AP140.S2.SS1.D26.P31.1
Description:
model shows the History Faculty Building, and interior elements including the library mezzanine and the galleries and escape stairs of the L-shaped block
1963 - 1967
Presentation model for the History Faculty Building, University of Cambridge, displayed in the exhibition Architecture I (1977) at Leo Castelli Gallery
Actions:
AP140.S2.SS1.D26.P31.1
Description:
model shows the History Faculty Building, and interior elements including the library mezzanine and the galleries and escape stairs of the L-shaped block
models
AP140.S2.SS1.D26.P31
Description:
model shows the History Faculty Building, and interior elements including the library mezzanine and the galleries and escape stairs of the L-shaped block
1963 - 1967
Presentation model for the History Faculty Building, University of Cambridge, displayed in the exhibition Architecture I (1977) at Leo Castelli Gallery
Actions:
AP140.S2.SS1.D26.P31
Description:
model shows the History Faculty Building, and interior elements including the library mezzanine and the galleries and escape stairs of the L-shaped block
models
1963 - 1967
Mabel O. Wilson and Jordan Carver present the ongoing advocacy project Who Builds Your Architecture? (WBYA?), which asks architects and allied fields to better understand how the production of buildings connects their practices to migrant construction workers who build their designs. WBYA?, a group of designers, scholars, and activists based in New York City, has(...)
28 January 2016
Practicing Advocacy: Who Builds Your Architecture?
Actions:
Description:
Mabel O. Wilson and Jordan Carver present the ongoing advocacy project Who Builds Your Architecture? (WBYA?), which asks architects and allied fields to better understand how the production of buildings connects their practices to migrant construction workers who build their designs. WBYA?, a group of designers, scholars, and activists based in New York City, has(...)
In this conversation, Kenneth Frampton (Columbia University) will discuss approaches to architectural history today with Esra Akcan (Cornell University) and Mark Jarzombek (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). What does it mean to write a global history of architecture now? What is the relationship between such a history and urgent contemporary concerns? During a(...)
6 April 2017
A Conversation with Kenneth Frampton: Can There Be a Global Architectural History Today?
Actions:
Description:
In this conversation, Kenneth Frampton (Columbia University) will discuss approaches to architectural history today with Esra Akcan (Cornell University) and Mark Jarzombek (Massachusetts Institute of Technology). What does it mean to write a global history of architecture now? What is the relationship between such a history and urgent contemporary concerns? During a(...)
DR2019:0013
Description:
Model for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
1983?
Model for Folly Three: The Rigorous Abolition of History
Actions:
DR2019:0013
Description:
Model for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
AP177
Synopsis:
The RUR Architecture Kansai-kan of the National Diet Library project records, circa 1996, document the New York based firm’s competition entry for the Kansai Science City branch of Japan’s National Diet Library. Records show integration of landscape in the building’s design, exploration of the relationship between structure and surface, and a multimedia approach to building design. Records include 169 digital files, mostly CAD models and images; 42 drawings and printed renderings; and 5 models and casts.
1996-2015
RUR Architecture Kansai-kan of the National Diet Library project records
Actions:
AP177
Synopsis:
The RUR Architecture Kansai-kan of the National Diet Library project records, circa 1996, document the New York based firm’s competition entry for the Kansai Science City branch of Japan’s National Diet Library. Records show integration of landscape in the building’s design, exploration of the relationship between structure and surface, and a multimedia approach to building design. Records include 169 digital files, mostly CAD models and images; 42 drawings and printed renderings; and 5 models and casts.
archives
Level of archival description:
Fonds
1996-2015
articles
Architectures of Care
Of Migration
30 August 2021
Of Migration
drawings
DR1976:0009
Description:
- Drawings DR1976:0008 and DR1976:0009 show a project for a rotunda designed by Legrand and Molinos for the amphitheatre for the Museum of Natural History, Paris. The final design for a square building with three semi-circular rotundas, was built by Legrand and Molinos in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris (1791). These drawings were once part of an album of Legrand architectural designs.
1792 ?
Section for an amphitheatre for the Museum of Natural History, Paris
Actions:
DR1976:0009
Description:
- Drawings DR1976:0008 and DR1976:0009 show a project for a rotunda designed by Legrand and Molinos for the amphitheatre for the Museum of Natural History, Paris. The final design for a square building with three semi-circular rotundas, was built by Legrand and Molinos in the Jardin des Plantes, Paris (1791). These drawings were once part of an album of Legrand architectural designs.
drawings
1792 ?
DR2019:0019
Description:
Photograph of a model for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
between 1983 and 1995
Photograph of model for Folly Three: The Rigorous Abolition of History
Actions:
DR2019:0019
Description:
Photograph of a model for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
between 1983 and 1995
drawings
DR2019:0015
Description:
Plan and sections for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
1983
Sections and plan for Folly Three: The Rigorous Abolition of History
Actions:
DR2019:0015
Description:
Plan and sections for one of four "Folly" projects designed by Agrest and Gandelsonas for the exhibition "Architecture III: Follies: Architecture for the Late Twentieth-Century Landscape" at Leo Castelli Gallery, New York, October 22-November 19, 1983
drawings
1983