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The Nature of Engineering. Part 2. / [presented by] Ted Happold (Buro Happold).
- Format:
- Sound recording
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Landscape architecture.
- Architecture, Modern--20th century.
- Architecture, Modern.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (1 video file (25 minutes)): sound, color
- Place of Publication:
- London, England: Pidgeon Digital, 1987.
- Summary:
- The late Ted Happold, born in 1930, read geology at Leeds University. Then, after several years of on-site building experience, he returned to the University to study engineering. In 1957, he joined Ove Arup & Partners, engineers, but left for a spell in New York with Severud Elstad & Krueger. Back with Arup in 1961, he rose to become by 1967 Executive Partner of one of the three structural divisions. In 1971 Happold left Arup's and set up his own partnership named Buro Happold and based in Bath. This was because he had been offered a new Chair of Building Engineering at Bath University and the opportunity to develop a joint school of architecture and engineering. As he had for long been involved in education for the building industry, he happily accepted. The course was such a success that it added construction studies to the curriculum. He believes strongly that the building industry would be improved by such an amalgam of studies. Happold has played a leading role in many of the organisations concerned with structural matters both in the UK and internationally, and he is someone who really understands what architecture and design are about, for which reason no doubt he was elected a Royal Designer for Industry in Britain in 1983. The Institution of Structural Engineers, the professional body of which he was a member, several times honoured him with their awards and in 1986 voted him President. While both at Arup's, and later under his own name, Happold has collaborated with very many outstanding architects including Richard Rogers to whom he had proposed that they enter the competition for the Pompidou Centre, joined by Renzo Piano and Peter Rice. Happold has always worked closely with Frei Otto, researching in the field of long-span structures, and they have carried out many seminal projects together in various parts of the world for which they have received awards. Structural engineering is primarily concerned with learning from nature about the forces of action, of wind or of people. It's also to do with the ecology, the characteristics of the available materials and the creative use made of them. All this Happold discusses at some length, illustrated by work in which he has been involved. The idea of designing like nature, he says, is probably our best chance of ensuring that what we do is compatible with nature.
- Contents:
- Ted Happold
- Teflon-Coated Glass Fibre Tent
- Munich Aviary
- Section Through Steel Crimping
- Strength Of Trees. Diagram
- Tracheids
- Herring-Bone Timber Strutting
- Medieval Building
- Leonardo Da Vinci Drawing For Laminated Arch
- Timber Building Construction
- Brunel Trestle Railway Bridge
- Mannheim Garden Festival Building
- Iraqi Marsh Arab Reed Building
- Lausanne Exhibition Building, 1967
- Glass Fibre-Filled & Glued Tensile Timber Joint
- School In Dorset For John Makepeace. Architects Frei Otto & Ahrends Burton & Koralek
- Arctic Project: Pneumatic Cover To City
- Translucent Laminates For Roofing Large Spaces
- Study For Covering Basildon Town Centre. Architect Michael Hopkins.
- Notes:
- Title from publisher's website (viewed April 28, 2021).
- Access Restriction:
- Restricted for use by site license.
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