Project
AP178.S1.1992.PR04
Description:
This project series documents the Helsenki Museum of Contemporary Art. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 28/90. The office assigned the dates 1992-1993 to this project. For the 75th anniversary of the independence of the country, the Finnish government held a competition for the design of the Museum of Contemporary Art of Helsinki. The competition was exclusive to Scandinavian architects, with the exception of four invited architects, including Àlvaro Siza. Eduardo Souto de Moura collaborated with Siza on the design. The project site was located in the center of Helsinki, near the main post office and the Parliament. Siza decided to name the building Cometa. The proposal included exhibition spaces, teaching and public facilities, an auditorium, workrooms, workshops, storerooms, film studio, and spaces for the administration and archives. The showrooms were located on the first floor and most of the lighting was intended to come from natural light. The design proposed by Siza included the use of granite for the exterior of the building. Steven Holl was selected by the jury to built the museum. Documenting this project are floor plans, sections, elevations, and site plans. Textual material includes project documentation, competition documentation, and correspondence. Photographs and negatives document the project site.
1992-1993
Museu de Arte Contemporânea para Helsínquia [Helsenki Museum of Contemporary Art], Helsenki, Finland (1992-1993)
Actions:
AP178.S1.1992.PR04
Description:
This project series documents the Helsenki Museum of Contemporary Art. While the records were held in the office’s archives this project was assigned the number 28/90. The office assigned the dates 1992-1993 to this project. For the 75th anniversary of the independence of the country, the Finnish government held a competition for the design of the Museum of Contemporary Art of Helsinki. The competition was exclusive to Scandinavian architects, with the exception of four invited architects, including Àlvaro Siza. Eduardo Souto de Moura collaborated with Siza on the design. The project site was located in the center of Helsinki, near the main post office and the Parliament. Siza decided to name the building Cometa. The proposal included exhibition spaces, teaching and public facilities, an auditorium, workrooms, workshops, storerooms, film studio, and spaces for the administration and archives. The showrooms were located on the first floor and most of the lighting was intended to come from natural light. The design proposed by Siza included the use of granite for the exterior of the building. Steven Holl was selected by the jury to built the museum. Documenting this project are floor plans, sections, elevations, and site plans. Textual material includes project documentation, competition documentation, and correspondence. Photographs and negatives document the project site.
Project
1992-1993
maps, textual records, graphic materials, photographs
DR2006:0110
Description:
correspondence, notes, a map, clippings, a brochure, postcards, coupons, invitations, newsletters, teaching materials, syllabi, posters, a photocopy of poster designs, handbills, press releases, a resume for Cedric Price, copies of two articles by Elizabeth Lebus on the borough of Bermondsey, a copy of an article by Ian Brown on the future of the AA, a report on an election at AA, AA prospectuses, a proposal for a Housing Policy and Design Programme at the London School of Economics, bibliographies, and proposals, including proposals for urban planning in South London
1980-1999
Correspondence, notes, a map, clippings, a brochure
Actions:
DR2006:0110
Description:
correspondence, notes, a map, clippings, a brochure, postcards, coupons, invitations, newsletters, teaching materials, syllabi, posters, a photocopy of poster designs, handbills, press releases, a resume for Cedric Price, copies of two articles by Elizabeth Lebus on the borough of Bermondsey, a copy of an article by Ian Brown on the future of the AA, a report on an election at AA, AA prospectuses, a proposal for a Housing Policy and Design Programme at the London School of Economics, bibliographies, and proposals, including proposals for urban planning in South London
maps, textual records, graphic materials, photographs
1980-1999
textual records
ARCH153564
Description:
Financial reports and budgets, 1972-1973 HUD project, Binghamton Street Study - Correspondence 1970- 1972: Budget Phase 2 & Phase 3 - Resident User Survey: Questionaire & Tabulation of Survey Results PDE's handwritten notes on finances procedures Progress on the Spring Lecture Series IAUS internal memoranda Correspondence with IAUS guest lecturers & attorneys Minutes of IAUS Fellows meeting: September 20 1972 Correspondence with Arthur Drexler, MoMA about Low Rise High Density exhibition Curriculum vitae of Carol Woodward Syllabus, Architecture A4790x : "Architecture and Industrial Society", Columbia University Teaching schedule
1970-1973
HUD project, Binghamton Street Study and Miscellaneous documents
Actions:
ARCH153564
Description:
Financial reports and budgets, 1972-1973 HUD project, Binghamton Street Study - Correspondence 1970- 1972: Budget Phase 2 & Phase 3 - Resident User Survey: Questionaire & Tabulation of Survey Results PDE's handwritten notes on finances procedures Progress on the Spring Lecture Series IAUS internal memoranda Correspondence with IAUS guest lecturers & attorneys Minutes of IAUS Fellows meeting: September 20 1972 Correspondence with Arthur Drexler, MoMA about Low Rise High Density exhibition Curriculum vitae of Carol Woodward Syllabus, Architecture A4790x : "Architecture and Industrial Society", Columbia University Teaching schedule
textual records
1970-1973
Project
AP206.S1.2000.PR01
Description:
This project series documents buildings for the Guru Jambheshwar University of Science and Technology in Hisar, India around 2000. The project consisted of the design of many new campus buildings, including the Administrative Block, offices, Health Centre, student and employee hostels, professors' houses and VIP houses, the Teaching Block, cafeteria, library, and University Works buildings. The University, previously known as Punjab Agricultural University, was established in 1995 by the Haryana state government and had a campus that sprawled over 372 acres. By 2007, around 200 acres had been developed with buildings and landscaping. Prakash had previously worked on projects for this campus, formerly known as the Punjab Agricultural University, in the 1960s. This project series contains the records for three buildings: the library, the Health Centre, and the Sports Hall. The library was notable for it's round shape, large entrance arch and domed skylight ceiling. The materials also emphasize the development of a large mural in the library depicting the astrological signs. The Health Centre was a diamond shaped building with an outdoor courtyard at its centre. The Sports Hall was a rectangular building with a trussed roof consisting primarily of an open, multipurpose space. This project is recorded through drawings, photographs of the finished buildings, and textual records dating from 2000-2007. The drawings are largely originals and include plans, sections, elevations, perspectives and details. The textual records consist of correspondence and a brochure on the campus construction program.
2000-2007
Guru Jambheshwar University of Science and Technology, Hisar, India (2000-2004)
Actions:
AP206.S1.2000.PR01
Description:
This project series documents buildings for the Guru Jambheshwar University of Science and Technology in Hisar, India around 2000. The project consisted of the design of many new campus buildings, including the Administrative Block, offices, Health Centre, student and employee hostels, professors' houses and VIP houses, the Teaching Block, cafeteria, library, and University Works buildings. The University, previously known as Punjab Agricultural University, was established in 1995 by the Haryana state government and had a campus that sprawled over 372 acres. By 2007, around 200 acres had been developed with buildings and landscaping. Prakash had previously worked on projects for this campus, formerly known as the Punjab Agricultural University, in the 1960s. This project series contains the records for three buildings: the library, the Health Centre, and the Sports Hall. The library was notable for it's round shape, large entrance arch and domed skylight ceiling. The materials also emphasize the development of a large mural in the library depicting the astrological signs. The Health Centre was a diamond shaped building with an outdoor courtyard at its centre. The Sports Hall was a rectangular building with a trussed roof consisting primarily of an open, multipurpose space. This project is recorded through drawings, photographs of the finished buildings, and textual records dating from 2000-2007. The drawings are largely originals and include plans, sections, elevations, perspectives and details. The textual records consist of correspondence and a brochure on the campus construction program.
Project
2000-2007
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
AP074
Synopsis:
The Catherine Chard Wisnicki fonds contains photographs dating from about 1947, of a house project in West Vancouver which Chard Wisnicki, the first female graduate of the McGill School of Architecture, was assistant architect. The fonds also contains a videocassette recording of an interview with Chard Wisnicki from 1995, and one textual document from 1997.
[ca. 1947], 1995, 1997
Catherine Chard Wisnicki fonds
Actions:
AP074
Synopsis:
The Catherine Chard Wisnicki fonds contains photographs dating from about 1947, of a house project in West Vancouver which Chard Wisnicki, the first female graduate of the McGill School of Architecture, was assistant architect. The fonds also contains a videocassette recording of an interview with Chard Wisnicki from 1995, and one textual document from 1997.
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
[ca. 1947], 1995, 1997
Project
AP018.S1.1974.PR02
Description:
This project series documents the design and construction of the University of Ottawa Health Sciences Building in Ottawa, Ontario from 1974-1984. The office identified the project number as 7402. The Ottawa Heath Sciences Complex, a vast hospital network encompassing institutions across the city, hired Parkin Architects Planners in 1971 to design and construct University of Ottawa buildings within the network. These campus buildings were located in the Alta Vista neighbourhood and referred to as the Health Sciences Centre. This project consists of one building in that complex, the Health Sciences Building. The distinction between these names should be noted when viewing the materials. The Health Sciences Building was built as a teaching hospital and the main hub of clinical learning at the University of Ottawa’s School of Medicine. The building was conceived as a response to a lack of research spaces in Ottawa hospitals at that time. The building was proposed to be 230,000 net assigned square feet, with 75,000 net assigned square feet designated as research space. The project is recorded through textual records, construction photographs, drawings and artwork dating from 1971-1984. The textual records show correspondence with the clients, consultants and contractors, construction change orders and instructions, site and construction reports, meeting minutes, specifications, financial records, detail and product research and planning, and schedules. There are also a large number of detail drawings disbursed throughout the textual records. Box AP018.S1.1974.PR02.001 contains an index to the textual records, which was created by the office.
1971-1984
University of Ottawa Health Sciences Building, Ottawa, Ontario (1974-1984)
Actions:
AP018.S1.1974.PR02
Description:
This project series documents the design and construction of the University of Ottawa Health Sciences Building in Ottawa, Ontario from 1974-1984. The office identified the project number as 7402. The Ottawa Heath Sciences Complex, a vast hospital network encompassing institutions across the city, hired Parkin Architects Planners in 1971 to design and construct University of Ottawa buildings within the network. These campus buildings were located in the Alta Vista neighbourhood and referred to as the Health Sciences Centre. This project consists of one building in that complex, the Health Sciences Building. The distinction between these names should be noted when viewing the materials. The Health Sciences Building was built as a teaching hospital and the main hub of clinical learning at the University of Ottawa’s School of Medicine. The building was conceived as a response to a lack of research spaces in Ottawa hospitals at that time. The building was proposed to be 230,000 net assigned square feet, with 75,000 net assigned square feet designated as research space. The project is recorded through textual records, construction photographs, drawings and artwork dating from 1971-1984. The textual records show correspondence with the clients, consultants and contractors, construction change orders and instructions, site and construction reports, meeting minutes, specifications, financial records, detail and product research and planning, and schedules. There are also a large number of detail drawings disbursed throughout the textual records. Box AP018.S1.1974.PR02.001 contains an index to the textual records, which was created by the office.
Project
1971-1984
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
Douglas Kelbaugh fonds
AP153
Synopsis:
The Douglas Kelbaugh fonds documents the professional practice of architect Douglas Kelbaugh from the beginning of his carreer in 1973, his partnership in the Kelbaugh + Lee Architects firm, in 1978, to his late projects in the 1990s. The documents in the fonds consist of drawings, textual records, photographs and panels relating to over 20 projects, predominantly his work in sustainable architecture in the United States from the early 1970s to the mid 1990s.
1970-2008
Douglas Kelbaugh fonds
Actions:
AP153
Synopsis:
The Douglas Kelbaugh fonds documents the professional practice of architect Douglas Kelbaugh from the beginning of his carreer in 1973, his partnership in the Kelbaugh + Lee Architects firm, in 1978, to his late projects in the 1990s. The documents in the fonds consist of drawings, textual records, photographs and panels relating to over 20 projects, predominantly his work in sustainable architecture in the United States from the early 1970s to the mid 1990s.
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
1970-2008
Series
Research files
AP197.S2
Description:
This series consists of research materials, 1958-2016, that Frampton was either interested in or may have used to develop his works and teachings. Materials consist of articles, student essays, biographies, chronologies of architectural movements, maps, curriculum vitaes, and journal, newspaper and magazine clippings. Reprographic copies of architectural drawings as well as prints, photographs, negatives, and slides that depict the built projects of various architects are also included in this series. Research materials consist of writings by or about various architects and theorists such as: Mario Botta; Charles Correa; Alan Colquhoun; Marco Frascari;Ignacio de Sola-Morales; O.M. Ungers; James Stirling; Fumihiko Maki; Le Corbusier; Tadao Ando; Alvaro Siza; Peter Eisenman; Frank Lloyd Wright; Alvar Aalto; Hannah Arendt; Walter Benjamin; H.P. Berlage; Mario Botta; Louis Kahn; Mies dan ver Rohe; Jørn Utzon; August Perret; and Louis Sullivan. The subjects explored in these texts are diverse and include: various architectural styles; architecture education; meaning in architecture, philosophy; film; art; music; mathematics; ecology; landscapes/gardens; and housing and urbanism.
1958-2016
Research files
Actions:
AP197.S2
Description:
This series consists of research materials, 1958-2016, that Frampton was either interested in or may have used to develop his works and teachings. Materials consist of articles, student essays, biographies, chronologies of architectural movements, maps, curriculum vitaes, and journal, newspaper and magazine clippings. Reprographic copies of architectural drawings as well as prints, photographs, negatives, and slides that depict the built projects of various architects are also included in this series. Research materials consist of writings by or about various architects and theorists such as: Mario Botta; Charles Correa; Alan Colquhoun; Marco Frascari;Ignacio de Sola-Morales; O.M. Ungers; James Stirling; Fumihiko Maki; Le Corbusier; Tadao Ando; Alvaro Siza; Peter Eisenman; Frank Lloyd Wright; Alvar Aalto; Hannah Arendt; Walter Benjamin; H.P. Berlage; Mario Botta; Louis Kahn; Mies dan ver Rohe; Jørn Utzon; August Perret; and Louis Sullivan. The subjects explored in these texts are diverse and include: various architectural styles; architecture education; meaning in architecture, philosophy; film; art; music; mathematics; ecology; landscapes/gardens; and housing and urbanism.
Series
1958-2016
textual records
AP197.S3.006
Description:
The box is comprised of correspondence for the years of 1995-1997, organized in chronological order. The box documents Frampton’s career as Ware professor at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University and his related professional activities. Correspondence in this box includes: offers of teaching positions; requests to write articles, reviews, books and recommendation letters; invitations to teach, present, or attend at lectures/symposiums/conferences; and requests to serve on juries. Throughout this period, Frampton corresponded with various architects, professors, publishers, and editors of various publications such as: Thames and Hudson Ltd.; the Berlage Institute; the Italian Cultural Institute; Yukio Futagawa of GA/ADA Edita Tokyo Co CD; and the MIT Press. Correspondence relates to his participation/involvement in: the Michael Blackwood Production “In search of Louis Kahn: Six Buildings;” the Japanese and German translations for the Studies in Tectonic Culture publication; organizing lectures on Studies in tectonic Culture; the Jerusalem Seminar in Architecture “Technology, Place & and Architecture;” teaching at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne; the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture; and the Architectural Society of China. Correspondence concerning the following publications and lectures is included: “the Megaform as City in Miniature;” “Critical regionalism revisited,” a lecture at the Berlage Institute; the Le Corbusier publication; “Tradition and Innovation in the Work of Christoph Mackler;” and the forward for Vittorio Gregotti`s Inside Architecture.
1995-1997
Personal and professional correspondence from 1995-1997
Actions:
AP197.S3.006
Description:
The box is comprised of correspondence for the years of 1995-1997, organized in chronological order. The box documents Frampton’s career as Ware professor at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University and his related professional activities. Correspondence in this box includes: offers of teaching positions; requests to write articles, reviews, books and recommendation letters; invitations to teach, present, or attend at lectures/symposiums/conferences; and requests to serve on juries. Throughout this period, Frampton corresponded with various architects, professors, publishers, and editors of various publications such as: Thames and Hudson Ltd.; the Berlage Institute; the Italian Cultural Institute; Yukio Futagawa of GA/ADA Edita Tokyo Co CD; and the MIT Press. Correspondence relates to his participation/involvement in: the Michael Blackwood Production “In search of Louis Kahn: Six Buildings;” the Japanese and German translations for the Studies in Tectonic Culture publication; organizing lectures on Studies in tectonic Culture; the Jerusalem Seminar in Architecture “Technology, Place & and Architecture;” teaching at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne; the Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture; and the Architectural Society of China. Correspondence concerning the following publications and lectures is included: “the Megaform as City in Miniature;” “Critical regionalism revisited,” a lecture at the Berlage Institute; the Le Corbusier publication; “Tradition and Innovation in the Work of Christoph Mackler;” and the forward for Vittorio Gregotti`s Inside Architecture.
textual records
1995-1997
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
Marcel Parizeau fonds
AP104
Synopsis:
Le Fonds Marcel Parizeau contient des documents relatifs à la formation et à la vie de professionnel de Marcel Parizeau. Il contient aussi des œuvres d'art réalisées par ce dernier. Le fonds est composé de dessins d'architecture et de meubles, de carnets de croquis, de tableaux, de manuscrits, de correspondances, ainsi que quelques autres documents.
1917-1955
Marcel Parizeau fonds
Actions:
AP104
Synopsis:
Le Fonds Marcel Parizeau contient des documents relatifs à la formation et à la vie de professionnel de Marcel Parizeau. Il contient aussi des œuvres d'art réalisées par ce dernier. Le fonds est composé de dessins d'architecture et de meubles, de carnets de croquis, de tableaux, de manuscrits, de correspondances, ainsi que quelques autres documents.
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
1917-1955