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The AA School & Projects / [presented by] Alvin Boyarsky (Director Architectural Association).

Pidgeon Digital Available online

View online
Format:
Sound recording
Contributor:
Boyarsky, Alvin, narrator.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Architectural Association (Great Britain). School of Architecture.
Architectural Association (Great Britain).
Architecture--Study and teaching--Great Britain.
Architecture.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (28 minutes)): sound, color
Other Title:
AA School and projects
Place of Publication:
London, England: Pidgeon Digital, 1985.
Summary:
The Architectural Association School of Architecture in London is unlike any other school of architecture in the world. Brought into being in 1847 by a number of students, it continues to this day its tradition of self-directed education. It has no curriculum but is organised on the basis of teachers who offer projects and students who choose to work for them from an appetite for the activities programmed. The teachers, none of them tenured, are people well-known and active in the field of ideas etc. There are lectures and seminars all day and every day, and exhibitions and a publishing house to disseminate all this to a wider audience. The School has a truly international intake of students and staff, and is today London's gathering-place and social centre for architecture. In 1971, however, when this remarkable School had been about to close down for reasons beyond its control, a small band of committed architects and students formed a new constitution involving the wishes of the school community as a whole. Their selected new Chairman was the Canadian Alvin Boyarsky, graduate of McGill and Cornell, who had once taught at the School but had left to become Dean of the College of Architecture and Art at the University Of Illinois at Chicago Circle. He had already demonstrated the necessary expertise at his two highly successful International Institute of Design Summer Schools in London in 1970 and 1971. He set the AA School in a new direction from which it has not looked back and he says in his talk, "It is possible for a school of architecture to rise above the everyday business of training to involve itself in the history of ideas and the formulation of new concepts".
Contents:
Alvin Boyarsky, 1985-The AA, Bedford Square, London
Terrace Housing, 1942. Hidalgo Moya
Town As Home, 1953. Michael Brawne
Housing, 1962. Patrick Hodgkinson
Channel Bridge, 1962. Farrow, Martin, Moon
Golden Lane Deck Housing, 1952. A & P Smithson
Leicester University Engineering Laboratories, 1964. Stirling & Gowan
Fun Palace, 1961. Cedric Price
Plug-in City, 1965. Peter Cook
Fold-out House, 1969. Alan Stanton
Film Safari Community, 1971. Paul Burrows
Project With Co-op Himmelblau, 1973
Public Convenience, 1976. Peter Wilson
La Villette Competition, 1976. Leon Krier
Monastery Project, 1981. Nigel Westbrook
Manhattan Transcripts, 1977. Bernard Tschumi
Manhattan Project, 1975. Elia Zenghelis & Rem Koolhaas
Hong Kong Peak Competition. Zaha Hadid
Monument To Falkland Islands. Nigel Coates
Project For Run-down Area
Venice Arsenale Project. Peter St. John
Unit Six Jury, 1983
AA Bar, 1983
Notes:
Title from publisher's website (viewed April 27, 2021).
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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