Architecture Archives of the Future
The education of the Architecture Archives of the Future group is situated at the intersections of advanced architectural design, history and theory, archival studies and museology. The aim is to develop innovative methods of architectural knowledge production based on the new opportunities offered by digital media and technologies, while building on the Delft methods of plan analysis and precedent research. Dick van Woerkom, Communal Living', undated, Collection Nieuwe Instituut Focus and approach Architecture archives are considered a resource full of knowledge, experience, and inspiration for designers. Education and research are therefore geared to open up these resources to critically and speculatively design for the future. Notions of memory and heritage are combined with the ones of imagination and projection. Questions that drive the education and research programme are design-driven with the aim to contribute to the urgent societal questions of today. Such confrontation and combination of archival studies and design-driven questions will lead to new approaches and design knowledge. VR and XR technologies and digital modelling are key tools, yet always in combination with the 'old' media of paper drawings, physical models and other media, all in order to explore the possibilities, meanings and values of these media in relation to architectural design, and their impact on the planning and experience of the built environment. The group is part of the Building Knowledge section of the Architecture department, and works together with the Nieuwe Instituut and Jaap Bakema Study Centre, to further research based on the holdings of the National Collection of Architecture and Urban Planning. Programme The recently launched group Architecture Archives of the Future currently offers two courses: The MSc 2 elective Housing Studies: An Open Intersectional Archive (AR0107) mines the rich housing traditions of the Netherlands and beyond. Design analysis is combined with archival studies, readings and interviews. This elective is organised together with the Architecture and Dwelling group. The MSc 2 studio The Virtual Architecture Museum combines digital modelling and VR technologies with archival research and architectural studies to learn from earlier architectural concepts and speculate on new ones and their related experiences. The studio is supported by the VR Lab. Programme MSc 2 studio spring semester 2025 Staff Dr.ir. Dirk van den Heuvel, Eytan Mann Kanowitz. Additional information For detailed course descriptions, please visit the study guide: MSc 2 * (only in spring semester) * The MSc2 semester of the Architecture track consists of a 5 EC compulsory course and 10 EC of track-specific Architecture electives in the third quarter, followed by a 15 EC (intra)disciplinary elective in the fourth quarter, which can be an intensive architectural research and design project or an intradisciplinary elective in which you are challenged to work together with students from other tracks on overarching themes. Contact Dr.ir. D. van den Heuvel D.vandenHeuvel@tudelft.nl