Fernando Schiappa de Campos

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Fernando Lopes Schiappa e Silva de Campos , Fernando Schiappa de Campos for short (born April 20, 1926 ) is a Portuguese architect .

Life

Fernando Schiappa de Campos was born on April 20, 1926. Campos studied architecture at the Escola Superior de Belas-Artes in Lisbon , graduating in 1954. After completing his training, he initially taught at various vocational schools.

In 1956 Campos moved to the Gabinete de Urbanização do Ultramar (GUU , in German about "Office for Urbanization of the Colonies"), where he worked as a commissioned architect. Among other things, he created the architectural guidelines for new school buildings in the colonies ("Normas para as Instalações dos Liceus e Escolas Profissionais nas Províncias Ultramarinas") together with the chief executive of the GUU, João António de Aguiar , and Eurico Machado. As part of his work as a contract architect for the GUU, he designed numerous school buildings - elementary schools, secondary schools and vocational schools - for the colonies of Mozambique and Angola . The main work of Campos was created during this time. Between 1958 and 1959 Campos attended, among other things, the course on architecture in the tropics of the Architectural Association of architects Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew , who had already worked with Le Corbusier on the Chandigarh project.

In 1959/60 Campos was part of an order from the GUU for the typification of local residential buildings in the Portuguese colony of Guinea ( Guinea-Bissau ), which later resulted in the report Habitats Tradicionais da Guiné Portuguesa , published in 1970. In the early 1960s, Campos moved to Lourenço Marques , the capital of what was then the Portuguese colony of Mozambique, as a consulting architect . There he advised the colonial administration on the colony's urbanization plans. At the end of the 1960s, Campos moved to the colony of Portuguese Timor and designed, among other things, the headquarters of the Banco Nacional Ultramarino and the residences of the employees of the same bank.

After the end of the dictatorship in Portugal and the independence of the Portuguese colonies, Campos moved back to Portugal. There Campos served from 1975 to 1978 as a civil servant in the planning department of the Ministry of Building, Housing and Urbanization. At the same time, Campos lectured at his alma mater, Escola Superior de Belas-Artes, until 1980.

Works

Edifício do Serviço de Turismo de Macau, Largo do Senado, Macau (1961)
Headquarters of the Banco Nacional Ultramarino in Dili, East Timor (1966–1968)
  • 1955: Escola Técnica Elementar de Silva Porto, Silva Porto [Cuito]
  • 1955–1956: Escola Técnica Elementar, Malanje ; together with Lucínio Cruz and João Pedro Lucas
  • 1956: Escola Comercial e Industrial Freire de Andrade, Beira ; together with Eurico Pinto Lopes
  • 1956: Escola Industrial e Comercial Infante D. Henrique, Moçâmedes ; together with Lucínio Cruz and Luís Possolo
  • 1956: Liceu Pêro de Anaia , Beira; together with António Figueiredo
  • 1956: Escola Técnica Elementar, Inhambane
  • 1956: Escola Técnica Elementar, Nampula
  • 1956: Escola Comercial e Industrial Sarmento Rodrigues, Nova Lisboa [Huambo]; together with Alberto Braga de Souza
  • 1958–1960: Escola Comercial e Industrial Gago Coutinho, Lobito ; together with Lucínio Cruz and Luís Possolo
  • 1958: Escola Comercial e Industrial de Quelimane, Quelimane
  • Late 1950s: Escola Comercial e Industrial de Benguela, Benguela
  • Late 1950s: Liceu Nacional de Nova Lisboa, Nova Lisboa [Huambo]; together with João António de Aguiar
  • 1961: Edifício do Serviço de Turismo de Macau, Macau
  • 1966–1968: Seat of the Banco Nacional Ultramarino in Dili
  • Late 1960s: Residences of the employees of the Banco Nacional Ultramarino, Dili

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d Ana Tostões (ed.): Arquitetura Moderna em África: Angola e Moçambique . 1st edition. Caleidoscópio, Lisbon 2014, ISBN 978-989-658-240-1 , p. 439 .
  2. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Técnica Elementar de Silva Porto / Escola Técnica Elementar do Cuito / Escola Industrial e Comercial João de Almeida. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  3. a b c d e f Documentação da Missão de Estudos do Habitat Nativo da Guiné na posse do Arquiteto Fernando Schiappa Campos vai ser doada ao IICT. Instituto de Investigação Científica Tropical, May 21, 2014, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  4. ^ Aida Freudenthal: Outros Equipamentos. In: Património de Influência Portuguesa (HPIP). Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, October 15, 2012, accessed February 6, 2016 .
  5. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Técnica Elementar de Malange / Escola Preparatória Marquês de Pombal. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  6. Ana Vaz Milheiro: Escola industrial e Comercial de Freire Andrade. In: Património de Influência Portuguesa (HPIP). Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, January 15, 2016, accessed February 6, 2016 .
  7. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial Freire de Andrade. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  8. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial de Moçâmedes / Escola Comercial e Industrial Infante D. Henrique. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 .
  9. ^ António Sopa, José Manuel Fernandes: Liceu Pêro de Anaia. In: Património de Influência Portuguesa (HPIP). Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, November 15, 2012, accessed February 6, 2016 .
  10. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Técnica Elementar de Inhambane. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  11. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Técnica Elementar de Nampula / Escola Industrial e Comercial Neutel de Abreu / Escola-Instituto Industrial e Comercial 3 de Fevereiro. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  12. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial Sarmento Rodrigues / Escola Ho Chin Minh / Instituto Politécnico do Huambo. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  13. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial do Lobito / Escola Comercial e Industrial Gago Coutinho. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  14. Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial de Quelimane / Escola Comercial e Industrial D. Francisco Barreto / Escola Industrial e Industrial 1 de Maio. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  15. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Escola Comercial e Industrial de Benguela. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2011, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  16. ^ Carlos Dias Coelho, José Manuel Fernandes: Escola Primária 23 e Liceu Norton de Matos. In: Património de Influência Portugua (HPIP). Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, October 15, 2012, accessed February 6, 2016 .
  17. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Liceu Nacional de Nova Lisboa / Liceu Norton de Matos / Hospital Central do Huambo. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2010, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  18. ^ Tiago Lourenço: Edifício do Serviço de Turismo de Macau. In: Sistema de Informação para o Património Arquitectónico. 2011, accessed February 6, 2016 (Portuguese).
  19. Edmundo Alves, Fernando Bagulho: Banco Nacional Ultramarino (Caixa Geral de Depósitos). In: Património de Influênia Portuguesa (HPIP). Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, August 10, 2012, accessed on February 6, 2016 .