICULA Inspirations from nature is widely used in the field of design. Rising concerns about the irreversible and hazardous effects of humankind, direct the developments in the field of design and technology once again to nature. -
Multifunctional Adaptive Façade at IBA 2013; Design Studies for an Integral Energy Harvesting Façade Shading System
Multifunctional Adaptive Façade at IBA 2013; design Studies for an Integral Energy Harvesting Façade Shading System VI International Conference on Textile Composites and Inflatable Structures STRUCTURAL MEMBRANES 2013 K.-U.Bletzinger, B. Kröplin and E. Oñate (Eds) MULTIFUNCTIONAL ADAPTIVE FAÇADE AT IBA 2013; DESIGN STUDIES FOR AN INTEGRAL ENERGY HARVESTING FAÇADE SHADING SYSTEM LIENHARD J.†, RIEDERER J.†, JUNGJOHANN H.†, OPPE M.† AND KNIPPERS J. † † Knippers Helbig - Advanced Engineering, Stuttgart - New York Knippers Helbig GmbH Tübingerstraße 12 – 16, 70178 Stuttgart, Germany Email: [email protected] - Web page: www.knippershelbig.com Key words: Membrane, GFRP, bending-active, adaptive Summary: As part of the international exhibition ‘Bauausstellung’ IBA 2013 in Hamburg, Germany, architects from KVA MATx team and engineers from Knippers Helbig Advanced Engineering have developed an integral energy harvesting façade shading system for their ‘Softhouse’ project. Its overall concept includes an energy harvesting hybrid textile roof featuring flexible photovoltaics, which contributes to create a micro-climate for the building as a shading roof for the terrace and glass façade. This responsive façade is based on a textile hybrid system, using textile membranes and glass fibre reinforced plastics (GFRP) in an intricate form- and bending-active structure. This paper will discuss the multiple design studies that were undertaken to develop a system that satisfies the, at times, diametrically opposed demands from architecture, building physics, -
Ian Hamilton Finlay, Albert Speer, and the Ideology of the Aesthetic at Little Sparta and Spandau GREG THOMAS Independent Scholar
Ian Hamilton Finlay, Albert Speer, and the Ideology of the Aesthetic at Little Sparta and Spandau GREG THOMAS Independent Scholar Abstract: This article assesses the development of Ian Hamilton Finlay’s concrete and post-concrete aesthetics from his contact with Brazil’s Noigandres poets in 1962 until his late-1970s correspondence with the architect and former Nazi minister Albert Speer. It considers Finlay’s work over this period, from early-1960s concrete poems evoking a private realm of formal order to counterfactual renderings of the same works on neoclassical and Third Reich architecture. The second half of the essay offers a reading of A Walled Garden, Finlay and Ian Gardner’s study of Speer’s garden on the grounds of Spandau prison. The article posits a gradual awakening of Finlay’s sense of the ideological quality of aesthetic judgement, culminating in works that ask troubling questions about the relationship between the socially unifying work of concretist aesthetics and the social repression and violence of Nazism. Keywords: Concrete poetry, Brazil, architecture, gardens, aesthetics At some point in the late 1970s, probably in August 1977, Ian Hamilton Finlay established a correspondence with the architect and former Nazi armaments minister Albert Speer.1 Finlay had already read Spandau: The Secret Diaries, 1 Acknowledgments and sincere thanks are due to the following organizations and estates for granting copyright permissions and/or authorizing reproductions or quotations: Wild Hawthorn Press for allowing reproduction of poems -
Flectofin® a Hinge-Less Flapping Mechanism Inspired by Nature
ecton ® A Hinge-less Flapping Mechanism Inspired by Nature International Bionic-Award 2012 Techtextil Innovation Prize 2011 Flectofin® A Hinge-less Flapping Mechanism Inspired by Nature Project Team Dipl.-Ing. Julian Lienhard Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design ITKE - University of Stuttgart, Germany M.Arch.(MIT) Simon Schleicher Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design ITKE - University of Stuttgart, Germany Dipl.-Biol. Simon Poppinga Plant Biomechanics Group - PBG Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Germany Dr. Tom Masselter Plant Biomechanics Group - PBG Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Germany Dipl.-Ing. Lena Müller Institute of Textile Technology and Process Engineering Denkendorf, ITV - Denkendorf, Germany B.Sc. Julian Sartori Institute of Textile Technology and Process Engineering Denkendorf, ITV - Denkendorf, Germany Supervisors Prof. Dr. Jan Knippers Institute of Building Structures and Structural Design ITKE - University of Stuttgart, Germany Prof. Dr. Thomas Speck Plant Biomechanics Group - PBG Albert-Ludwigs-University of Freiburg, Germany Dr. Markus Milwich Institute of Textile Technology and Process Engineering Denkendorf, ITV - Denkendorf, Germany Industry Partner clauss markisen Projekt GmbH Biss.-Ochsenwang, Germany Supported by BMBF Funding Directive BIONA German Federal Ministry of Education and Research ® Introduction 1 Flectofin The Flectofin® is a hinge-less flapping mechanism In architectural constructions, such as shading systems inspired by a deformation principle found in the Bird-Of- like umbrellas or blinds, deployability is mainly provided Paradise flower [1,2]. Its valvular pollination mechanism by the use of rigid elements connected with technical shows a fascinating non-autonomous plant movement hinges. Due to the high number of load cycles that act which was analyzed to better understand the basic on gliding and rotating elements, however, hinges tend underlying principles that are responsible for the plant’s to gall over time which causes expensive maintenance mechanical performance. -
Portfolio Id
SOM PRIZE AND TRAVEL FELLOWSHIP 2011 PORTFOLIO ID #11 Abstract and Itinerary: SOM 1 Temporary and Transitional Spaces, Architecture and Mobility Itinerary: Background: USA: - Pier Six Concert Pavilion (1991), Baltimore, Maryland, FTL, International Fabric Associated Industries Expo Oct 25-27, 2011 Historically nomadic cultures used lightweight, flexible, and portable materials such as tapestries, animal hides, and thin-wood components to quickly assemble and disassemble communal and - The Smithsonian Institution (2007), Washington, DC, Foster and Partners, Smith Group Inc. private, temporary and transitional spaces. Advancements in technology since 1950 have enhanced the durability and strength of these spaces using plastic and membrane construction methods. - UN Interim Canopy (2009), New York, New York, HLW International, FTL Global events such as the World Cup, The World Expo and The Olympics all require multiple transitional and temporary spaces that support human activities in a safe, sustainable way. Global disasters - The Central Park (2011), San Clemente, California, Michael Maltzan Architects mandate that transitional spaces be quickly assembled with consideration of local, cultural, and economic needs. From airports to temporary event structures, plastic and membrane construction - San Diego Convention Center (1989), San Diego, California, (1989) Arthur Erickson, Horst Berger, Birdair methods continue to set precedents for how architecture can inspire, shelter, and support humanity. By studying precedents and collaborating with