scholarly journals Multiculturalism in Post-War architecture: Aldo van Eyck and the Otterlo Circles

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (42) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alejandro Campos Uribe ◽  
María de Miguel Pastor ◽  
Paula Lacomba Montes ◽  
Jordi Martínez Ventura
Keyword(s):  
2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 123-133
Author(s):  
Rachel Kallus

The September 1965 meeting of Team 10 in Berlin was another occasion on which the ‘family’ gathered to present and discuss projects and ideas. Like other Team 10 meetings, issues of modernisation, inhabitation, post-war reconstruction, the welfare state, consumer society and the role of the architect were subjects of heated debate. After the famous 1959 meeting in Otterlo at which Team 10 emerged out of CIAM, the core group members were still trying to determine the character and size of their group, which would enable them to reach some kind of unity while maintaining a diversified outlook. The list of 30 invitees included familiar names alongside a few newcomers, among them the Israeli, German-born planner-architect Artur Glikson, who had been invited to join the meeting by Aldo van Eyck. The gathering was to be informal but, unlike invitations to previous meetings, this one, sent by Shadrach Woods, did not propose any specific theme. The meeting was motivated partly by the establishment of the new branch office of Candilis-Josic-Woods in Berlin, set up to supervise construction of the Free University. Presentations took place at the Akademie der Künste, in the Hansaviertel, the showcase district for modern architecture built in the latter half of the 1950s [1, 2].


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher Layne ◽  
Brian Allen ◽  
Krys Kaniasty ◽  
Laadan Gharagozloo ◽  
John-Paul Legerski ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 446-456
Author(s):  
V. V. Yusupov

The issue of development of forensic institutions of Ukraine in the ХХ century was studied. Until 1917, forensic medical examinations were conducted in the medical compartments of the provincial administrations, at the departments of forensic medicine of universities and in hospitals - by police doctors. The chairs of forensic medicine existed in the St. Vladimir Kyiv University, Kharkiv, Novorosiisk and Lviv Universities. Real organization of Ukrainian forensic medical institutions began in 1919 with the creation of the Medical Examination Department at the People’s Commissariat of Health. In 1923, the Main forensic medical inspection, headed by M. S. Bokarius, was founded. In the provinces the positions of forensic medical inspectors were created. In 1927 the sections of biological research were established in the Kharkiv, Kyiv and Odesa institutes of scientific andforensic expertise,where separate forensic examinations were conducted. In 1949 the institutions of forensic medical examination of the USSR were merged into the Bureau of Forensic Medical Examination, in Ukraine it was held in 1951. It was proved that forensic medical institutions developed at the following chronological stages: 1) until 1917 - forensic medical service in the Ministry of Internal Affairs; 2) 1917-1941 - prewar formation of forensic medical institutions; 3) 1941-1949 -forensic medical institutions during the war and in the first post-war years; 4) 1949-1990s - period of development of the bureau of forensic medical examinations of the countries of the USSR; 5) since the 1990s - development of expert institutions in the public health care system in independent postSoviet states. It’s stressed that formation of the forensic institutions in Ukraine is closely related with the development of forensic medicine departments of higher educational establishments. Forensic medicine departments were the basisfor practicalforensic medicine, professors provided daily assistance to forensic medical experts.


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