Cultural Heritage in Transformation

مقدمة من

شعار المنصة
متاح الآن إلى 2024-12-12
27.50 ساعة تعليمية
متوسط
اللغة :
الإنجليزية
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نبذة عن المقرر

In recent decades the sustainable conservation of cultural heritage has become a crucial global challenge. In this context, the trend towards largescale urbanization raises questions as to how new development can take place which respects and maintains the intrinsic values and unique qualities which have been handed down from previous generations, particularly within urban areas.

The course addresses these themes by providing participants with the skills to define, explore, conserve, utilize and manage cultural heritage. Throughout the course, you will be introduced to various methodologies and thematic approaches relevant to these skills using the City of Aachen as an example. Through case studies drawn from Aachen and beyond, you will explore examples at a range of spatial scales; from landscape and city scale to individual buildings and artifacts.

Revision questions and assignments will enable you to consolidate your newly acquired skills and to implement these approaches within the city or town of your choice.

المدربين

Frank Lohrberg
Frank Lohrberg
Prof. Lohrberg studied landscape architecture at Hanover University and won the Peter Joseph Lenné Award in 1990. From 1994 he worked at the University of Stuttgart where he received his doctorate in 2001. In 2002 he founded the lohrberg stadtlandschaftsarchitektur practice, which focuses on the landscape architecture of regional open space. In 2009 he was appointed as professor of landscape architecture at the RWTH Aachen. He currently chairs several national and international research projects focussing on the related topics of green infrastructure and urban agriculture.
Alexander Markschies
Alexander Markschies
Prof. Markschies holds an MA and a Ph.D. from the Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn. He is an Art Historian who is currently writing a book on the planning processes in Architecture, particularly concentrating upon ground plans. He is teaching Art History and History of Architecture at RWTH Aachen University, and has previously taught at the ETH Zürich and UNITEC, New Zealand.
Bruno Schindler
Bruno Schindler
Bruno Schindler acquired the skills of practical building and landscape conservation at an early age. Later on, between 1985 to 1986, he researched the palace architecture of the Roman Renaissance and the architecture treatise of Andrea Palladio - the Quattro Libri - at the Roman Max Plank Institute Bibliotheca Hertziana, under the direction of C. L. Frommel. He also studied mathematics at the RWTH Aachen University and architecture at the Instituto Universitario di Architettura in Venice (IUAV) and at the Institut Superieur d'Architecture St. Luc in Liège. Since 1999 he has led numerous research projects in collaboration with Prof. Jan Pieper; in particular on questions of the reconstruction of historical building processes and building scales, which have been financed by the DFG and the Gerda Henkel Foundation. In 2017, Bruno Schindler published a summary of his research work on the Aachen Palatine Chapel under the title "Thron und Altar – Oktogon und Sechzehneck".
Anke Naujokat
Anke Naujokat
Anke Naujokat graduated from RWTH Aachen University with a Diploma in Architecture. She specialized in Architectural History, working first as Research Assistant at the Institute of Building History at RWTH Aachen and then as a fellowship holder at The Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florence. She was awarded a doctorate for her study on The Holy Sepulchre Chapel by Leon Battista Alberti in Florence. She has also acquired experience as an architectural critic and was one of the founders of the Online Journal 'archimaera.architektur.kultur.kontext.online' (www.archimaera.de) in 2006. In the same year she became Professor at FH Aachen University of Applied Sciences, teaching Architectural History and Theory as well as Historic Building Conservation and Architectural Design. Since 2014 she has held the Chair of Architectural History at RWTH Aachen University, conducting research on various fields of Architectural history, i.e. early modern church architecture and the rhetoric of architecture.
Carola Neugebauer
Carola Neugebauer
Carola Neugebauer studied Landscape Architecture in Germany and France and holds a PhD in urban design. She was researcher at the Leibniz-Institute of Ecological and Regional Development and at the Leibniz-Institute for Regional Geography, before she became Associate professor at RWTH University Aachen leading the independent department “Preserving Cultural Heritage”. Her research and teaching activities has been focused on urban developments in Eurasia with a special emphasis on urban planning practice and theory, (UNESCO world) heritage preservation, housing and spatial identities. She has been successful in working and leading interdisciplinary and international research projects and teaching cooperation. Her research is published in peer-reviewed journals and books.
Christian Raabe
Christian Raabe
Prof. Raabe holds a Diploma from the Technical University Berlin and is a certified engineer. He worked at several teaching and research institutions with a focus on the history of architecture, building construction and monument preservation, namely at the Technical University of Cottbus, the International Film school of Cologne, the FH Potsdam and the Department of Restoration of the FHTW Berlin. In 1994, he founded his own office ABRI + RAABE ARCHITEKTEN in Berlin/Germany and since then, he has worked as an architect on numerous restoration projects. He was awarded his Doctorate in 2007 and in 2008 he became professor of the Department for Historic Building Conservation and Research at the Faculty of Architecture of the RWTH Aachen University/Germany. Christian Raabe is a specialist in Heritage Conservation issues and the organization and implementation of restoration work on historic buildings.