Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)

The school of Valencia was a singular case study in the architectural training in Spain towards the end of the 60s. Like in Madrid, Barcelona, and Seville, the school also participated in the bustling political and social context, but while in these schools the curriculum of 1964 was extended until...

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Main Author: Débora Domingo-Calabuig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OmniaScience 2018-05-01
Series:Journal of Technology and Science Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jotse.org/index.php/jotse/article/view/366
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spelling doaj-6c662f53167842e1a60dc6b7490a75bb2020-11-25T00:32:04ZengOmniaScienceJournal of Technology and Science Education2013-63742018-05-018319220310.3926/jotse.366155Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)Débora Domingo-Calabuig0Universitat Politècnica de ValènciaThe school of Valencia was a singular case study in the architectural training in Spain towards the end of the 60s. Like in Madrid, Barcelona, and Seville, the school also participated in the bustling political and social context, but while in these schools the curriculum of 1964 was extended until 1975, in Valencia the creation of the Instituto Politécnico Superior was the opportunity to launch an experimental curriculum introducing notable changes. Beginning in 1969, the new architecture students of Valencia shared a classroom and subjects’ contents with students from 3 other degrees (Industrial Engineering, Civil Engineering, and Agricultural Engineering) and underwent continuous evaluations following a semester calendar. The architecture school of Valencia thus became a dual organism since the previous plan coexisted with the new one, but each was taught in different venues, isolated from one another. This work puts in parallel both curricula, both university environments and the teaching practices received by both group of students and tries to reconstruct the first years of history of the architecture school of Valencia thanks to testimonies and the few existing documentary sources. In addition, a critical assessment of the results is developed which is compared to the recent reflections and changes that have been occurring in the teaching of architecture.http://www.jotse.org/index.php/jotse/article/view/366Architectural training, architecture school of Valencia, Post-1968 architectural education, architectural pedagogies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Débora Domingo-Calabuig
spellingShingle Débora Domingo-Calabuig
Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
Journal of Technology and Science Education
Architectural training, architecture school of Valencia, Post-1968 architectural education, architectural pedagogies
author_facet Débora Domingo-Calabuig
author_sort Débora Domingo-Calabuig
title Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
title_short Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
title_full Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
title_fullStr Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
title_full_unstemmed Dualities in architectural training: The Architecture School of Valencia (1968-1975)
title_sort dualities in architectural training: the architecture school of valencia (1968-1975)
publisher OmniaScience
series Journal of Technology and Science Education
issn 2013-6374
publishDate 2018-05-01
description The school of Valencia was a singular case study in the architectural training in Spain towards the end of the 60s. Like in Madrid, Barcelona, and Seville, the school also participated in the bustling political and social context, but while in these schools the curriculum of 1964 was extended until 1975, in Valencia the creation of the Instituto Politécnico Superior was the opportunity to launch an experimental curriculum introducing notable changes. Beginning in 1969, the new architecture students of Valencia shared a classroom and subjects’ contents with students from 3 other degrees (Industrial Engineering, Civil Engineering, and Agricultural Engineering) and underwent continuous evaluations following a semester calendar. The architecture school of Valencia thus became a dual organism since the previous plan coexisted with the new one, but each was taught in different venues, isolated from one another. This work puts in parallel both curricula, both university environments and the teaching practices received by both group of students and tries to reconstruct the first years of history of the architecture school of Valencia thanks to testimonies and the few existing documentary sources. In addition, a critical assessment of the results is developed which is compared to the recent reflections and changes that have been occurring in the teaching of architecture.
topic Architectural training, architecture school of Valencia, Post-1968 architectural education, architectural pedagogies
url http://www.jotse.org/index.php/jotse/article/view/366
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