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056-0106-00L 2 Credits NDS D-ARCH
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Study Trip I

Studienreise I

Lecturers & Examiners: Prof. Dr. Maarten Delbeke
Only for MAS in History and Theory of Architecture.
VVZ CR n/a

Last Updated: 2026-02-05 15:41:46

Abstract

As the contested capital of three world religions, Jerusalem has a firm place in the history of the city. But who financed and profited, then as now, from building in this place? What new methodological insights do we get when we look at the key buildings of Jerusalem both in terms of morphology and territoriality on the one hand and from the perspective of their financing on the other?

Objective

Students will gain an understanding of the interaction between the client, the form of financing and the territorial situation of architecture. This includes looking at multiple actors: religious, philanthropic, and charitable institutions; government agencies as well as instruments of taxation; and the global networks and capital flows that enable them.

Content

Visit of key buildings and sites with lectures and guided tours; development of analyses of the intersections between city and architecture.

Resources

Literature

Will be announced on the class platform.

Learning Materials (Links)

General Information

Language
German
Levels
NDS
Frequency
Yearly recurring

Examination

Type
ungraded semester performance

Registration & Places

Priority: Registration for the course unit is only possible for the primary target group

Course Components

Type Title Time & Place Hours
practical/laboratory course Studienreise I No time listed 50 h semesterly

Offered In

  • MAS in History and Theory of Architecture (GTA) (The MAS-programm in "History and Theory of Architecture" is a two-year half-time course and contains 60 CP. The course starts in the autumn semester. Attendance of classes supplemented by independent research; practical training periods and excursions; lectures/seminars on one to two days per week, in total 600 ca. contact hours, in addition private study ca. 600 hours (for each in-class day one day of work preparation), two individually tutored seminar papers on chosen subjects (200 hours) and credited Master's thesis (600 hours).)