ARCH 350 1st Edition Lecture 38Outline of Last Lecture Sustainability, Urban Age, Architecture and Hannover Principles, 2000’sI. Buckminster FullerA. US Pavilion for the International Exposition, Montreal, CanadaII. Paolo SoleriA. Arcosanti Project, ArizonaIII. Biosphere 2, University of Arizona, Oracle, AZIV. Sustainability and CitiesA. Curitiba, BrazilB. Portland, OregonC. São Paulo, BrazilV. Domingos BongestabsA. University of the Environment (UNILIVRE), Curitiba, BrazilVI. Oscar NiemeyerA. Oscar Niemeyer Museum, CuritibaVII. Renzo PianoA. California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco VIII. Ken YeangA. IBM Tower, Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaIV. Emilio Ambasz and Assoc.A. ACROS Fukuoka Perfectural International Hall, Fukuoka, JapanV. Hans HolleinA. Vulcania Museum, Auvergne, FranceVI. Nicholas Grimshaw and PartnersA. The Eden Project, St. Austell, EnglandThese notes represent a detailed interpretation of the professor’s lecture. GradeBuddy is best used as a supplement to your own notes, not as a substitute.VII. William McDonough + PartnersA. Renovation for Ford Rouge Center, MichiganVIII. MVRDVA. 3D-Garden, Hengelo, The NetherlandsOutline of Current Lecture Reconfiguring the Urban Sphere: Industrial Wastelands and Adaptive Reuse of Industrial BuildingsI. I.M. PeiA. Addition to the Louvre, Paris, II. Renzo PianoA. FIAT Lingotto Factory, Turin, ITB. Paganini Auditorium, Parma, ItalyC. The Shard, London, EnglandIII. Giacomo Matte TruccoA. Fiat Lingotto Factory, Turin, ItalyLondon Docklands, London, England, IV. OMAA. World Heritage Site Zollverein (2001), Essen, Germany (Adaptive reuse by OMA V. SANAAA. World Heritage Site Zollverein (2001), Essen, Germany (School of Design by SANAA VI. Herzog & de MeuronA. Tate Modern, LondonB. Caixa Forum, MadridC. Bird’s Nest Olympic Stadium, Beijing, ChinaIndustrial reuse: USAI. Wurster Bernardi & EmmonsA. Ghirardelli Square (1967), San Francisco (Fisherman’s Wharf)II. Joseph Esherick & AssociatesA. The Cannery (1968), by, San Francisco (Fisherman’s Wharf), converted from a former Del Monte canneryIII. Simeon Bruner, Frank Gehry, Robert Venturi, and David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & MerrillA. MASS MoCA-Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams, Massachusetts, ReuseIV. Reuse as public park: Diller Scofidio + Renfro/James Corner: High Line, New YorkCurrent LectureReconfiguring the Urban Sphere: Industrial Wastelands and Adaptive Reuse of Industrial BuildingsI. I.M. PeiA. Addition to the Louvre, Paris, II. Renzo PianoA. FIAT Lingotto Factory, Turin, ITB. Paganini Auditorium, Parma, ItalyC. The Shard, London, EnglandIII. Giacomo Matte TruccoA. Fiat Lingotto Factory, Turin, ItalyLondon Docklands, London, England, IV. OMAA. World Heritage Site Zollverein (2001), Essen, Germany (Adaptive reuse by OMA V. SANAAA. World Heritage Site Zollverein (2001), Essen, Germany (School of Design by SANAA VI. Herzog & de MeuronA. Tate Modern, LondonB. Caixa Forum, MadridC. Bird’s Nest Olympic Stadium, Beijing, ChinaIndustrial reuse: USAI. Wurster Bernardi & EmmonsA. Ghirardelli Square (1967), San Francisco (Fisherman’s Wharf)II. Joseph Esherick & AssociatesA. The Cannery (1968), by, San Francisco (Fisherman’s Wharf), converted from a former Del Monte canneryIII. Simeon Bruner, Frank Gehry, Robert Venturi, and David Childs of Skidmore, Owings & MerrillA. MASS MoCA-Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art, North Adams, Massachusetts, ReuseIV. Reuse as public park: Diller Scofidio + Renfro/James Corner: High Line, New
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