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Otto Königsberger

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Nationality
  
German

Structures
  
Victoria Hall

Role
  
Name
  
Otto Konigsberger

Occupation
  
Architect


Otto Konigsberger wwwtelegraphindiacom1120413images12oriOttojpg

Born
  
October 13, 1908 (
1908-10-13
)
Berlin, Province of Brandenburg, German Empire

Known for
  
Architecture, Urban planning

Died
  
January 3, 1999, London, United Kingdom

Education
  
Books
  
Manual of Tropical Housing and Building: Climatic Design, Roofs in the Warm Humid Tropics

Similar People
  
Julius Posener, Walter Segal, Hans Poelzig, Bruno Taut

Otto H. Königsberger (13 October 1908 – 3 January 1999) was a German architect who worked mainly in urban development planning in Africa, Asia and Latin America, with the United Nations.

Contents

Otto Königsberger Otto Koenigsberger Building Bangalore MOD Institute

Early life

Otto Königsberger Anagha koenigsberger

Königsberger was born in Berlin in 1908, and trained as an architect there at the Technical University, graduating in 1931. In 1933, he won the Schinkel Prize for Architecture for a design for the Olympic Stadium in Berlin. However, with the rise to power of the Nazi Party, Königsberger was forced to leave the country, as was his uncle, physicist Max Born. Königsberger later illustrated Born's popularized physics text, The Restless Universe (published 1935).

Otto Königsberger Anagha koenigsberger

Königsberger spent the next six years in the Swiss Institute for the History of Egyptian Architecture in Cairo, where he gained his doctorate. When his uncle Max Born was in Bangalore as a guest of C. V. Raman, the Diwan Mirza Ismail enquired if he know of any trained architect. Thanks to Born's introduction, Königsberger was appointed chief architect and planner to Mysore State, India in 1939. His buildings during this period include some buildings in the Indian Institute of Science (1943–44), the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) in Bombay (Mumbai), the bus station, Serum Institute and Victory Hall (1946, renamed as Town Hall) in Bangalore, the town plan for Bhubaneswar, and some town planning for Jamshedpur with the vision of J.R.D. Tata. After Indian Independence he became director of housing for the Indian Ministry of Health from 1948 to 1951, working on resettling those displaced by partition.

Career

Otto Königsberger Otto Koenigsberger MOD Institute

In 1953 Königsberger moved to London and became head of the Department of Development and Tropical Studies at the Architectural Association, which later became the Development Planning Unit of University College, London, where he worked as a professor until his retirement in 1978.

Otto Königsberger Otto Koenigsberger MOD Institute

Königsberger taught that town planners in the developing world should be prepared to dynamically adapt their plans, and involve local communities and techniques, as opposed to imposing a static master plan based on Western ideas – an approach he called Action Planning. He served as a senior adviser to the United Nations Economic and Social Council from the 1950s, and helped launch Habitat International in 1976, which he edited until 1978. His Manual of tropical housing and building was published in several languages and remains a standard course text in many parts of the world.

Awards and legacy

Otto Königsberger Ghosts of architects past on the Indian Institute of Science campus

In 1989, Königsberger was one of the first recipients of the UN Habitat Scroll of Honour, the most prestigious award given by the United Nations in recognition of work carried out in the field of human settlements development. The same year, University College London established the Otto Koenigsberger Scholarship to enable young professionals from developing countries to study urban planning in the UK.

Otto Königsberger Constructing a Shared Vision Otto Koenigsberger and Tata amp Sons

Otto Königsberger Constructing a Shared Vision Otto Koenigsberger and Tata amp Sons

References

Otto Königsberger Wikipedia


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