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Ernst neufert mit mitarbeitern
Ernst neufert mit mitarbeitern















RE-MOVING THE GOALPOSTS : PERSPECTIVES ON WOMEN AND REGENERATION / WOMEN'S DESIGN SERVICE. RESIDENTIAL LIGHTING : A PRACTICAL GUIDE / BY RANDALL WHITEHEAD. PALACES AND GARDENS OF PERSIA / YVES PORTER. United States : GRAYSON PUBLISHING (DC), 2002. MIKYOUNG KIM : INHABITING CIRCUMFERENCE, LANDSCAPE RITUALS, URBAN GROUND, FIXED AND LENGTHENING POSITIONS, MULITISENSORY EXPERIENCE. METAL BUILDING SYSTEMS : DESIGN AND SPECIFICATIONS / ALEXANDER NEWMAN. THE INSPIRED RETAIL SPACE : ATTRACT CUSTOMERS, BUILD BRANDING, INCREASE VOLUME / CORINNA DEAN. United States : BLACK DOG PRESS (UK), 2003. REVISIONING LANDSCAPES AND POLITICS / EDITED BY MARK DORRIAN AND GILLIAN ROSE. LIGHTING : INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR / ROBERT BEAN.īoston, MA : Elsevier/Architectural Press, 2004.ĪFRICAN-AMERICAN ARCHITECTS : A BIOGRAPHICAL DICTIONARY, 1865-1945 / EDITED BY DRECK SPURLOCK WILSON.ĭETERRITORIALISATIONS. URBAN PLANNING AND REAL ESTATE DEVELOPMENT / JOHN RATCLIFFE, MICHAEL STUBBS AND MARK SHEPHERD. PRESIDIO, MISSION, AND PUEBLO : SPANISH ARCHITECTURE AND URBANISM IN THE UNITED STATES / JAMES EARLY.ĭallas : Southern Methodist University Press, 2004. Please check the catalogue for future availability. In Reyner Banham’s Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (1960) and Joan Campbell’s canonic monograph on the Deutscher Werkbund (1978), standardization is conflated with typification (Typisierung), which describes a related but ultimately distinct idea.2 Here, I will argue that standardization must also be thought in the light of what Georges Canguilhem and Michel Foucault term, in French, “normalisation.”3 That is, the concept of standardization (“Normung” or “Normierung,” as it is most frequently named in German) expresses a dimension of normalisation that is frequently overlooked in architectural discourse.4 Readers of Foucault in translation tend to treat the French word normalisation and the English normalization as interchangeable (they are not).Items without call numbers at the beginning of this list are yet to be catalogued and are not yet available for borrowing. In the work of Henry-Russell Hitchcock and Sigfried Giedion, the term standardization tends to be equated with mechanization, prefabrication, or mass production.1 The term is often taken to describe changes in how things are made—how the use of custom-made parts gives way to interchangeable parts.

ERNST NEUFERT MIT MITARBEITERN SERIES

doi:10.1162/GREY_a_00125 Standardization Reconsidered: Normierung in and after Ernst Neufert’s Bauentwurfslehre (1936) NADER VOSSOUGHIAN During the last century, studies of standardization in architecture and design have been limited by a series of elisions between wholly different vocabularies. In Reyner Banham’s Theory and Design in the First Machine Age (1960) and Joan Campbell’s canonic monograph on the Deutscher Werkbund (1978), standardization is conflated with typification (Typisierung), which describes a related but ultimately distinct idea.2 Here, I will argue that standardization must also be thought in the light of what Georges Canguilhem and Michel Foucault term, in French, “normalisation.”3 That is, the concept of standardization (“Normung” or “Normierung,” as it is most frequently named in German) expresses a dimension of normalisation that is frequently overlooked in architectural discourse.4 Readers of Foucault in translation tend to treat the French word normalisation and the English normalization as interchangeable (they are not). Standardization Reconsidered: Normierung in and after Ernst Neufert's Bauentwurfslehre (1936) Standardization Reconsidered: Normierung in and after Ernst Neufert's Bauentwurfslehre (1936)Įrnst Neufert.















Ernst neufert mit mitarbeitern