Jürgen Eberhardt

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jürgen Eberhardt (born July 8, 1943 in Osnabrück ) is a German architect , monument conservator and university professor .

Life

After graduating from high school in 1960 at the modern language grammar school in Ibbenbüren , Jürgen Eberhardt studied architecture at RWTH Aachen University from 1960 to 1966. After passing the Diploma Examination in 1966 he was for two years a research fellowship at the Bibliotheca Hertziana in Rome . In 1970 he received his doctorate with the thesis The Castle of L'Aquila degli Abruzzi and his architect Pyrrhus Aloisius Scrivà at RWTH Aachen University. From 1969 to 1971 he worked as a group leader at the State Building Authority in Aachen . In 1971 he was appointed professor for monument preservation, maintenance and use concepts at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences. From 1986 to 2003 he was also in charge of the additional course he had set up in “Monument Preservation, Monument Area and Environment Planning”. In 2003 he finished teaching at this university.

Jürgen Eberhardt lives with his family in Tecklenburg .

Buildings / planning reports (selection)

  • 1969–1971: As part of the work at the Aachen State Building Authority: Planning of the police service building in Düren; Restoration and restoration work on the Jülich Citadel; u. a. m.
  • Planning expert opinion from 1972: planning and implementation supervision restoration of the castle chapel in the citadel Jülich, reconstruction of the renaissance ceiling and design of the floor, 1977/78; Planning and implementation supervision of the bridge over the south ditch of the Jülich Citadel, 1991–93; Numerous individual plans for the Napoleonic bridgehead Jülich as part of the restoration for the State Garden Show, 1998; u. a. m.

Fonts (selection)

  • 1970: "The fort of L´Aquila degli Abruzzi and its architect Pyrrhus Aloisius Scrivà", Diss. Techn. University Aachen 1970
  • 1978: Jülich, ideal city layout of the Renaissance, Cologne 1978
  • 1986: The citadel of Jülich - the ideal scheme at Specklin as the key to ground plan geometry, in: Festungsforschung der DGF eV, Vol. 6, 1986, pp. 95–116
  • 1989: Citadel Jülich - Presentation of the monument, in: Series fortress research of the DGF eV, Vol. 8, 1989, pp. 63–114
  • 1992: The "Leaning House" in Tecklenburg, in: In the course of time, 100 years of the Westphalian Office for Monument Preservation, Münster 1992, pp. 190–207
  • 1993: "Archaeological inventory" in North Rhine-Westphalia, in: Stadtarchäologie - Aspects of the preservation of monuments, Stuttgart 1993, pp. 38–42
  • 1993: The citadel of Jülich, fortifications, residential palace and palace chapel. Research on planning and building history, edited by Conrad Doose, Jülich 1993, ISBN 9783872270443
  • 1993: (with Eberhard Gockel and Simone Wiechers): Joachim Spies - graphics. Catalog for the special exhibition, March 21 to April 18, 1993 in the Marburg University Museum , published by Marburg University Museum for Art and Cultural History, Marburg 1993, ISBN 3925430199
  • 1994: On the reconstruction of the former court arcades of the residential palace in the Jülich Citadel, in: The Italian architect Alessandro Pasqualini (1493–1559) and the Renaissance on the Lower Rhine. Conference Handbook / 1st Jülich Pasqualini Symposium, Günter Bers, Conrad Doose (Ed.) Jülich 1994, pp. 297-314, ISBN 978-3872270511
  • 1994: Citadel Jülich - new bridge over the south ditch. Planning services for the city of Jülich 1991–93, in: insider University of Applied Sciences Cologne, No. 3 Dec. 1994, pp. 18–20
  • 1996: Alessandro Pasqualini's original draft of the Jülich Citadel, in: Festungsjournal, DGF magazine, issue 1/1996, pp. 9–12
  • 1997: Ten years of additional studies in "Monument Preservation, Monument Area and Environment Planning" at the Architecture Department of the Cologne University of Applied Sciences, in: Working Group Theory and Teaching of Monument Preservation eV, Documentation of the 1996 Annual Conference in Cologne, Weimar 1997, pp. 188–193.
  • 1998: From Juliacum virtual to Jülich: Jülich from its beginnings as a Roman stopover at the strategically important Rur crossing over six stages of development to today's city, in which the historical development is still reflected; [a virtual journey through 2000 years of Jülich's urban history] [electronic resource], Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH
  • 1999: Alessandro Pasqualini's original design model for the citadel in Jülich, in: Italian Renaissance architecture on the Schelde, Maas and Lower Rhine, conference manual / 2nd Jülich Pasqualini symposium 1998 in Jülich. Günter Bers, Conrad Doose (Ed.) Jülich 1999, pp. 381–395
  • 2003: Species protection versus monument preservation? The example of Jülich as a learning process in the Rudolf Neumann house (edit.), Preservation and use of historical citadels, proceedings of the symposium from 6. – 9. June 2001, Mainz 2003, pp. 61-76
  • 2004: (with Norbert Schöndeling) a. a., The research project "Archaeological Survey" in North Rhine-Westphalia, in: Urban development and archeology, series of publications on the preservation of soil monuments in North Rhine-Westphalia, Volume 7, Essen 2004, pp. 11–111
  • 2009: (with Conrad Doose and Hajo Lauenstein): The 'Italian' Jülich. Basic features of Alessandro Pasqualini's concept for the city complex, the citadel and the residential palace (= Jülich research; 8), Jülich 2009 ISBN 978-3-933969-74-3

literature

  • Preservation of historical monuments in teaching and research . Festschrift for the retirement of Prof. Dr.-Ing. Jürgen Eberhardt. Edited by the Faculty of Architecture at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences, Cologne 2003

Individual evidence

  1. a b Michael Werling : Architecture teacher at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences, part I. The alumni. (Ed. On the occasion of the 35th anniversary of the department or the faculty for architecture at the Cologne University of Applied Sciences) Cologne 2006, p. 73 ff.
  2. Ten years of additional course , accessed on March 19, 2013
  3. Review , accessed March 18, 2013
  4. ^ Festschrift Jürgen Eberhardt , accessed on March 18, 2013.