JEAN PROUVE COMPLETE WORKS, VOL 2: 1934-1944.By Peter Sulzer, Basel: Birkhauser. 2000. sFRI48 (DMI (Desktop Management Interface) The first desktop management standard from the DMTF. Enabling PCs to be monitored from a central console, it was superseded by the DMTF's Common Information Model (see CIM). 68) The Egan Report and rediscovered enthusiasm for prefabricated pre·fab·ri·cate tr.v. pre·fab·ri·cat·ed, pre·fab·ri·cat·ing, pre·fab·ri·cates 1. To manufacture (a building or section of a building, for example) in advance, especially in standard sections that can be easily shipped and construction are a timely reminder of the adage that those who fail to attend to the lessons of history are bound to repeat them. Peter Sulzer, Professor emeritus from the Technical University at Stuttgart, was in the 1960s a leading designer of precast concrete component systems. Later, disillusioned dis·il·lu·sion tr.v. dis·il·lu·sioned, dis·il·lu·sion·ing, dis·il·lu·sions To free or deprive of illusion. n. 1. The act of disenchanting. 2. The condition or fact of being disenchanted. , he turned to self-build and participation following the example of Walter Segal (AJ 27.7.83, ARs June 1985, March 1987). His magnum opus on Prtouve reflects both his need to understand the mechanization mechanization Use of machines, either wholly or in part, to replace human or animal labour. Unlike automation, which may not depend at all on a human operator, mechanization requires human participation to provide information or instruction. of architecture and his social concern, for both are combined in his hero. The blacksmith who became the inventor and producer of Modernist furniture and components, and eventually of whole prefabricated buildings, was also a pioneer in profit sharing and paid holidays. His efforts to mechanize mech·a·nize tr.v. mech·a·nized, mech·a·niz·ing, mech·a·niz·es 1. To equip with machinery: mechanize a factory. 2. craft production were geared not merely to technical efficiency and economy, but embraced the whole production process and its social consequences. This is one reason we should look closely at Prouve. The other is for the ingenuity of his details, especially in folded metal, for which the detail drawings in this series of books are invaluable. Vol 1 (published 1995, reviewed AR May 1997) covered the years 19 17-33. The current volume takes the oeuvre to 1944, including the difficult years of the occupation when the factory made stoves and bicycle frames, and Prouve was involved in the resistance. When the Germans tried to requisition one of the presses Prouve planned to blow it up, but it proved too heavy to remove, so survived to provide good service for some decades more. Besides the endless furniture, doors and windows Doors and Windows is a multimedia disk by the Irish band The Cranberries. Track listing
Pride of place goes, however, to the Maison du Peuple in Clichy (architects Beaudouin and Lods) with its astonishing a·ston·ish tr.v. as·ton·ished, as·ton·ish·ing, as·ton·ish·es To fill with sudden wonder or amazement. See Synonyms at surprise. retractable floor and advanced curtain wall system. There is much to ponder here for Egan enthusiasts, who need to discover how precisely buildings are like cars and how they are not. There are also clues about the logic of production, about how components can be produced, transported and put together, and how the numbing effects of repetition can be avoided. It is time to cut through the image making of Hi-tech and re-examine re·ex·am·ine also re-ex·am·ine tr.v. re·ex·am·ined, re·ex·am·in·ing, re·ex·am·ines 1. To examine again or anew; review. 2. Law To question (a witness) again after cross-examination. the spirit of the '2CV kind of thinking' that drove this ingenious and unpretentious Frenchman. |
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