graphic materials
Ephemera from conferences, seminars, and exhibitions that Iñaki Ábalos attended and/or participated
ARCH278458
Description:
Original file title: A&H C3 CV: certificaciónes de eventos y conferencias (IA)
1996-2002
Ephemera from conferences, seminars, and exhibitions that Iñaki Ábalos attended and/or participated
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ARCH278458
Description:
Original file title: A&H C3 CV: certificaciónes de eventos y conferencias (IA)
graphic materials
1996-2002
textual records
ARCH278504
Description:
File's title: IA 2.1B Texto Vandelvira [self-adhesive note] / Notas por chalas, Madrid Iñaki Vandelvira
n.d.
Notes for talks by Iñaki Abalos (Vandelvira)
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ARCH278504
Description:
File's title: IA 2.1B Texto Vandelvira [self-adhesive note] / Notas por chalas, Madrid Iñaki Vandelvira
textual records
n.d.
drawings
AP140.S2.SS1.D33.P47
Description:
site plans for landscape architecture and playground equipment, some rendered, sections and axonometrics, for Phase I and IA
Site plans for landscape architecture and playground equipment
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AP140.S2.SS1.D33.P47
Description:
site plans for landscape architecture and playground equipment, some rendered, sections and axonometrics, for Phase I and IA
drawings
drawings
AP140.S2.SS1.D33.P69
Description:
plans, sections, details and schedules, including for staircases, apartments and duplexes, footbridges and ramps for Phase I and IA
Plans, sections, details and schedules, including for staircases
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AP140.S2.SS1.D33.P69
Description:
plans, sections, details and schedules, including for staircases, apartments and duplexes, footbridges and ramps for Phase I and IA
drawings
textual records
ARCH278471
Description:
File's title: IA & H 2.1. A Columbia / Ensenanza Columbia: papeles seminar viaje Chicago. The documents are in English and Spanish.
ca. 1996
Seminar framework and syllabus for the course Techniques & Architecture in Contemporary Cities, taught by Abalos & Herreros at Columbia University, New York (N.Y.), United States
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ARCH278471
Description:
File's title: IA & H 2.1. A Columbia / Ensenanza Columbia: papeles seminar viaje Chicago. The documents are in English and Spanish.
textual records
ca. 1996
drawings, textual records, photographs
PH1998:0013:006:001-005
architecture
after 1930
Photographs of plans, elevations and perspective drawings for a Sovtorgflot building, Arkhangelsk, Soviet Union (now in Russia)
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PH1998:0013:006:001-005
drawings, textual records, photographs
after 1930
architecture
textual records
ARCH278462
Description:
File's title: IA 1995 B.1 Clase/mesa redenda, curso de arquitectura "Principice, enunciar el proyecto" U.I. Menéndez Pelayo, Santander / Charla Biblioteca Usera (Santander VIMP 95)
ca. 1995
Teaching documents and correspondence relatively to the course "Principios, enunciar el proyecto" by Iñaki Abalos
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ARCH278462
Description:
File's title: IA 1995 B.1 Clase/mesa redenda, curso de arquitectura "Principice, enunciar el proyecto" U.I. Menéndez Pelayo, Santander / Charla Biblioteca Usera (Santander VIMP 95)
textual records
ca. 1995
Project
AP018.S1.1969.PR04
Description:
This project series documents the master plan for the future Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) expansion projects in Toronto in 1969. The office identified the project number as 69035. This project outlines the complete master plan for future expansions of the gallery. For decades, the AGO, under its previous name, The Art Gallery of Toronto, consisted of the nineteenth century Grange mansion and a gallery to its north. The project shows the growth of the AGO from two small buildings surrounded by parks to a much larger two storey building that would touch Dundas Street to the north, Beverly Street to the West, and McCaul Street and the Ontario College of Art to the East. In total, three stages were proposed in this plan to increase the AGO sevenfold from 32,000 square feet of gallery space to 253,000 square feet. In addition, a parking lot was proposed in the Dundas Street Mall to the east of the gallery. Originally, the stages were known in the documentation as Phases I, II, III, and IA but their names evolved with the project. Each stage was eventually given its own project number by the office and the original master plan documented in this project series changed in size and design over the years. This project contract was originally given to John B. Parkin Associates. However, John C. Parkin continued the project under his new firm, Parkin Architects Planners, after parting ways with partner John B. Parkin in 1971. The project is recorded through drawings, including presentation boards, dating from 1965-1978. The majority of these are original drawings showing the design planning of the art gallery.
1965-1981
Art Gallery of Ontario, The Master Plan, Toronto (1969)
Actions:
AP018.S1.1969.PR04
Description:
This project series documents the master plan for the future Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) expansion projects in Toronto in 1969. The office identified the project number as 69035. This project outlines the complete master plan for future expansions of the gallery. For decades, the AGO, under its previous name, The Art Gallery of Toronto, consisted of the nineteenth century Grange mansion and a gallery to its north. The project shows the growth of the AGO from two small buildings surrounded by parks to a much larger two storey building that would touch Dundas Street to the north, Beverly Street to the West, and McCaul Street and the Ontario College of Art to the East. In total, three stages were proposed in this plan to increase the AGO sevenfold from 32,000 square feet of gallery space to 253,000 square feet. In addition, a parking lot was proposed in the Dundas Street Mall to the east of the gallery. Originally, the stages were known in the documentation as Phases I, II, III, and IA but their names evolved with the project. Each stage was eventually given its own project number by the office and the original master plan documented in this project series changed in size and design over the years. This project contract was originally given to John B. Parkin Associates. However, John C. Parkin continued the project under his new firm, Parkin Architects Planners, after parting ways with partner John B. Parkin in 1971. The project is recorded through drawings, including presentation boards, dating from 1965-1978. The majority of these are original drawings showing the design planning of the art gallery.
Project
1965-1981
articles
machine learning, machine learning tool, architectural drawings, trees, AI, artificial intelligence, architectural history, protocols, toolkit, research methods
10 July 2023
Learning from Machine Learning
Sylvia Lavin on designer trees and architectural historiographies of the digital
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drawings, photographs
PH1998:0013:001-048
Description:
- All of the projects in album PH1998:0013:001-048 were designed by Solomon Lisagor, some in collaboration with other architects, from 1923 through 1938 for various locations in Soviet Union. The photographs and magazine clippings show drawings and models for and views of twenty projects including: the Palace of Soviets, Moscow (10 pages); the Ordzhonikidze Sanatorium for the Ministry of the Oil Industry in Kislovodsk, Soviet Union (now Russia) (8 pages); the "Worker" RZhSKT [the "Worker" Worker's Housing Construction Cooperative Trust] in Saratov, Soviet Union (now Russia) (5 pages); the Limeny resort, Crimea, Soviet Union (now Ukraine) (4 pages); the Rostov Institute of Engineers of Transport [?], Rostov-on-Don, Soviet Union (now Russia) (3 pages); the House-commune of transitional type, Rostokino, Moscow (3 pages); a Building of People's Commissariat for Heavy Industry (Narkomtyazhprom), Moscow (3 pages); a Type F unit apartment, 8 Gogolevskii Boulevard, Moscow (2 pages); a development scheme for the southern coast of Crimea, Soviet Union (now Ukraine) (2 pages). Several other projects are represented on single album pages: a workers settlement in Kashira, a circus, and a Red Army Dormitory; a Sovtorgflot building, Arkhangel'sk, Soviet Union (now Russia); a typical experimental single-family house; prefabricated housing; a single-family house, a public rest room and two bus stops; a development scheme for the Ufa region, Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union (now Ufa, Bashkortostan, Russia); and housing constructed from larger stone blocks [krupnye kamennye bloki]. One of the album pages is unused.
architecture
between 1923 and 1943
Album of photographs and magazine clippings of projects by Solomon Lisagor, some designed in collaboration with other architects, Soviet Union (now in Russia and Ukraine)
Actions:
PH1998:0013:001-048
Description:
- All of the projects in album PH1998:0013:001-048 were designed by Solomon Lisagor, some in collaboration with other architects, from 1923 through 1938 for various locations in Soviet Union. The photographs and magazine clippings show drawings and models for and views of twenty projects including: the Palace of Soviets, Moscow (10 pages); the Ordzhonikidze Sanatorium for the Ministry of the Oil Industry in Kislovodsk, Soviet Union (now Russia) (8 pages); the "Worker" RZhSKT [the "Worker" Worker's Housing Construction Cooperative Trust] in Saratov, Soviet Union (now Russia) (5 pages); the Limeny resort, Crimea, Soviet Union (now Ukraine) (4 pages); the Rostov Institute of Engineers of Transport [?], Rostov-on-Don, Soviet Union (now Russia) (3 pages); the House-commune of transitional type, Rostokino, Moscow (3 pages); a Building of People's Commissariat for Heavy Industry (Narkomtyazhprom), Moscow (3 pages); a Type F unit apartment, 8 Gogolevskii Boulevard, Moscow (2 pages); a development scheme for the southern coast of Crimea, Soviet Union (now Ukraine) (2 pages). Several other projects are represented on single album pages: a workers settlement in Kashira, a circus, and a Red Army Dormitory; a Sovtorgflot building, Arkhangel'sk, Soviet Union (now Russia); a typical experimental single-family house; prefabricated housing; a single-family house, a public rest room and two bus stops; a development scheme for the Ufa region, Bashkir Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic, Soviet Union (now Ufa, Bashkortostan, Russia); and housing constructed from larger stone blocks [krupnye kamennye bloki]. One of the album pages is unused.
drawings, photographs
between 1923 and 1943
architecture