Anett-Maud Joppien

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Anett-Maud Joppien (born September 14, 1959 in Frankfurt am Main ) is a German architect and university professor .

Life

Anett-Maud Joppien studied architecture at the TU Berlin and TU Darmstadt from 1978 to 1985 . From 1985 to 1987 she completed postgraduate studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago and at the University of California, Berkeley (Fulbright scholarship, M.Arch.).

From 1987 to 1989 he worked as a freelancer in the engineering firm BGS in Frankfurt am Main. She has been a freelance architect since 1989 and founded the architecture office Joppien Dietz Architekten GbR in Frankfurt am Main with Albert Dietz and Jörg Joppien, and a branch in Berlin from 1992 (since 1998 in Potsdam ). In 1996, after Jörg Joppien left, she continued the office partnership with Albert Dietz under Dietz Joppien Architekten GbR, from 2004 as an AG, from 2019 as Dietz Joppien Planungsgesellschaft mbH with the participation of the agn group.

In 1988 she was a research assistant at the TU Darmstadt with Thomas Herzog. In 1998 she took on a visiting professorship at the TU Hannover in the field of urban development and from 1999 to 2000 a visiting professorship at the TU Darmstadt in the field of design and visual communication. From 2003 to 2011 she was a professor at the Bergische Universität Wuppertal in the field of design and construction. Since 2011 she has been a university professor at the TU Darmstadt in the field of design and building technology and since 2018 dean of the architecture department.

She has been a member of the Association of German Architects ( BDA) since 1995 , was a member of the state competition committee from 2000 to 2008, and was a member of the representative assembly of the Hesse Chamber of Architects and Town Planners from 1996 to 2009. Since 1994 she has been a judge in national and international architecture juries. She was a member of the design advisory board of the cities of Karlsruhe (2010–2013), Mainz (2013–2016), Mannheim (2015–2018) and from 2019 in Freiburg . Since 2013 she has been Vice President of the German Society for Sustainable Building (DGNB).

Many of her designs, competition entries and completed projects have been awarded architecture prizes.

Works (selection)

  • Max-Schmeling-Halle , Berlin, 1996
  • Airport training center, Frankfurt am Main, 1993
  • Lichtbahnhof - Hannover Airport, Hannover, 1999
  • Sauerland residential area, Wiesbaden, 2001
  • New Lustgarten Potsdam, Potsdam, 2001/2015
  • Neckermann Versand AG logistics center, Frankfurt am Main, 2001
  • High-rise residential buildings Solitäre 7 and 8, Frankfurt am Main, 1999/2002
  • Fire department technology center, Beelitz -Heilstätten, 2002
  • UFO loft and commercial building, Frankfurt am Main, 2005
  • DB-Servicepoint product family, DB AG train stations, 2006 with Unit Design GmbH
  • Helsinki Fair, Helsinki, 2010
  • Oskar-von-Miller-Strasse residential and commercial building, Frankfurt am Main, 2010
  • Residential and commercial buildings at Am Kaffeelager, Überseequartier Hafencity Hamburg, 2010 with Trojan + Trojan
  • BMW branch, Frankfurt am Main, 2015
  • Office and residential high-rise Taunusturm, Frankfurt am Main, 2016, performance phase. 5 with Braun & Volleth Architekten GmbH
  • ETA model factory of the TU Darmstadt, Darmstadt, 2016
  • Residential high-rise Praedium, Frankfurt am Main, 2017
  • Marienturm, Frankfurt am Main, 2019, performance phase. 5
  • One Forty West, Frankfurt am Main, 2020, performance phase. 5 with cyrus moser architects

Prototypes / research projects (selection)

  • Solar Decathlon Europe 2010, University of Wuppertal
  • CUBITY - Solar Decathlon Versailles 2014, "Plus Energy and Modular Future Student Living", Technical University Darmstadt Photo
  • CUBITY - LivingLAB - Student Living of the Future, Technical University Darmstadt
  • FounderLAB, Technical University of Darmstadt
  • Energy Plus Home 4.0-Solar Decathlon China Dezhou 2018, Technical University Darmstadt

Selected publications

  • Anett-Maud Joppien, Manfred Hegger (Eds.): CUBITY - Energy-Plus and Modular Future Student Living. Berlin 2017.
  • Anett-Maud Joppien, Marina Kirrkamm, Christel Hornstein (eds.): Architects profil.werk.leben. Wuppertal 2013.
  • Anett-Maud Joppien: Decathlon for the future. In: Manfred Hegger, Caroline Fafflok, Johannes Hegger, Isabell Passig (eds.): Aktivhaus - The basic work - From Passive House to Energy Plus House, Munich 2013, pp. 29–33.
  • Anett-Maud Joppien: Team Wuppertal, Ii: Bergische Universität Wuppertal, Hochschule Rosenheim, Hochschule für Technik Stuttgart, Hochschule für Technik und Wirtschaft Berlin (ed.): SolarArchitektur⁴ - The German Contributions to Solar Decathlon Europe 2010, pp. 78-103

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Dietz Joppien Planungsgesellschaft mbH. Retrieved April 7, 2020 .
  2. BauNetz Media GmbH: Viewpoints | Dietz Joppien Planungsgesellschaft, Frankfurt am Main. Retrieved April 7, 2020 .
  3. ^ Dietz Joppien Planungsgesellschaft mbH. Retrieved April 7, 2020 .
  4. ^ Dietz Joppien Architects - Frankfurt am Main, Germany - Architects - Team. Retrieved April 7, 2020 (Persian).
  5. ^ Technical University of Darmstadt: Anett-Maud Joppien. Retrieved April 7, 2020 .
  6. ^ Technical University of Darmstadt: Anett-Maud Joppien. Retrieved April 7, 2020 .
  7. Prof. Anett-Maud Joppien | DGNB. Accessed April 7, 2020 (German).