Architecture, Building and Planning - Research Publications

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Now showing 1 - 7 of 7
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    Architectural Reunification: Akademie der Kunst, Berlin
    Hinkel, R ; Frichot, H (Asia and the Pacific Programme of Educational Innovation for Development, 2006)
    Review of the Akademie der Künste, Academy of Art, in the heart of Berlin. A controversial building by Behnisch & Partner Architects, Germany.
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    Hotel Room Heimat: A Feeling for Home
    Hinkel, R ; Frichot, H (Architecture Media Pty Ltd, 2008)
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    A Visit to the Hospital
    Hinkel, R ; Frichot, H (Architecture Media Pty Ltd, 2008)
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    Design that Moves
    Hinkel, R ; Frichot, H (Architecture Media, 2009)
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    Langsam durch belebte Strassen gehen
    Hinkel, R ; Frichot, H (Bauverlag, 2005)
    A walk through the city, following the cultural spine, curated as conversation between a local and a stranger. Discussing recent architectural projects in Melbourne, Australia. An introduction to a special feature with six separate articles.
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    A Practice of Ephemeral Urban Design
    Hinkel, RU (Common Ground Research Networks, 2009)
    This paper will present research that developed from two projects undertaken in the School of Architecture and Design at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia. The first project was a postgraduate collaboration of researchers in the Design Research Institute at RMIT University, the second was a collaboration with video, sound and projection artists. Both projects engaged with public urban spaces on a sensory and experiential level by using different principles and practices. In this paper I will argue that space is something that is not framed in advance of inhabitation, as an a priori conceptual category. Instead space is a more elusive environment that unfolds alongside our modes of expression and perception. Further, I will demonstrate through two design research case studies how space formation is interwoven with the effects and affects of temporality, ephemerality, and the poetic and sensory potential of new and old technologies. These installations were intended to extend the quotidian perception of the city as a physical and built environment through creating an awareness of temporal, ephemeral, and intangible elements and sensations.
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    Spatial hardware and software
    Hinkel, RU (Wiley, 2008-01-01)