Architecture and The Built Environment - Research in Context
Architecture and The Built Environment - Research in Context
Architecture and The Built Environment - Research in Context
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* Foreword
TU Delft’s Faculty of Architecture and OTB Research Institute, together with the independent
Berlage Institute, have made great strides in their investigations into how design, engineering,
planning and management can contribute to improving performance, quality of life and
sustainability in the built environment of the Netherlands, the European Union and beyond.
As such we perceive the world around us as our laboratory. The way in which we communicate
and interact with that world is through journal publications, books, dissertation, events,
exhibitions and websites.
However, performance and excellence in our field is not just evidenced by publications
alone. Stakeholder appreciation, academic reputation, impact on practice and policy making,
involvement in externally commissioned research projects and participation in national and
international consortia are just as strong performance indicators.
This publication ‘Architecture and the Built Environment - Research in Context’ proudly
presents the progress that we have made over the years 2003 - 2009 by presenting the best
achievements in an extended range of performance categories.
It is the first joint publication by Architecture, OTB and Berlage and hints clearly at stronger
future ties between the three institutes, which are strategically positioned in the Rotterdam/
Delft cluster of creative industries in architecture and urbanism.
I have full confidence that together Architecture, OTB and Berlage have sufficient capacity to
weather the current crisis and emerge even stronger, ready to play an international leading role
in the developments in the field of architecture and the built environment.
Introduction 7
Architecture 8
Built environment 10
Faculty of Architecture 13
Architecture 45
Design & History 67
Green Building Innovation 89
Computation & performance 115
Urbanism 139
Innovations in the Management of the Built Environment 165
Housing Quality 189
Governance of Geoinformation and Land Development 213
Berlage 234
Colophon 256
1 4 May 2 0 0 8 : t h e day a f t e r t h e f i r e
Ronald Plasterk (Dutch Minister of Education, Culture and Science) gestures towards
the burnt-out thirteen-storey faculty building. Plasterk stands among objects that
would have been displayed in the exhibition ‘Architecture Collections — past, present
& future’, and were saved from the low-rise pavilions. The exhibition was scheduled to
open at the faculty on 15 May. Among the exhibits were eighty models of designs by
great names such as Le Corbusier, Loos, Duiker, and Frank Lloyd-Wright. There were also
scale models by Gerrit Rietveld, and chairs by J.J.P. Oud, Prouvé, Gispen, and Rietveld.
6
* Introduction
This publication provides an overview of TU Delft’s and Berlage’s most significant research
achievements in the field of architecture and the built environment, produced over the years
2003–2009. The publication is produced in preparation for the Dutch 2010 research assessment
exercise Architecture and the Built Environment.
The system of research assessments in the Netherlands requires that an institute conducts
what is known as a self-analysis, using a detailed format that is stipulated by a standard evalua-
tion protocol or SEP. On the initiative of TU Delft’s rector Prof. Jacob Fokkema PhD, the Faculty
of Architecture worked with the Rathenau Institute to amend the system of research assess-
ment in order to bring the presentation of societal research performance on a par with the
presentation of more established performance indicators.
The objective of ERiC was to develop ways to measure the social impact of research. The project
was supported by a wide range of key stakeholders in the field: the Royal Netherlands
Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO),
Netherlands Association of Universities of Applied Sciences (HBO-Raad), and Quality Assurance
Netherlands Universities (QANU).
The Architecture ERiC-pilot developed the format for the approach presented here. However,
Architecture and the Built Environment – Research in Context is not just published to allow our
achievements to be assessed. More importantly the book is intended to communicate those
achievements. It provides a point of reference for research performance and excellence in
architecture and the built environment. It can be read as a structured effort to establish a
benchmark in our field.
7
* Architecture
the three existing degree programmes, followed
in 1989 by the Building Technology degree
programme.
On 13 May 2008, the Faculty of Architecture
building at TU Delft was reduced to ashes in
a devastating fire and subsequently partially
collapsed. The faculty library was one of the few
elements that survived the disaster. In late 2008,
the Faculty moved to what had been TU Delft’s
main building, located at Julianalaan 134 in Delft:
BK City.
Profile
Faculty of Architecture The Faculty of Architecture has five departments:
TU Delft’s Faculty of Architecture (‘Faculteit Architecture, ®MIT, Building Technology, Urbanism,
Bouwkunde’ in Dutch) focuses on design, engi- and Real Estate & Housing. Over the past few
neering, planning and management related to decades, the faculty has grown to become an
architecture and the built environment. With institute of considerable stature. Both nationally
over 3,000 students and around 250 full time and internationally, the faculty works with
equivalent (FTE) scientific staff, Architecture is the universities, private-sector companies and
largest faculty at TU Delft and one of the largest public bodies – conducting contract research for
in its field in Europe. Over 500 first-year students the latter. Furthermore, there is an extensive
enrol in its programme annually, of whom over exchange of faculty members and students with
30% are female. Great importance is attached to similar faculties, both in the Netherlands and
the special relationships with a range of institutes abroad. Thanks to increasing public interest in
at home and abroad, including TU Delft’s OTB 'design, engineering, planning and management,
Research Institute and the Berlage Institute. the number of students who choose to attend the
Faculty of Architecture in Delft has risen steadily.
The faculty stands at the centre of such develop-
History ments and has adapted its study programmes
What was later to become ‘Bouwkunde’ that we in response to them. Students are educated
know today first emerged in 1904, when the to become engineering designers who on the
Architecture Department originating from the one hand contribute to the growth of scientific
Civil Engineering Department of the Technische knowledge relating to architectural issues and, on
Hogeschool Delft (TH-Delft) first began to offer the other, are able to devise practical solutions to
an Architecture degree programme. In 1948, the tackle these issues.
Architecture degree programme was joined by the Building practice requires architectural engineers
new Urban Development degree programme. This who can combine a scientific approach with
was followed in 1972 by the Public Housing pro- management qualities, and who are able to lead and
gramme. Since 1986, the Technische Hogescholen manage the process of initiative, design, realisation
in the Netherlands have been known as Technische and management.
Universiteiten (Universities of Technology), of
which there are three. From that point on, the
Architecture Department was referred to as the
Faculty of Architecture. In 1987, the Real Estate
and Project Management programme was added to
9
* Built environment
Research Area
OTB is a hybrid organisation in the sense that it
combines directly funded research with contract
research. The aim of the institute is to maintain
a broad fifty-fifty balance between its directly
funded and contract-based activities.
OTB’s research covers the areas of housing
studies, urban studies, transport studies and geo-
information studies. Its research activities relate
to the built environment, and draw from aspects
of technological sciences, policy and management
sciences, behavioural sciences, spatial disciplines
and information and communications technology.
This research profile is directly linked to TU Delft’s
OTB Research Institute for the mission to conduct strategic research which has
Built Environment both fundamental and applied aspects. OTB’s
The OTB Research Institute for the Built research portfolio consists of seven research
Environment is an interfaculty research institute programmes, as listed below.
involving the faculties of Architecture, Technology,
Policy and Management, and Civil Engineering and 1. Housing Systems aims to examine and explain
Geosciences. The OTB has its own independent the manner in which housing systems can be
status within TU Delft, functions as an autonomous characterised, how they change over time,
unit and is the direct responsibility of TU Delft’s and whether they are and will continue to be
Executive Board. The three deans of the constitu- sustainable in terms of their affordability, the
ent faculties make up the board of the OTB. They quality of individual units, and the quality of the
advise the management of the institute and the residential environment.
Executive Board. The institute has no formal pro- 2. Housing Quality focuses on the physical quality
fessorships. All OTB chairs are located within the of dwellings and their improvement in four
three constituent faculties or partly outside Delft. research areas: technical knowledge on the
In 2010 TU Delft’s Executive Board decided that health and sustainability of dwellings, innovation
the OTB should become a part of the Faculty in building and maintenance processes, the
of Architecture to reinforce the quality of the management of housing providers, and policy
research of both the faculty and the institute. instruments and enforcement procedures
aimed at improving the quality of housing.
3. Urban and Regional Development deals with
the interrelationship between the ever growing
complexity of urban systems and the extent to
which the development of these systems can
be influenced through policies and governance.
4. Neighbourhood Change and Housing is
concerned with the ways in which residential
neighbourhoods are ordered, organised and
experienced as everyday realities in a changing
urban world.
11
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1.2 Societal concerns and issues
The principal societal concern addressed by the
Objectives and Faculty’s research is ‘quality of life in buildings,
cities and regions’. This quality of life is related
research area to various issues such as aesthetics, energy ef-
ficiency, land-use efficiency and value creation. It
affects the life styles of individuals and the social,
economic and territorial cohesion of communities.
1.3 Position
The Faculty of Architecture at Delft University
of Technology is one of the largest architecture
faculties in Europe with more than 3,000 students
1.1 Vision, mission and objectives and around 250 full time equivalent (FTE) scientific
Vision: The vision of the ‘Architecture and the Built staff. Traditionally a high percentage of the
Environment’ Research Portfolio is to consolidate scientific staff are also practitioners. Well-known
the excellent international academic reputation designers such as Jo Coenen, Tony Fretton,
of the Faculty of Architecture as a leading Dick van Gameren, Winy Maas, Michiel Riedijk,
design academy; to be an international platform Kas Oosterhuis and Dirk Sijmons conduct research
for innovation in architectural design, building and teach at this faculty. This produces innovative
engineering, urban planning, landscape architecture and revolutionary architects, building engineers,
and management for the built environment; and to urban designers and managers.
be a platform for the debate on current and social
themes in architecture and the built environment.
1.4 Research area
Mission: The Faculty’s mission is to educate The specific characteristics of the faculty’s
leading international Master’s and PhD students research are referred to by the concept of
about architectural design, building engineering, ‘design-oriented research’. Central to the discus-
urban planning and management for the built sion on ‘design-oriented research’ is the level of
environment; to perform excellent and innovative scientific rigour of the design activities. These
design-oriented research; to transfer its know activities involve building theory, appropriate
ledge through its Bachelor’s and Master’s degree research methods, communication patterns,
programmes, through journal articles and book scientific critique, and so on. This scientific rigour,
publications, exhibitions and events, and however, has to be balanced with specific con-
through consulting. textual demands of this field such as reflection
and creativity in the design process. The concept
Objectives: The faculty’s objective is to play thus encompasses a broad typology of research
a key role in the cluster of architectural and activities situated on an imaginary axis ranging
urban design industry in the western part of the between intuitive design on the ‘art’ side of the
Netherlands, and develop a strong international axis towards optimizing scientific research on the
presence, exploiting the reputation of Dutch archi- ‘science’ side of the axis. This broad typology is
tecture and spatial planning and the significance of reflected in the various ways in which the concept
the Randstad as a leading European region. of ‘design-oriented research’ is defined by the
different Research Groups. The following
categories of research can be distinguished:
14 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
1. evaluation research, which is characterised
as the empirical study of existing objects
and processes. It analyses the effects and
consequences which manifest themselves
once architectural objects or processes have
been realised.
2. historical research, which interprets,
understands and explains designs, while taking
site characteristics into account.
3. conceptual research is exploratory and experi-
mental and aims at innovative, revolutionary
concepts, manifestos and visions of the built
environment.
4. practical research is research done for
educational purposes and for professional
practices and refers to the research architect’s
need to find optimum solutions for certain
building assignments.
Innovations in Management Prof. Hans Wamelink PhD & Prof. Hans de Jonge
Real Estate & Housing
of the Built Environment
Housing Quality Prof. Henk Visscher PhD & Vincent Gruis PhD
15
16 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Th e l ib r a r y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
It provides support to research and instruction of the
Faculty of Architecture with a collection that comprises of
40,000 books, 250 periodical subscriptions and 90 subscriptions
to loose-leaf and serial works.
17
2 Composition
Chart a. Total research staff in numbers Chart b. Total research staff in fte
600 150
Guests
500 120 PhD-students
400 Non-tenured staff
90
300 Tenured staff
60
200
100 30
0 0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
18 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Table b. Research staff with position in practice
Rotterdam/
Prof. Henco Bekkering Partner and director HKB Stedebouwkundigen NL
Groningen
Prof. Monica Chao-Duivis PhD Managing director Dutch Institute for Construction Law The Hague NL
Prof. Tony Fretton Founder and director Tony Fretton Architects London UK
Prof. Dick van Gameren Founder and director Dick van Gameren Architecten Amsterdam NL
Prof. Maurits de Hoog Senior urban advisor Urban Planning Department Amsterdam NL
Prof. Ulrich Knaack PhD Prof. Design and construction Hochschule OWL Detmold DE
Prof. Eric Luiten Advisor on Spatial Quality Province of South Holland The Hague NL
Prof. Michiel Riedijk Founder, partner and director Neutelings Riedijk Architecten Rotterdam NL
Prof. Patrick Teuffel PhD Managing partner Teuffel Engineering Consultants Stuttgart DE
Prof. Hans Wamelink PhD Leading professional DHV bv Amersfoort NL
19
3
Europe and the Middle East
•• Bilkent University, TR
past seven years, the faculty has seen an influx •• Utrecht University, NL
•• Middle East Technical University METU, TR
of foreign PhD students and staff members, while
the geographical scope of its activities such as
North and South America
conferences, networks and consortia clearly hint at •• Dalhousie University, CA
an increased level of interaction with both national •• Harvard University, US
and international stakeholders and partners. •• Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT, US
The extent of the faculty’s integration becomes •• Princeton University, US
evident in the positions that its professors and •• Southern California Institute of
20 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
3.3 International and national positioning
In 2008/2009 the Faculty of Architecture took
part in a pilot to explore evaluation methods, the
NWO-funded Evaluating Research in Context (ERiC)
project. The ERiC pilot concluded that: “there is
no stable publication pattern nor a core set of
scientific journals to make a valid bibliometric
benchmarking of architectural departments. Only a The publication record is, as the ERiC project
small sample of scientific journals is covered by ISI noted, not on a par with research excellence. RMIT
databases. Although these data can be included in Architecture, for example, has a modest publication
an evaluation report, clearly for an assessment of record although the discipline scored 5, the highest
the research quality of the programs, information possible result, in the ERA trial to assess the
about program, other scientific outputs and good research excellence of Australian Humanities and
peer assessment will be required and are of Creative Arts (HCA) disciplines for 2002-2007.
more value.” Bartlett, on the other hand, with its very sub-
stantial publication record has only one high-flying
However, we would still like to be clear about the group. The Space Group was noted as the highest
institutes that we consider to be competitors. performer of the Bartlett (which has the highest
The faculty is positioned within a leading group of proportion of 4*, ‘world leading’, research in the
European, American, Asian and Australian design field of Architecture and the Built Environment),
schools, including ETH, MIT, RMIT and NUS. in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise.
Based on the SCOPUS index, we have visualised
the publication record of these institutes based Although we would not wish to overstate the
using the (sub)affiliation as indicated in the table overall significance of publication records, we
on page 22. would like to point out the combined strength of
the Faculty of Architecture and the OTB Research
Institute. The OTB will be integrated into the
Faculty of Architecture in the course of 2011,
turning the joint institute a strong player indeed.
21
Table a. Score table academic publications listed in Scopus
the Netherlands
NL Berlage Institute 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 3
E u r o p e & M i d d l e Ea s t
Architecture OR Urbanism
be KU Leuven 4 4 7 1 9 7 2 34
OR Planning
ch ETH Zurich Architecture 0 0 2 2 5 4 5 18
uk Bartlett 22 32 41 55 58 55 56 319
North America
Architecture OR Planning
us Columbia University 4 7 11 10 14 8 9 63
OR Preservation OR GSAPP
Architecture OR Art
us Cornell University 10 8 12 15 17 27 21 110
OR Planning
us Harvard University Architecture OR Design OR GSD 12 9 11 13 12 20 15 92
au RMIT Architecture 0 0 3 7 5 8 4 27
Document types included in Scopus: Article, Article-in-Press, Conference Paper, Editorial, Erratum, Letter, Letter to or correspondence with
the editor, Note, discussion or commentary, Review, Short Survey.
22 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
3.5 Participation in consortia
Participation in consortia takes place in
externally funded projects, international
doctoral programmes, research centres,
committees and networks, some highlights:
23
24 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
The model shop in Glasshouse South as a central place
in BK City, the new faculty building. The glasshouse was
designed by Prof. Mick Eekhout PhD.
25
4
platform for innovation in design, engineering,
planning and management; and a vital platform
Scientific relevance for the debate on current and social themes
in architecture and the built environment. The
and quality faculty has an outstanding reputation in Europe
for its leading academics and designers, its PhDs,
and its dissemination activities – book publications,
seminars and conferences – and it has expanded its
reach worldwide.
4.3 Coherence
The activities of the faculty’s research groups
spans architecture, building technology, urbanism,
real estate and housing and specifically includes
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of history, heritage, sustainability and innovation.
the research Its coherence stems predominantly from the
The faculty’s portfolio on Architecture and the Dutch practice in which the government has
Built Environment is unique in combining evaluation influenced architecture, urban development
research, historical research, conceptual research and landscape design through its social housing
and practical research. It includes architectural programmes and spatial planning policies.
design and history, which generally tend towards
the research methods of the humanities (discursive
and interpretive); urban/spatial planning and 4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
management, which tend more towards the The scientific output of the Faculty of Architec-
methods of the social sciences; and building tech- ture bears the characteristics of arts & humanities,
nology, which is based primarily on the methods of social sciences and technical sciences. It places a
the technical sciences. By arranging the portfolio strong emphasis on high-quality book publications.
around this diverse range of methods as well as The ISI coverage of academic (design-oriented)
the crucial component of design, a new generation journals in the field of Architecture and the
of researchers is being ‘schooled’ whose approach Built Environment is notoriously weak. This fact
includes the practical capabilities of design-oriented is compensated by a rich culture of journalism
research as well as the reflective capabilities of which blends academic writing and professional
scientific reasoning. discussion. That is where we find the majority of
the faculty’s journal output, both in English and in
other European languages such as Dutch, German,
4.2 Significance of the contribution Spanish and Italian.
to the field
The Faculty of Architecture is the largest
academic institute in the Netherlands conducting
research into interventions in the built environ-
ment by means of design, engineering, planning
and management. As such, its research work is
able to consolidate the excellent international
academic reputation of the Faculty of Architecture
as a leading design academy; as an international
26 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
4.5 Results and outputs
Key results/highlights
The Faculty of Architecture has made significant scientific progress in the areas of cultural heritage
(buildings, cities and landscapes), energy-efficiency and climate (facades, housing, urban areas), design
practice (architecture, building technology, urbanism), digital technologies (building technology,
architecture and urbanism) and history (architecture, urbanism).
•• Delft School of Design (DSD), 2002. Laboratory for emerging research and experimentation
concerning doctoral research.
•• ®MIT, 2006. Research centre for Restoration, Modification, Intervention, Transformation.
•• The Why Factory, 2009. Think tank on urban futures.
•• protoSPACE 3.0, 2010. State of the art multi-purpose facility designed for the development of
nonstandard, virtual, and interactive architecture, replacing its two predecessors that were lost
in the May 2008 fire.
Key publications
•• Linden, A.C. van der, Boerstra, A.C., Raue, A.K., Kurvers, S.R. & Dear, R.J. de, 2006. `Adaptive
temperature limits: A new guideline in the Netherlands: A new approach for the assessment of
building performance with respect to thermal indoor climate.´ Energy and Buildings. Vol 38,
No.21. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 8-17.
•• Rots, J.G. & Invernizzi, S., 2004. `Regularized sequentially linear saw-tooth softening model.´
International Journal for Numerical and Analytical Methods in Geomechanics. Vol 28, No.7-8.
Wiley, Malden, p. 821-856.
•• Lubelli, B., Van Hees, R.P.J. & Brocken, H.J.P., 2004. `Experimental research on hygroscopic
behaviour of porous specimens contaminated with salts.´ Construction and Building Materials.
Vol 18, No.5. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 339-348.
•• Gruis, V., Elsinga, M., Wolters, A. & Priemus, H., 2005. `Tenant empowerment through innovative
tenures: An analysis of Woonbron-Maasoevers’ client’s choice programme.´ Housing Studies.
Vol 20, No.1. Taylor & Francis, Oxford, p. 127-147.
•• Nadin, V. & Stead, D., 2008. `European spatial planning systems, social models and learning.´
DISP. Vol 172, No.1. ETH, Zürich, p. 35-47.
•• Avermaete, T.L.P., Havik, K.M. & Teerds, P.J. (eds.), 2009. Architectural Positions. SUN Publishers,
Amsterdam.
•• Graafland, A.D., 2003. Versailles and the Mechanics of Power. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Maas, W. (ed.) 2006. Space fighter. The evolutionary city (Game:) MVRDV/DSD in collaboration with
the Berlage Institute, MIT and cThrough. Actar, Barcelona.
•• Oosterhuis, K. & Feireiss, L. (eds.) 2006. GameSetandMatch II; On Computer Games Advanced
Geometries and Digital Technologies. Episode publishers, Rotterdam.
27
•• Steenbergen, C.M. et al., 2009. The Polderatlas of the Netherlands. THOTH, Bussum.
•• Uytenhaak, R., 2008. Cities full of space; Qualities of density. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
key dissertations
•• Baumeister, R.,2009. Une Architecture Sauvage. Asger Jorn’s Konzept und Kritik
der Modernen Architektur (publication forthcoming by 010 Publishers, Rotterdam).
•• Berghauser Pont, M.Y. & Haupt, P.A., 2009. Spacemate; Space, density and urban
form (published in 2010 by NAi Publishers, Rotterdam).
•• Bitterman, M.S., 2009. Intelligent Design Objects (IDO). A cognitive approach for
performance-based design (cum laude).
•• Heer, de J., 2008. The Architectonic Colour. The Polychromy in the Purist Architecture
of Le Corbusier (published in 2009 by 010 Publishers, Rotterdam).
•• Peek, G.J., 2006. Locatiesynergie (published in 2006 by Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft).
key events
key exhibitions
28 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
5
•• Team 10: A Utopia of the Present (Rotterdam,
2005 / New Haven (USA), 2006 / Paris, 2007)
Societal relevance exhibition and publication.
•• Energy potential studies in the new Provincial
and quality Environmental Plan (POP) of Groningen, 2007.
•• The Netherlands Architecture Institute
commission for research, analysis and building
of 15 polder models, 2005.
•• A tool with which to assess the potential for
transformation of office buildings and the
risks involved (Transformation Potential Meter,
Vacancy Risk Meter), 2003.
29
5.4 Evidence of the appreciation 5.6 Evidence of impacts
of stakeholders Evidence of the social relevance and quality of
In the summer of 2010, the Faculty of the research can be found in the large number of
Architecture conducted an online survey among books and dissertations published by faculty staff
its stakeholders and received over 50 completed commercially, in the number of conferences and
questionnaires. The partnership between the exhibitions attended, and in the implementation of
Faculty of Architecture and its stakeholders is the tools and instruments developed:
predominantly based on joint research projects •• The opening of the Why Factory in Delft by
or proposals (47%), joint collaboration on book or Dutch Minister of Education, Culture and
journal publications (27%) and joint collaboration Science, Ronald Plasterk, and the symposium
on conferences, seminars and workshops (24%). “My Future City”, where a variety of students,
The nature of the contacts is primarily focused on inhabitants, architects, urbanists, thinkers,
discussing projects, proposals and/or programming developers, politicians, technicians presented
(44%), on conducting joint projects, proposals and/ their ideas on the future city. Delft, 2009.
or programming (29%) and on developing formal •• The conference and exhibition ‘A Wider View on
partnerships with for example contractors and Cultural Landscape Challenges in Europe’ during
partners (31%). the Triënnale at the Radio Klootwijk, Apeldoorn,
There is a strong appreciation for general which attracted 35,000 visitors.
reputation, impartiality, methodology, creativity, •• Dutch Dialogues: workshops, conferences, pub-
competence and reliability. Contributions are made lications and advice, which contributed to the
through providing information on developments reconstruction of New Orleans as a sustainable
in the field, encouraging innovation, contributing delta-city (Meyer and de Hoog) (2008-2009);
tools and designs, and participating in conferences ‘Dutch Dialogue’ assistance provided to New
and other events. Orleans, South Louisiana and the United States
Congress.
•• The Genadendal Conference in South Africa,
5.5 Dissemination strategies with the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and
The faculty’s researchers produce high-quality Education, Culture and Science, COST Europe,
commercial book publications and publish frequently SenterNovem, 2003-2006.
in journals that target both a professional and •• InteractiveWall: Prototype For An Emotive
academic readership. They organise academic and Wall, commissioned by Festo, Hannover Messe,
professional events such as exhibitions, seminars, Germany, 2009.
expert meetings, conferences and design competi- •• Computational support for Lifecycle Integral
tions. Key staff members are regularly interviewed Performance assessment (CLIP) software tool
for newspapers, magazines, websites and television developed for use by the Dutch Government
programmes. Buildings Agency (Rijksgebouwendienst), 2009.
The best dissertations are often published as
commercial books. Most dissertations are digitally
stored in the TU Delft Library Repository. All
dissertations are listed on the faculty website and
(if available) linked to the full version in the reposi-
tory. TU Delft is one of the signatories of the 2003
Berlin Declaration on Open Access and encourages
open access publishing by its employees.
30 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Figure 1 Stakeholder analysis 2010
Figure 1b. Impartiality and independence Figure 1d. Encouraging innovation in our work
Figure 1e. Involvement in conferences and other events Figure 1g. Creativity
31
5.7 Commissioned research by •• STAWON, Research foundation for dwelling
societal actors and living environments of the Royal Institute
•• Computational support for Lifecycle Integral of Dutch Architects (BNA): Parkeren in de
Performance assessment (CLIP) software tool, woonomgeving (2008-2010)
2009, commissioned (in three consecutive •• Spatial Metro Interreg IIIB North-west
projects) by the Dutch Government Buildings Europe: a project funded by the ERDF, Norwich,
Agency (Rijksgebouwendienst). Koblenz, Rouen and Biel/Bienne investigating
•• The Netherlands Architecture Fund pedestrian mobility and regeneration of the
(Stimuleringsfonds voor Architectuur): European city centre (2005-2008).
Beyond Clinical Buildings (2007-2008)
•• National Housing and Town Planning Advisory
Unit, UK: European Planning Systems and their
Impact on the Provision of Housing, 2009.
T h e 'U r ba n i s m o n T ra c k' s e m i na r , h e l d at
t h e D e l f t Sc h o o l o f D e s i g n , Ja n ua r y 2 0 0 7 .
The Delft School of Design (DSD) was formally
instituted in 2002 as a laboratory for emerging
research and experimentation in the context of
doctoral research within the faculty’s depart-
ments of architecture and urbanism and building
technology. Since its foundation, the DSD has
provided both a platform – both academic and
public – for events such as lectures and debates,
conferences, colloquia, seminars and workshops.
32 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 3,285 87% 5,255 77% 6,375 78% 6,882 79% 8,027 80% 7,930 78% 6,269 64%
External funding 486 13% 1,544 23% 1,806 22% 1,880 21% 1,961 20% 2,192 22% 3,467 36%
Total funding 3,771 100% 6,799 100% 8,181 100% 8,762 100% 9,988 100% 10,122 100% 9,736 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 3,255 91% 5,000 90% 5,605 87% 6,872 90% 9,337 92% 9,995 91% 7,656 88%
Other costs 318 9% 566 10% 869 13% 789 10% 858 8% 1,039 9% 1,050 12%
Total expenditure 3,573 100% 5,566 100% 6,474 100% 7,661 100% 10,195 100% 11,034 100% 8,706 100%
12
External funding
10
Direct funding
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
3,5
Housing Quality*
3
Innovations in the Management
0,5
*
Faculty of Architecture's share in the
0
Housing Quality research group
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
33
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 27 1 26 6 17 1 27 3 37 1 26 2 24 5
Non-refereed articles 20 0 7 2 14 2 35 7 18 1 24 0 26 12
Books 27 2 31 14 52 15 62 15 84 5 55 11 59 11
PhD-theses 4 3 7 5 2 9 10 5 4 7 13 9 9 3
Editorships journals/book 26 5 27 7 39 9 36 11 52 16 80 7 67 10
Total publications 704 50 646 136 887 187 1001 156 1094 183 937 160 893 170
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
34 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Chart a. Refereed articles Chart b. Books
50 100
40 80
30 60
20 40
10 20
0 0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
400 100
350
80
300
250
60
200
150 40
100
20
50
0 0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09 ’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
*
Faculty of Architecture's share in the Housing Quality research group
35
8 Academic reputation
2006 Modernization and Regionalism - Re-inventing Urban Identify, IFOU Organisation Wang Beijing cn
2006 The Architectur of Hospitals, UMC Organisation Wagenaar Groningen nl
2007 GameSetandMatch II: the architecture co-laboratory Organisation Oosterhuis Delft nl
2007/9 The Future Envelope I, II, III Organisation Knaack, Klein Delft nl
Dobbelsteen,
2009 SASBE2009 (Smart and Sustainable Built Environments), CIB Organisation Delft nl
Dorst, Timmeren
2007 15 jaar Bouwbesluit (15 years Building code), Min VROM Keynote, panel Visscher The Hague nl
2007 Urbanism on Track - Expert meeting tracking technologies Organiser Spek, Schaick Delft nl
2007 RESPONSE-ABILITY - 2nd Congress of Croatian Architects Organiser Jerkovic Opatija hr
2008 International expert meeting Randstad 2040 Organiser Hoeven Delft nl
2008 International open ideas competition Building for Bouwkunde Organiser Volker Delft nl
2005 Team 10 - In Search of a Utopia of the Present, Cite de l'Architecture Curator Risselada, Heuvel Paris fr
2006 The Memory of the City Curator Meyer Delft nl
2008 A Wider View on Cultural Landscapes in Europe, Triënnale Apeldoorn Curator Luiten Apeldoorn nl
2009 Brazil contemporary; Architecture • Visals Culture • Art, NAi Curator Meurs Rotterdam nl
2009 From Berlage to Koolhaas, A Hundred Years of Dutch Architecture Curator Duin Beijing cn
2005 European Steel Award: V-House, Nesya - Norway ECCS Nijsse Brussels be
2007 Aga Khan Award for Architecture: Dutch Embassy Addis Ababa Aga Khan Gameren Kuala Lumpur my
2008 International Architectural Award: OBA Amsterdam Chicago Athenaeum Coenen Chicago us
2009 RIBA Award: Fuglsang Kunstmuseum RIBA Fretton London uk
2009 GOOD DESIGN™ Award: FESTO Interactive Wall Chicago Athenaeum Oosterhuis Chicago us
36 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Table f. Honorary positions
2003/> Cornell's International Workplace Studies Program Visiting professor Voordt Ithaca us
2007 Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts School of Architecture (KARCH) Visiting professor Leupen Copenhagen dk
2007/8 National University Singapore (NUS) Visiting professor Meyer Singapore sg
2008/9 Harvard University Graduate School of Design (GSD) Visiting professor Sijmons Harvard us
2009 American Institute of Architects (AIA) Honorary fellowship Coenen, Maas New York us
2003/> Royal Dutch Acadey of Arts & Science (KNAW) Full member Eekhout Amsterdam nl
2005/9 Advisory Committee for Architecture of the European Commission Member Duin Brussels eu
2009 Dutch professional organisation of urban designers and planners (BNSP) Board member Zonneveld Amsterdam nl
2009 Int. Association Computer Science and Information Technology (IACSIT) Senior member Bier Singapore sg
2003/> ARQ - covering all aspects of architectural endeavour Editorial board Fretton Cambridge uk
2003/> Journal of Design Research - human aspects as central issue of design Editor Klaasen Olney uk
Avermaete, Grafe,
2003/> Oase - architecture, urban design and landscape design Editors Havik, Teerds, Rotterdam nl
Schrijver
2003/> Planning Practice and Research Editor-in-Chief Nadin Oxford uk
2009/> Positions - Journal on Modern Architecture and Urbanism Editor Wagenaar Rotterdam nl
2003/> Bulletin KNOB - Dutch Journal for Cultural Heritage Editor Thoor Amersfoort nl
2003/> Tijdschrift voor de Volkshuisvesting Editor Flier The Hague nl
2006/> Čovjek i prostor - bimonthly Croatian Architecture Association Editorial board Jerkovic Zagreb hr
2009/> Delft Architectural Studies on Housing design (DASH) Editor-in-Chief Gameren Delft nl
Grafe, Schrijver,
2005/> Netherlands Architecture Fund Advisory cmte Rotterdam nl
Velde
37
38 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
Th e W h y Fac t o r y (T ? F ) , l o cat e d i n G la s s h o u s e Eas t at B K C i t y.
The Why Factory was opened in October 2009. It functions as a think tank on
urban futures. T?F runs independent research projects, PhD programmes, Architecture
and Urbanism Master studios, Postgraduate studios at the Berlage Institute
in Rotterdam, master classes, workshops, debates and Q and A's. The Why Factory
Tribune was awarded the ninth Lensvelt / De Architect interior Prize in 2009. The
Why Factory Tribune was designed by MVRDV, where Winy Maas is principal architect.
39
9
9.2 Structure of the programmes
The Graduate School programme combines training
Next generation in the Master’s phase and training in the PhD
phase. Courses on research skills, methodology,
study and writing are introduced in the Master’s
phase. The training and education programme of
the PhD phase includes courses that introduce
students to the foundations and methods of
design-oriented research in the humanities, social
sciences and technical sciences, topical colloquia
and peer-review presentations in which PhD
students are invited to present their work in
peer-review sessions.
40 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
10
10.2 Available infrastructure
The faculty comprises a library with 40,000 items
Viability and a Map Room with an extensive collection
documenting the Netherlands. TU Delft Library
provides access to major online scientific journals.
A digital repository allows staff members to store
their output as open access. The faculty shares
a Building Technology Lab with other faculties.
The faculty is home to a large model shop and the
protoSPACE 3.0 lab, a state of the art multi-
purpose facility designed for the development of
nonstandard, virtual, and interactive architecture.
41
11 SWOT analysis
Strengths weaknesses
A considerable and enviable resource base through The Faculty of Architecture has not been
the confederation of the Faculty of Architecture, successful in obtaining research grants from the
the OTB Research Institute and the Berlage Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research
Institute. (NWO). The community of researchers is rather
The institutions involved have an extremely high pessimistic about its future chances in this respect.
international standing. External funding of specific research groups lags
Staff is increasingly PhD-educated. The staff is well behind. Architecture is a field with a weak academic
integrated into the rich practice of Dutch architec- journal culture. In response to the internal
ture, urban design, spatial planning and housing. TU Delft output bonus system, the faculty devel-
A growing body of excellent PhD research, oped alternative publishing strategies, channelling
attracting PhD students from all over the world. its output towards books, professional magazines
A sense of a vibrant young community of and conference proceedings. The community is
researchers interested in each other's work. adverse to publishing in ISI-indexed journals.
Successful in resolving the fragmentation of its PhD supervisors do an average job in providing
research portfolio, replacing the eighteen research theoretical and methodological support.
programmes with seven research groups.
Opportunities threats
With its large contingent of PhD students, the The May 2008 fire and subsequent collapse of the
Faculty of Architecture, the OTB Research original faculty building posed the most challenging
Institute and the Berlage Institute can become threat to the faculty’s research so far. In that fire
a centre for research, not just in the Netherlands most of the personal libraries and research work
but in Europe and beyond. Design and engineering has been lost. This setback was beyond any
are increasingly accepted as mature academic experienced in its 100 years of existence.
activities in the Netherlands (ERiC-project, TU Delft faces severe austerity measures and cuts
upcoming policy advise KNAW-TWINS committee). in direct funding of the Faculty of Architecture
Cooperation with TUe and UTwente in the 3TU. from an average €34 million a year to €29 million
Federation Centre of Competence for the Built in 2010. Due to austerity measures, it is difficult
Environment. Emerging new challenges and funding to offer promising young researchers the prospect
opportunities: energy-efficiency, climate change, of tenure.
JPI Urban Europe.Abolition of TU Delft’s bonus
system in 2010 creates the opportunity for a
new publishing environment.
42 Fa c u lt y o f A r c h i t e c t u r e
12
The faculty, working with the Valorisation Centre,
will identify individual staff members that are likely
Strategy to be successful in obtaining research grants, to
support and coach them in developing proposals
for NWO, FP7-EEB, IEE and Urban Europe JPI.
43
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1
ture. It explores the status of architecture as a
discipline that combines practical issues of design
Objectives and and the intellectual questions that underlie them.
This status is also reflected in the department’s
research area educational programme. In addition, the programme
aims to ensure a better and more systematic
dissemination of the research results within the
larger international scientific community.
46 Architecture
Project’ (primarily design-led research and material For many years the research group has maintained
explorations), the sub-programme ‘Foundations’ a strong international reputation in the fields
(primarily historical and theoretical perspectives on of typological and design-oriented research, as
the architecture project) and the Delft School of highlighted by the various international exhibitions,
Design (DSD). publications and keynote lectures undertaken by
Within this programme, the DSD holds a unique group members.
position, being both incorporated within the
Department, and an autonomous institute since
2002. For the purposes of this assessment, the 1.4 Research area
research of the DSD has been included in the general •• Building typologies
2 Composition
Table a. Research staff at institutional and programme level
Guests 0 0 4 5 20 18 17
Total research staff 33 8,8 43 10,3 48 13,9 54 16,8 96 23,4 99 25,1 87 20,5
Prof. Dick van Gameren Founder, director Dick van Gameren architecten Amsterdam NL
47
3
(then: Sci-Arc, now: Dean Kentucky School of Archi-
tecture), and K. Michael Hays, (Harvard University).
Research
environment 3.3 International and national positioning
Various members of the group have played central
and embedding roles in national and international research bodies
such as the European Association for Architectural
Education (EAAE), the European Architectural
History Network (EAHN), and DOCOMOMO.
In addition, they have acquired leading positions
with academic journals and publications such as the
Journal of Architecture, OASE. Architectural Jour-
3.1 Embedding nal, DASH, Footprint, OverHolland, the Routledge
Due to the reputation of both the Department Series on Interiors, and the DSD publication series
and the DSD, the research group as a whole is on Architecture and Urbanism.
well integrated into the architecture and the built
environment community. It is involved in many
active national and international partnerships, both 3.4 Actual collaborations with stakeholders
within academia and the professional field. These Collaborations are typically maintained at the
contacts include various institutions, publishers, individual level, with each researcher having a high
research centres and scholars at other universities. degree of autonomy. Gathering these contacts into
They also include municipalities such as the City of a more coherent network that is more accessible
Groningen, the Netherlands Architecture Institute to the entire department is one of the priorities
(NAi), 010 and Routledge publishers, VU University for the years to come, as evidenced by, for example,
Amsterdam, Utrecht University, Leiden University, the appointment of a research coordinator at the
the Bartlett, ETH Zurich and Princeton University, Department of Architecture who is specifically
to name a few. responsible for improving the exchange of network
information.
With the installation of the new research
programme and a research committee, the
Department of Architecture has taken a new step 3.5 Participation in consortia
towards the development of a vibrant research In addition, researchers at the department
culture. The new programme requires scholars work within a range of research networks such
to collaborate and exchange research results as Stichting Architecten Onderzoek Wonen en
between chairs and sections. This culture of Woonomgeving (STAWON), Team 10 Online and
exchange and debate is further enhanced by the Humanities in the European Research Area (HERA),
activity of the research committee (peer-review the European Consortium on Modern Architecture
colloquia, research monitoring, etc), as well as by and the Construction of Cultural Identity. Since
the appointment of young staff members with a its founding, the DSD has served as a platform for
strong track record in architectural research who international research gatherings.
are actively looking for professional partnerships. Within the Faculty, the research programme has a
long-standing working relationship with the History
section (Randstad project) and is strengthening
3.2 Number and affiliation of guest researchers its connections with other departments such as
Among the visiting professors were M. Christine Urbanism, while also reaching out to related facul-
Boyer PhD (Princeton University), Michael Speaks ties such as Technology, Policy and Management.
48 Architecture
4
4.3 Coherence
The research group is diverse, but the various
Scientific relevance projects contain a coherent core of questions
relating to the cultural significance of the architec-
and quality tural project and its conceptual foundations.
This offers a systematic understanding of design
and its influence on the built environment.
49
4.5 Results and outputs
Key results/highlights
Key publications
•• Graafland, A.D., 2003. Versailles and the Mechanics of Power. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Avermaete, T., 2005. Another Modern: The Post-war Architecture and Urbanism of Candilis-
Josic-Woods. NAi Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Risselada, M., Heuvel, D. van den (eds.), 2005. Team 10: A Utopia of the Present. NAi Publishers,
Rotterdam.
•• Gameren, D. van, 2005. Revisions of Space: An Architectural Manual. NAi Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Pimlott, M., 2007. Without and within: Essays on the urban interior. Episode Publishers,
Rotterdam.
•• Fretton, T., 2008. Tony Fretton Architects. Gustavo Gili, Barcelona.
•• Healy, P., 2008. The Model and its Architecture. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Kuitenbrouwer, P., 2009. Intense Laagbouw: Woningbouw in hoge dichtheden. Platform GRAS,
Groningen.
•• Riedijk, M., 2009. The drawing. The architect´s raison d´être. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
50 Architecture
Key dissertations
•• Claessens, F., 2005. De stad als architectonische constructie. Het architectonisch discours
van de stad. Duitsland 1871-1914. Publicatiebureau Bouwkunde, Delft.
•• Kaminer, T., 2008. The idealist refuge: architecture, crisis, and resuscitation. TU Delft
Architecture, Delft.
•• Komossa, S., 2008. The transformation of the Dutch urban block; Model, rule and ideal.
TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Stanek, L., 2008. Henri Lefebvre and the concrete research of space: urban theory, empirical
studies, architecture. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Alturk, E., 2009. Drawing architecture theory on the city. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
key Events
•• DSD Inaugural Conference, (Delft, 2004). conference and publication: Graafland, A.D., Kavanaugh
L.J., (eds.) Crossover. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2006.
•• The Projective Landscape (Delft, 2006), conference.
•• Architectural Positions: Architecture, Modernity and the Public Sphere (Delft, 2007), colloquia and
publication: Avermaete, T., Havik, K., Teerds, H. (eds.) 2009. Architectural Positions: Architecture,
Modernity and the Public Sphere. SUN Publishers, Amsterdam.
•• Rethinking theory, space, and production: Henri Lefebvre today. (Delft, 2008), conference.
•• TransThinking: Architecture in Mind, from noopolitics to bio-politics. (Delft, 2008), symposium.
key Exhibitions
•• Peter and Alison Smithson: From the House of the Future to the House for Today (Rotterdam,
2004), exhibition and publication: (Heuvel, D. van den, Risselada, M. (eds.) 2004. From the House of
the Future to the House for Today. Rotterdam: 010 Publishers, 2004).
•• 100 Years of Dutch Architecture (Delft, 2005/Bejing, 2009) exhibition and publication: Barbieri,
U., Duin, L. van (eds.), 2003. A Hundred Years of Dutch Architecture: Trends and highlights.
NAi Publishers/SUN Publishers, Rotterdam/Nijmegen.
•• Team 10: A Utopia of the Present (Rotterdam, 2005/New Haven (USA), 2006/Paris, 2007).
exhibition and publication: Heuvel, D. van den, Risselada, M. (eds.), 2005. Team 10: A Utopia of the
Present. NAi Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• The Dutch Urban Block (Milano, Madrid, Barcelona, Budapest, Seattle, 2006) exhibition and
publication: Komossa, S., Meyer, H., Risselada, M. (eds.), 2005. Atlas of the Dutch Urban Block.
Thoth, Bussum.
•• In the Desert of Modernity: Colonial Planning and After (Berlin, 2008 & Casablanca, 2009),
exhibition and publication: Avermaete, T., Karakayali, S. & Osten, M. Von. (eds.) 2010. Colonial
Modern: Aesthetics of the Past, Rebellions for the Future. Blackdog Publishers, London.
51
5
5.2 Key results/highlights
•• Team 10: A Utopia of the Present (Rotterdam,
Societal relevance 2005/New Haven (USA), 2006/Paris, 2007).
exhibition and publication: Heuvel, D. van den,
and quality Risselada, M. (eds.), 2005. Team 10: A Utopia of
the Present. NAi Publishers, Rotterdam.
52 Architecture
5.3 Key knowledge contributions to International exhibitions play a central role in the
practices and policies dissemination of research results. Many of the out-
•• Kuitenbrouwer, P., 2009. Intense Laagbouw: comes of this research programme are presented
Woningbouw in hoge dichtheden. Platform in major exhibitions at important cultural
GRAS, Groningen. institutions and designed for a broader audience
•• Uytenhaak, R., 2008. Cities Full of Space: (Nederlands Architectuurinstituut NAi, Rotterdam),
Qualities of Density. 010 Publishers, Rotterdam. Cité de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine (Chaillot,
•• Hansen, B.L., 2008. Beyond Clinical Buildings. Paris), Design Museum (London), Haus der Kulturen
Netherlands Architecture Fund & TU Delft. der Welt (HKW, Berlin).
•• Bijlsma, L., Groenland J., 2006. The intermediate
size: a Handbook for Collective Dwellings.
SUN, Nijmegen. 5.6 Evidence of impacts
•• Maas, W. (ed.) 2006. Space fighter. Many books and especially exhibitions that have
The evolutionary city (Game:) MVRDV/DSD in resulted from this research programme are
collaboration with the Berlage Institute, MIT reviewed and discussed in the professional and
and cThrough. Actar, Barcelona. general press (newspapers, magazines, websites).
Introducing the research results into the public
media demonstrates the resonance of the research
5.4 Evidence of the appreciation with broader societal concerns.
of stakeholders
The value placed by stakeholders on the contri-
butions to knowledge mentioned above can be 5.7 Commissioned research by
evidenced in three ways: a) it has been evident societal actors
in interviews with stakeholders which have been Examples of commissioned research by societal
performed within the framework of the ERIC actors are:
(Evaluating Research in Context) project; b) by the •• Municipality of Groningen (2008-2009): Intense
continuing involvement of stakeholders with Laagbouw: Woningbouw in hoge dichtheden.
researchers, as expressed by the commission of •• STAWON, Research foundation for dwelling and
new research projects for example; and c) the living environments of the Dutch Federation of
research results have been used within concrete Architects BNA (2008-2010): Parkeren in de
policies and plans (as in the case of planning high- woonomgeving.
density/low-rise neighbourhoods in the municipality •• Netherlands Architecture Fund (2007-2008):
of Groningen). Beyond Clinical Buildings.
53
Selected publications of the
Department of Architecture.
54 Architecture
55
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 756 98% 1,677 94% 1,893 97% 2,015 95% 2,496 96% 2,141 96% 1,782 91%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 737 93% 1,454 91% 1,568 88% 1,968 88% 2,605 90% 2,485 90% 1,873 90%
Other costs 56 7% 141 9% 215 12% 263 12% 286 10% 272 10% 200 10%
Total expenditure 793 100% 1,595 100% 1,783 100% 2,231 100% 2,891 100% 2,757 100% 2,073 100%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
56 Architecture
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 2 0 0 0 3 0 4 0 4 0 4 0 2 0
Non-refereed articles 7 0 0 0 7 0 15 0 4 0 12 0 8 4
Books 5 0 3 0 10 0 9 0 12 0 10 0 9 1
PhD-theses 3 0 1 0 0 6 1 0 0 1 5 4 3 0
Conference papers 3 0 27 0 13 1 23 2 17 5 12 2 26 7
Professional publications 28 0 26 0 29 0 43 0 38 1 55 1 32 5
Editorships journals/book 5 0 6 0 8 0 12 0 9 0 24 2 23 2
Total publications 86 0 95 0 175 27 161 2 152 8 174 26 177 25
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 0 0 0 0% 0 0 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
2001 0 1 1 1 100% 1 1 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2002 1 1 2 1 50% 1 1 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 0 0% 1 50%
2003 2 0 2 1 50% 1 1 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 0 0% 1 50%
2004 1 5 6 2 33% 3 1 3 50% 3 50% 3 50% 0 0% 3 50%
2005 1 0 1 1 100% 1 1 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
Total 5 7 12 6 50% 7 58% 7 58% 7 58% 7 58% 0 0% 5 42%
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 0 0 0 0% 0 0 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
2001 0 0 0 0 0% 0 0 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
2002 0 0 0 0 0% 0 0 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
2003 0 1 1 1 100% 1 1 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2004 0 0 0 0 0% 0 0 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
2005 3 3 6 3 50% 3 1 3 50% 3 50% 3 50% 0 0% 3 50%
Total 3 4 7 4 57% 4 57% 4 57% 4 57% 4 57% 0 0% 3 43%
57
8 Academic reputation
2006 3rd Annual AHRA International Conference St. Catherine’s College Fretton Oxford UK
2006 The International Mega Cities Conference Graafland Guangzhou CN
2008 10th International Docomomo Conference: The Challenge of Change' Avermaete Rotterdam NL
2009 African perspectives, University of Pretoria Gameren Pretoria ZA
2009 Int Conf on Sustainable Water Infrastructure for Cities and Villages of the Future Schuetze Beijing CN
2009 Int Conf on Walter Benjamin, Technicon, Israel Institute of Technology Healy Haifa IL
Duin, Barbieri,
2004/8 EAAE conf ‘The European City’, (2004), ‘Research by Design’ (2008) Organisation, Chair Delft NL
Claessens, Cavallo
2007/8 The Colonial Modern’ I (2007) and II (2008) Organisation Avermaete Berlin DE
Graafland, Bruyns,
2007 Urban Development, African Perspectives’, international Conference Organisation Delft NL
Avermaete
2008 Docomomo international conference Organizing cmte Heuvel Rotterdam NL
2008 Rethinking Theory, Space and Production: Henri Lefebvre Today’ Organisation Stanek Delft NL
Avermaete, Havik,
2007 Lecture series ‘Architectural Positions’ TU Delft, Faculty Architecture Organisers Delft NL
Teerds
2007 RESPONSE-ABILITY - 2nd Congress of Croatian Architects Organiser Jerkovic Opatija HR
2007 ‘Modern architecture archive’ meeting - V&A museum London Invited lecturer Heuvel London UK
2008 ‘Day of Philosophy’, University of Tilburg Invited lecturer Schrijver Tilburg NL
2005 Team 10 - In Search of a Utopia of the Present, Cite de l'Architecture Curator Risselada, Heuvel Paris FR
2006/7 The Dutch Urban Block. Milan, Madrid, Barcelona, Budapest, Seattle Organizer, lecturer Komossa, Jutten Worldwide UN
2008 In The Desert of Modernity: Colonial Planning and After Curator Avermaete Berlin DE
2007 Aga Khan Award for Architecture: Dutch Embassy Addis Ababa Aga Khan Gameren Kuala Lumpur MY
2009 RIBA Award: Fuglsang Kunstmuseum RIBA Fretton London UK
58 Architecture
Table f. Honorary positions
2005 Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Fellow Graafland Tokyo JP
2006 University of Aarhus, Dep of Social Anthropology & Ethnography Visiting Professor Hauptmann Aarhus DK
2007 Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts School of Architecture (KARCH) Visiting professor Leupen Copenhagen DK
2007 University of Edinburgh, Department of Architecture Visiting Professor Hauptmann Edinburgh UK
2009 Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design Visiting professor Healy Jerusalem IL
2008 Postgraduate Research Program, University of Hong Kong Assessor Graafland Hong Kong HK
2008/9 PhD-program Villard d’Honnecourt Reviewer Komossa, Schrijver Venice IT
Contributor to
Heritage Decree, Ministry of Culture. Belgium, Flanders Avermaete Brussel BE
Architecture
59
Final presentation,
Master's Studio Dwelling.
60 Architecture
9
9.3 Supervision
In recent years, the Department of Architecture
Next generation has been actively investing in the development and
further professionalisation of a three-fold system
of support for PhD candidates. The primary super-
vision responsibilities are carried out by the main
supervisor (a professor within the department),
with an additional daily supervisor when possible
(associate or assistant professors with a PhD
degree). At a secondary level (bringing together
all PhD candidates within a research project or
chair), small PhD seminars are organised which are
based on a close reading of texts and discussions
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding on method as on content. A third level (bringing
PhD candidates in the Architecture research together all researchers in the department) con-
group traditionally follow a relatively individualised sists of Peer-review Colloquia, which are organised
research track, supported primarily by their two or three times a year. During these seminars,
supervisor(s) rather than coursework. In the near external specialists in the particular research fields
future, this autonomous research track will be are invited to give their opinions on the work of
supported by basic integration into the depart- PhD candidates. A month prior to the colloquium,
ment’s wider research questions through a shared a reader containing texts by the candidates is
core curriculum of PhD courses. prepared as a basis for these discussions. Each
PhD candidate is required to participate in at least
two Peer-Review Colloquia (after the first year of
9.2 Structure of programmes research (outline presentation) and after approxi-
The research programme itself offers an initial mately 2.5 years (chapter presentation)) over the
guidance structure for PhD candidates: it is divided course of the PhD research period.
into projects which are staffed by a population
of researchers that differ in their degree of
experience and involvement. Each project is headed 9.4 Success rates
by a senior researcher (professor or associate/ PhD candidates in the Architecture research group
assistant professor level with PhD) that has a more can generally be divided into two categories: a)
substantial research appointment. This project staff members that have educational duties along-
leader is supported by other experienced staff side their research duties; and b) PhD students
(associate or assistant level) and a limited number that have a research contract (internally or
of junior researchers or PhD candidates. externally funded). The first category of research-
In addition, beginning this academic year (2010) ers is successful but generally takes longer than
the department will be offering PhD seminars that four years to complete the PhD due to a heavy
are related more directly to the research areas of teaching load. The second category of PhD candi-
the research programme. Alongside these topical dates completes the PhD within the limits of the
seminars, the faculty will be offering general projected timeframe. Although the number of PhDs
research courses (see 9.5, next page). is not very high, the Department of Architecture
has made substantial progress during recent years
in attracting PhD researchers who have completed
their research work.
61
10
9.5 Educational resources
The PhD candidates of the Department of
Architecture can benefit from the various general Viability
courses offered by TU Delft (such as technical
writing in English, software skills).
Faculty-wide graduate courses are being devel-
oped which will be open to advanced Master’s
programme students as well as to starting PhD
candidates. These focus on developing research
skills (writing abstracts, research methods,
organising data).
62 Architecture
10.2 Available infrastructure e xtensive library of the Faculty of Architecture,
In the past years, the Department of Architecture the Map Collection, and the model workshop when
has invested substantially in the support of carrying out their research.
researchers. This has resulted in the appoint-
ment of a part-time research coordinator, who is
responsible for the target-oriented dissemination 10.3 Innovative capacity
of information concerning research (calls for The Department of Architecture has an energetic
papers, funding, training) including through the group of junior faculty members that has taken
research web page. up the challenge of restructuring research. New
ways of combining studio education and research
The research coordinator provides (together are being explored, and collaborative projects
with the secretary of the department) support for have been formed over the boundaries of chairs,
funding applications and organises the Peer-Review departments and disciplines. Despite a lack of
Colloquia of the Department of Architecture. authoritative senior faculty members to turn to
Together with the programme coordinator, for guidance, the junior faculty has proven itself
the research nestor and the chairman of the capable of fostering a positive attitude towards
department, the research coordinator forms the critically rethinking their own discipline within the
Research Committee that monitors research realm of scientific inquiry and design capability.
within the Department of Architecture. The The generally broad and international orientation
research coordinator functions as the first contact of the junior faculty places the department in a
for all researchers of the department. At the level favourable position for fuller engagement in the
of material infrastructure, the researchers of global arena of architectural research.
the Department of Architecture can rely on the
63
11 SWOT-analysis
Strengths Weaknesses
One of the greatest strengths of the Architecture A significant weakness is the ability to acquire
department is the diversity, energy and enthusiasm external funding. The faculty is mainly dependent
of its junior staff. This has ensured a strong innova- on direct government funding. This poses a threat
tive capacity, with the ability to explore beyond to the viability of research, particularly in light
the established boundaries of research and the of current budget constraints. The Netherlands
structure of the chairs. Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) does
The international orientation of the Architecture not include a category of research funding which
department has aided in improving intellectual accommodates the design disciplines. Funding
exchange. The members of the research staff are requests from the Department of Architecture
active in both formal and informal international must choose between the Humanities, the Applied
networks. In addition, there are a great number Sciences, or the Social and Behavioural Sciences.
of foreign students at Master’s level, most of who Although architecture shares characteristics with
choose to study in Delft specifically due to the all of these areas, there is no perfect fit with any
reputation of Dutch architecture. one of them.
Opportunities Threats
The current round of restructuring, which in- One of the greatest threats to the restructuring
cludes the bulk of the ‘Architectural Project and of the programme is the long-standing tradition
Foundations’ programme, as well as a reconfigured of fragmentation and the autonomy of individual
institute or graduate programme in history and researchers and projects. This was also the
theory (consisting of IHAAU, the Department of central criticism of the mid-term review.
Architecture and the DSD), uses the strength The main challenge in the coming years will be to
of the junior staff – its energy and readiness to maintain more cohesion than has previously been
collaborate – to maintain cohesion. The programme the case, without losing the energy generated by
brings together the various research strands, the personal efforts of individual researchers.
allowing the various perspectives and methodologi- In other words, we must guarantee a certain
cal approaches to complement one another rather level of autonomy while simultaneously encourag-
than compete. The Peer Review Colloquia have ing greater collaboration and more exchange of
played a central role in fostering an atmosphere ideas; this is the central task of the new
of open academic debate. research programme.
64 Architecture
12
This same exploration of the discipline forms the
strategy to approach the funding institutions. If
Strategy architecture typically falls short by adhering to the
traditional categories of scientific research, it is
time to put forward robust categories of academic
research in the design disciplines. By emphasising
the qualities of the discipline itself, such as the
exploratory qualities of design and the scientific
aspects of analysis, we stand to encourage innova-
tive research in the field itself, and perhaps achieve
more success in acquiring funding along the way.
The near future is both uncertain and exciting. This also necessitates a reassessment of the
The lack of senior faculty members is a pressing journal indexes for architecture. Some of the
issue, posing a real threat to the viability of the most reputable scholarly journals in the field are
department. Collaborations have been increasing not allocated a scientific status on the basis of
and are encouraged not only in the spirit of traditional domains of academic research. On a
academic exchange, but also as a manner to faculty level, SCOPUS will be approached with this
increase stability through networks (and thus question of evaluation criteria and the scholarly
the viability of the research). quality of journals such as OASE and Footprint,
both peer-reviewed, and DASH, as an exemplary
Viability is also aided by strengthening PhD journal of design-based research.
research: today’s PhD candidates will form tomor-
row’s pool of junior staff. At departmental and
faculty level, steps have been taken to incorporate
a PhD course structure as part of a more compre-
hensive graduate programme that is supportive of
the existing individual research. The Architecture
department’s peer-review seminar formula has
proven successful and we hope to be equally suc-
cessful in initiating PhD courses. The experiences
of the DSD in creating a research-oriented Mas-
ter’s programme will be invaluable in this process.
65
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1 Objectives and
research area
Objectives: The objectives of the Design &
History research group are threefold: to provide
decision makers, planners and designers with the
intellectual and practical tools to approach the
reconstruction work that awaits them in the most
responsible way that scientific research and practi-
cal expertise can provide; to produce in-depth
historical analysis of architectural movements; and
to unravel the often quite explicit philosophical,
social, cultural and theoretical implications involved
in specific design approaches.
69
2 Composition
Guests 6 11 12 17 16 15 21
Total research staff 40 6,9 43 6,1 47 8,0 62 10,7 71 12,8 67 14,2 73 13,3
Prof. Rob van Hees Research coordinator TNO Building Conservation Delft NL
Visiting Prof. Dirk Jan de Vries PhD Specialist Cultural Heritage Agency Amersfoort NL
Bert van Bommel Adv. Heritage Care Government Building Agency The Hague NL
and integration
3.3 International and national positioning
Providing the perfect background for a
combination of historical and theoretical work on
the one hand, and the design professions on the
other, TU Delft gives ®MIT and IHAAU a distinct
advantage. Comparable research groups within the
Netherlands are hard to find: the field covered by
3.1 Embedding ®MIT coincides partly with that of the national
Limited to design and policy professionals, ®MIT conservation board and some local conservation
is has fairly permanent working relationships with agencies, IHAAU shares part of its terrain with art
a number of partners in this field, such as the RCE, historical fields at Groningen, Amsterdam, Utrecht
TNO, Unesco, Docomomo, Icomos and a number and Leiden.
of architecture firms (see Table 2.b. Societal
Relevance & Quality). IHAAU, on the other hand,
prefers to cultivate its relative independence 3.4/5 Current partnerships with
by choosing its partners in relation to specific stakeholders and participation in consortia
projects: STAGG (specialist healthcare architects), ®MIT regularly works with research organisations
publishers, sometimes municipal planning boards, and societal and government institutions like TNO,
and so on. If one defines the Architecture and RCE, the Government Buildings Agency (RGD),
Built Environment Community in a broader sense, UNESCO, Docomomo, and Icomos. Book projects
including academic circles, research councils, and include partnerships with clients and publishing
so on, both the IHAAU and ®MIT cherish their firms, like those of IHAAU. Since 2008, ®MIT has
contacts with the international community and can been part of the international consortium ‘KIK
lay claim to an extensive network of professionals (Brussels), TNO and ®MIT/TU Delft’, regarding
within the Netherlands and abroad. the research and conservation of the Rubenshouse
in Antwerp.
3.2 Number and affiliation of IHAAU: Most, if not all of the book projects in
guest researchers which IHAAU participates are realised in close
Guest researchers (not including PhD students) at cooperation with publishing firms such as 010,
IHAAU are: Prof. W Schache PhD (Environmental Thoth, Birkhäuser, Minnesota University Press,
Planning, University of Dortmund), Prof. P Kahlfeldt NAi-publishers, Wolters Noordhof, and so on.
PhD (Principles and Theory of Building Construction In addition to this, long-term projects always
at the University of Dortmund), R. Baumeister PhD, involve close cooperation with stakeholders
T. Budantseva, A. Broekhuizen, A. Fohl, R. Garcia, (healthcare architecture: University Medical Centre
B. Heine Hippler, M. IJsselstijn, I.B. Jacob, of Groningen, for instance). IHAAU works together
B. Kérekgyarto (TU Budapest), A. Koch, O. Macel, with the universities of Groningen and Ghent in the
I. Ostermann, P. van Roosmalen, D.W. Schmidt, preparation of an international network focusing
M. Simon (TU Budapest), C. Smeenk, on colonial cultural heritage.
H. Pump Uhlmann.
71
4 Research
environment
4.3 Coherence
Within the Faculty of Architecture of TU Delft,
the research approach of ®MIT and IHAAU is
unique. ®MIT and IHAAU embody the historical
dimensions of architecture and urbanism. Their
research programme expands and modifies exist-
and integration ing bodies of knowledge and positions the work
of its members in its historical context. Exploring
architectural traditions, theory, philosophy, history
and the historical context of existing buildings
and urban structures, this research programme
informs the educational activities of ®MIT and
IHAAU. Both IHAAU and ®MIT are engaged in
preserving the memory of architectural history and
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of architectural traditions, and consider this to be a
the research primary condition for a full understanding of the
The programme wishes to establish a solid basis for present situation and the issues involved in today’s
the evaluation of existing bodies of knowledge; the transformation processes.
shifting position of design disciplines relative to
research work on the one hand (some of which
used to be part of architecture and urbanism but 4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
have now become specialist disciplines), and the The publications of ®MIT and IHAAU demonstrate
main actors in decision-making processes on the a balance between purely scholarly and scientific
other hand; taking positions in debates on the output, in terms of the scientific ranking of the
quality and value of the past; heritage and its mod- university, and the ‘professional publications’. Both
ernisation, the nature of conservation; the attitude are indispensible for the production of architecture
and theory of intervention and transformation; the and urbanism. Scientific ranking informs all players
policy and conservation of World Heritage. in the field, focusing on key players in decision-
making processes as well as the ‘general public’,
while the professional publications address archi-
4.2 Significance of the contribution tectural and urban practitioners directly.
to the field
The conservation and transformation of the archi-
tectural and urban heritage in a broad sense have
become an important aspect of the practice of
architecture. However, the approach, attitude and
toolbox of architects and planners are not keeping
pace with this reality. To improve and innovate the
spatial quality and process quality of interventions
in the built environment, it is necessary to reflect
on the history of architectural ideas and how they
have materialised, on conservation, and on current
and previous practice. The Design and History pro-
gramme provides such instruments, concentrating
particularly on the legacy of the twentieth century.
73
4.5 Results and outputs
Key results/highlights
•• ®MIT was involved in the COST action C-16 to improve “the quality of existing urban building
envelopes” with COST Europe and SenterNovem (2003-2006). The acronym “COST” stands for
European COoperation in the field of Scientific and Technical research. This resulted in 5 books in
the series research in architectural engineering:
Verhoef L.G.W. e.a. (ed.), 2007. Cost C16. Improving Quality of Existing Urban Building Envelopes.
Volumes 1-5, IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• The Genadendal Conference in South Africa, with the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Education,
Culture and Science, COST Europe and SenterNovem (2003-2006):
Preez, H. du, Oers, R. van, Roos, J. & Verhoef, L.G.W. (eds.), 2009. The Challenge of Genadendal.
IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• UNESCO World Heritage Centre, Recommendation on Historic Urban Landscapes (2006-2009).
•• The IHAAU contributed to the international conference The Architecture of Hospitals and its
offspring (2005/2010, in cooperation with key players in the field).
•• Randstad Research Project: mapping the cities of the Randstad Holland 1200-2000, ongoing.
key publications
•• Bergeijk, H. van, 2007. Jan Wils. De Stijl en verder, 010 Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Deben, L., Salet, W. & Thoor, M.-Th. van (eds.), 2004. Cultural Heritage and the Future of the
Historic Inner City of Amsterdam, Aksant, Amsterdam.
•• Hees, R.P.J. van & Lubelli, B.A. (Guest Editors), 2009. Special Issue on Compatibility of Plasters
and Renders on Salt Loaded Substrates, Construction and Building Materials, Vol. 23, no. 5.
Elsevier, Amsterdam, Boston, London et al.
•• Rutte, R. & Engen, H. van (ed.), 2008. Stadwording in de Nederlanden. Op zoek naar overzicht,
Verloren , Hilversum.
•• Wagenaar, C. & Mens, N., 2009. De architectuur van de ouderenhuisvesting: bouwen voor wonen
en zorg, NAi Publishers, Rotterdam.
•• Bergeijk, H. van, 2009. ‘American influences on Dutch Architecture and Urban Design’, in: Four
Centuries of Dutch-American Relations 1609-2009, Boom, Amsterdam, Albany (NY).
•• Bollerey, F., 2008. ‘The global march of a stimulant and the birth of modern cultural transfer’, in:
The Viennese Café as an Urban Site of Cultural Exchange, Birkbeck, London, p. 13-26.
•• Hees, R.P.J. van, Binda, L., Papayanni, I. & Toumbakari, E., 2004. ‘Damage analysis as a step towards
compatible repair mortars’, in: Groot, C., Ashall, G. & Hughes, J. (eds.). Characterisation of Old
Mortars with Respect to their Repair – RILEM report 28, p. 105-150.
•• Kuipers, M., 2007. Monumenten van Herrezen Nederland. Rijksdienst Cultureel Erfgoed,
Amersfoort.
•• Wagenaar, C. & Mens, N., 2009. Healing Environment: anders bouwen voor betere zorg.
Thoth, Bussum.
Key dissertations
•• Baumeister, R., 2009. L’Architecture Sauvage: Asger Jorn’s critique and concept of
architecture, Delft.
•• Heer, de J., 2008. The Architectonic Colour. The Polychromy in the Purist Architecture
of Le Corbusier (published in 2009 by 010 Publishers, Rotterdam).
•• Lubelli, B.A., 2006. Sodiumchloride damage to porous building materials, Delft, 2006: Print
Partners Ipskamp, Enschede.
•• Martire, A., 2008. Leisure Coast City. A comparative history of the urban waterfront, Delft
•• Nellessen, D., 2009. Von Baudenkmälern zu Baudenkmalen. Die Entwicklung des Denkmalrechts
in land Berlin von 1949 bis heute, Delft.
•• Zijlstra, H., 2006. Building construction in the Netherlands 1940-1970: continuity + change-
ability = durability (Bouwen in Nederland 1940-1970 continuïteit + veranderbaarheid =
duurzaamheid), Delft (2009, Analysing Buildings from Context to Detail in time. ABCD research
method. IOS Press, Amsterdam).
key events
•• Third International Symposium on Restoration. World Heritage Site Olinda in Brazil. Proposals
for Intervention, Delft University of Technology, the Netherlands 26 & 27 October 2006. Meurs,
P.H. & Verhoef, L.G.W. (eds.), 2006. Proceedings. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• 10th International Docomomo Conference. The Challenge of Chance. Dealing with the Legacy of
the Modern Movement, Rotterdam 2008. Heuvel, D. van den, Mesman, M., Quist, W. & Lemmens,
B., 2008. Proceedings. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
key exhibitions
•• K.S. Melnikov and the Reconstruction of Moscow, 2006. Vienna – Galerie am Ringturm etc.:
Macel, O. , curator.
•• Brazil contemporary Sao Paolo, 2009. NAi Rotterdam: Meurs, P.H., curator.
75
Expert system MDDS (Monument
Damage Diagnostic System) - Screenprint
of an analysis of brick decay.
77
5 Societal relevance
and quality
5.3 Key knowledge contributions to
practices and policies
To facilitate the use of existing and new research,
®MIT has contributed to the development of
communication tools such as the damage atlas
and the stone atlas. These have been integrated
into the expert system MDDS, and widely used
in the national and international field of heritage.
Unesco WHC’s Recommendations on Historic Urban
Landscapes (2006-2009) led to policies and recom-
mendations on conservation practices in World
Heritage cities. Jo Coenen was one of the main
initiators on the revision of the Architects Title
Act (WAT). IHAAU’s publications have contributed
5.1 Socio-cultural, technical and/or to significant advances in knowledge in the fields
economic quality of: historical geography; urbanisation, the history
The joint research programme undertaken by of urbanisation and urban concepts; interaction
®MIT and IHAAU is essential to establish archi- between design concepts and innovations; the
tecture and urbanism as professional disciplines founding of Positions.
in their own right. They target design professions
as well as policy makers. IHAAU’s involvement in
the Randstadproject epitomises the direct link 5.4 Evidence of the appreciation
between analyses and future programming. ®MIT of stakeholders
staff cooperate with research organisations, Evidence of the appreciation of the research is
societal & government institutions (TNO, RCE, provided by the assignment of staff members as
Government Building Agency, Unesco, Docomomo, advisors on desalination and damage processes
Icomos), culminating in joint research programmes in major national and international monuments.
or projects. ®MIT’s chairs and researchers Following the conference on the Future of
have contributed to TNO’s Monument Damage Urban Conservation Policies in the Netherlands
Diagnostic System (MDDS). They monitor (indoor) (Commissie Weevers), IHAAU was commissioned by
climate, (salt) damage (EU project on desalination), the Government Building Agency and the National
materials, building history, and transformation and Advisor of Heritage to carry out further research
re-development (conversion) processes assigned and advise on these policies. The IHAAU
by public and private partners. is continuously asked to coordinate books.
®MIT collaborates with the Centraal Museum
Utrecht/Utrecht University on ‘Rietveld’s Universe’
5.2 Key results/highlights (exhibition and publication in October 2010),
Research and analysis carried out by Job Roos, Landgoed Zonnestraal-de Alliantie/Nai publishers
one of the ®MIT staff members who provided on the publication ‘Zonnestraal’ (December 2010),
the basis for converting the former head office the Pieterskerk Leiden (indoor climate/desalina-
of TU Delft into the Faculty of Architecture. Roos tion), the Government Buildings Agency/National
became the coordinating architect of the project. Advisor of Heritage/NRF (research and advice on
Members of staff of the IHAAU are closely urban conservation policies), and Eusebius Church
involved in re-thinking healthcare architecture Arnhem (monitoring conservation).
(they are often assigned to do so by relevant
stakeholders).
79
5.6 Evidence of impacts 5.7 Commissioned research by
The impact of the contributions is demonstrated societal actors
by the use of the systems developed by ®MIT’s ®MIT’s portfolio of socially relevant projects
staff members. The desalination project of the extends to all scale levels and disciplines of its
Waag Building in Amsterdam, for example, was researchers. Research has been commissioned by:
based on advice, research and product develop- the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science;
ment of ®MIT. The WTA Conference of 2005 led Strijp S Beheer; private development companies;
to research and advice on the use of restoration Stichting Pieterskerk Leiden; Stad Antwerpen/
mortars in the fortification systems of Den Bosch. Rubenshouse; Government Building Agency.
IHAAU has contributed to a reinterpretation of Both ®MIT and IHAAU successfully acquired
the history of modernism. research projects for publications and exhibitions
(atlas productions, healthcare architecture,
Rietveld’s Universe, Restoration of Zonnestraal,
monographies).
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 345 91% 465 81% 536 101% 589 74% 803 96% 874 83% 757 71%
External funding 36 9% 107 19% -5 -1% 206 26% 30 4% 183 17% 312 29%
Total funding 381 100% 572 100% 531 100% 795 100% 833 100% 1,057 100% 1,069 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 259 83% 351 82% 393 77% 550 81% 829 95% 1,154 86% 921 85%
Other costs 54 17% 77 18% 118 23% 125 19% 48 5% 185 14% 157 15%
Total expenditure 313 100% 428 100% 511 100% 675 100% 877 100% 1,339 100% 1,078 100%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 1 1 7 0 0 0 5 2 5 1 0 1 6 4
Non-refereed articles 9 0 2 1 1 2 2 7 2 0 6 0 4 7
Books 5 1 6 5 11 5 13 8 17 3 7 9 11 5
Book chapters 20 7 41 8 40 21 27 22 68 20 22 19 30 26
PhD-theses 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 3 0 2 0 2 1 1
Conference papers 13 1 24 2 28 2 27 6 22 6 33 9 10 5
Professional publications 13 4 22 18 31 18 22 12 20 12 35 8 20 11
Editorships journals/book 4 2 7 2 6 4 4 4 11 1 13 2 9 6
Total publications 65 16 110 38 117 52 102 64 145 45 116 50 91 65
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
81
8 Academic reputation
2004 Int Conf on Surface Technology Water Repellent Agents, Hydrophobe IV Mbr. Scientific Cmte Hees Gent BE
2007 Int Symp on Conservation of Monuments in the Mediterranean Basin Mbr. Scientific Cmte Hees Orléans FR
2007 International jury for a children’s hospital in Kiev Jury member Wagenaar Kiev UA
2004 Central and Eastern European Architecture, Nai Co-organisation Wagenaar Rotterdam NL
2006 Moscow - The Architecture and Urban Planning of Melnikov 1921-1937 Organisation Macel Vienna AT
2006/9 Rietveld’s Universe, Centraal Museum Utrecht (2010) Co-organisation Thoor Utrecht NL
2009 Brazil contemporary; Architecture • Visals Culture • Art, NAi Curator Meurs Rotterdam NL
2009 All or nothing - Robert van ’t Hoff, architect of a new society (2010) Research team Bergeijk Kröller-Müller NL
Chief Government
2003/4 Ministry of Housing Spatial Planning and the Environment (Min VROM) Coenen The Hague NL
Architect
2009 American Institute of Architects (AIA) Honorary fellowship Coenen New York US
2003/> Architecturalia: foundation on the history of architecture and urbanism Secretary Wagenaar Groningen NL
2009 Maastricht University, Postgraduate Architecture Program Professor, chair Coenen Maastricht NL
2003 EU 6th Framework Programme (FP6) - Cultural heritage Evaluator Hees Brussels EU
2009 Slovenian Research Agency (ARRS) Evaluator Zijlstra Ljubljana SL
2008/> Bulletin KNOB - Dutch Journal for Cultural Heritage Editor-in-Chief Thoor Amersfoort NL
2008/> Bulletin KNOB - Dutch Journal for Cultural Heritage Editor Kuipers Amersfoort NL
2003/9 Bauhaus Universität Dessau, scientific advisory board Member Bollerey Dessau DE
2003/9 TNO, Building Conservation Technology Team Coordinator Hees Delft NL
2004 City of Brno, Selection committee Restoration of Villa Tugendhat Member Macel Brno CZ
83
9 Next generation
9.2 Structure of programmes
The programme’s structure will be streamlined
– e.g. in the Graduate School - the internal coop-
eration strengthened, and links with colleagues
abroad intensified by the organisation at regular
intervals of themed seminars and PhD reviews.
9.3 Supervision
The chairs formally constituting the top layer of
the IHAAU being vacant, the Associate Professors
working here are expected to bridge the gap
between the present situation, the appointment
of new Professors and the institutional reorganisa-
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding tion. ®MIT continues to supervise its part of the
The objectives of the Design and History research programme in much the same way as it has been
programme are quite clear: continuation, expansion doing so far. Each PhD candidate has a supervisor
and the exploration of new terrains, and strength- (Professor), with two-monthly meetings, and a daily
ening of the imbedding of research and research supervisor. PhD reviews are organised every 4-5
tracks in the educational curriculum of the faculty. times a year. The future programme will be in line
Whether or not these objectives can be realised with the Graduate School.
within the framework of this programme depends
largely on current reorganisation processes that
may imply a virtual merger between the IHAAU 9.4 Success rates
and the DSD. If this merger materialises, it will In terms of academic recognition, involvement in
result in a completely new institutional embed- practical design projects, and links to public opinion,
ding of part of the work that is presented here as the success rates have been satisfactory and, on
contributing to the Design and History portfolio. this basis, can be further improved. (Naturally, this
is a prerequisite for finding external funding in a
very difficult market.)
Historical development of
Apeldoorn as part of the
work on historical atlases by
Reinout Rutte PhD.
85
11 SWOT-analysis
Strengths Weaknesses
®MIT and IHAAU benefit from being part of a ®MIT and IHAAU may benefit from closer
major technological university with expertise in cooperation in the domains they both cover,
research and education in adjacent fields. albeit from different angles: scientific research
Moreover, the long-standing Dutch tradition in either directly or not directly related to concrete
planning and research - that fostered the emer- restoration and transformation processes.
gence of freelance markets capable of delivering IHAAU should improve its public relations; ®MIT
state of the art scientific and scholarly research may want to clarify its position relative to the
- provides our work with a context that, from an historical disciplines.
international perspective, is quite unique. The IHAAU should stay out of the concrete
work of ®MIT and IHAAU is credited for its high transformation and reconstruction issues and
productivity and high standard. Delft University of focus on the general expertise needed to efficiently
Technology offers high-grade supporting facilities tackle the problems inherent in these matters.
such as the faculty library, the maps room, and the ®MIT, on the other hand, may benefit from
full range of expertise to support mapping, avoiding all too generic theoretical and
drawing, photography, and multimedia. philosophical work.
Opportunities Threats
The reconsideration of modernism is a major under- Rather than facing serious competition, ®MIT and
taking slowly taking off. One of the triggers is the IHAAU see the field they cover threatened by the
emergence of totally new geopolitical frameworks lack of adequate educational facilities where quali-
that, for the first time, trigger scientists to ques- fied personnel for this type of work are trained.
tion the inherent relations between modernism There is a growing discrepancy between the urgency
and the European and later American domination of and relevance of the work and the availability of
the ‘western’ world. The awareness that at least adequate staff. This carries the risk that part of
part of the scientific body of knowledge is tainted the work will be delegated to parties that cannot
by propaganda also tends to reconfigure interna- deliver the required level of expertise, which can
tional cooperation in this field. Another trend is the only be harmful to the field. The decrease in the
awareness that in architectural history, until now, number of temporary contracts, regarding young
links between theory and materialisation, especially personnel in particular, is not helpful for expanding
in the field of the twentieth century, have been research. So far, the staff of IHAAU have been
neglected. Moreover, the scope of our work should relatively stable. ®MIT has faced substantial
include Central and Eastern Europe. reduction in research personnel in 2009.
Danish chair by Rietveld, published in the book 'Chairs' by Otokar Macel PhD.
The chair was referred to as the 'Danisch chair' after Rietveld had presented it
at an exhibition in Denmark in 1952.
87
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1
Vision: Society must undergo a transition towards
an economy based on renewable or recyclable
Objectives and resources and a built environment that is largely
self-sustaining. The greatest challenge lies in the
research area alteration of existing areas: with 90% of the build-
ing stock of the near future already built, effective
improvements can only be achieved by immediate
action to improve entire regions, cities, districts,
neighbourhoods, buildings and building elements.
In addition, the quest for research unison is deeply
rooted in what we consider to be research that is
relevant to future developments.
90 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
1.3 Position 1.4 Research area
The GBI research group is based within the The basic competences of the GBI research group
scientific areas of Climate Design (chairs of are defined by Materials, Components & Buildings,
Building Physics, Building Services, and Climate Building Envelopes, Energy Efficiency, and Comfort.
Design & Sustainability) and Building Technological These specialist areas are under continuous devel-
Design (chairs of Design of Construction, Product opment and enhancement. The following priority
Development and Architectural Engineering). research themes which link the basic competences
Within the Department of Building Technology, are: Closing Cycles, E-novation, Carbon Neutrality
GBI cooperates well with the Computation & and Climate Adaptation. These themes are the
Performance Group. GBI cooperates with many subject of particular attention because of their
other bodies both inside and outside TU Delft societal urgency. They will remain on the agenda
(see section 3). for at least the next five years and may be
extended beyond that.
Materials,
Building Energy
Components Comfort
Envelopes Efficiency
& Buildings
g r e e n bui l di ng innovation
Closing cycles
Academia
Public and
and science E-novation private market
funds
Carbon neutrality
Climate adaptation
91
2 Composition
Guests 3 15 18 17 25 17 19
Total research staff 52 13,8 68 13,0 63 14,1 72 18,8 81 19,5 76 20,6 75 19,0
Prof. Ulrich Knaack PhD Prof. For Design & construction Hochschule OWL Detmold DE
Prof. Ulrich Knaack PhD Co-founder, consultant Imagine envelope b.v. The Hague NL
Prof. Andy van den Dobbelsteen PhD Advisory Board Chair Dutch Green Building Council Rotterdam NL
Leo Gommans Senior advisor sustainable building BOOM Maastricht Maastricht NL
92 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
The five overwhelming, white wings on the Yitzhak Rabin Center in Tel Aviv
by Moshe Safdie. The international tendering procedure for the roofs with
the accompanying steel construction and glass facades was won in 2005 by
Octatube, the design & build company of professor Mick Eekhout PhD, and
an project syndicate of co-makers [photo: Octatube International].
93
3
3.3 National and international positioning
Within the Netherlands, the GBI group regularly
Research works in partnership with the Universities of
Eindhoven, Twente and Wageningen. International
environment partnerships include the Detmold Hochschule,
TU Darmstadt, Royal Art Institute Copenhagen,
and embedding Catholic University of Leuven, Leeds Metropolitan
University, Carnegie Mellon and Queensland
University of Technology.
Moreover, GBI staff members participate in
international networks with various actors from
academia and commercial practice, such as EIA
(Annex 39, 44, 45), CIB (W116), Wessex Institute
of Technology (WIT), Passive and Low-Energy
3.1 Embedding Architecture (PLEA) and the European Façade
The Green Building Innovation research group has Network (EFN).
a strong position in the academic world, including
its own Faculty of Architecture, other faculties
of TU Delft (especially the Faculties of Industrial 3.4 Actual collaborations with stakeholders
Design Engineering, Civil Engineering & Geosciences A few examples that demonstrate the breadth and
and Applied Sciences), other universities and depth of GBI’s stakeholder partnerships:
schools, research networks, as well as funding •• CAScade Park Almere, funded by DuraVermeer
organisations such as Agentschap NL, (Houten), in a consortium with Deerns (Rijswijk),
FES programmes (e.g. Knowledge for Climate), Claus en Kaan Architecten (Amsterdam).
STW/NWO and the EU. •• DIEMIGO: ‘Public Electric Vehicle Charging
Integration in the Built Environment; Case
Schiphol The Grounds’; interdisciplinary TUD
3.2 Number and affiliation of research project together with Schiphol Group
guest researchers within TRANSUMO (National Dutch research
As Table 2.1 shows, since the group started in programme).
around the year 2003, the number of guest •• Energy Potential Mapping for De Groene
research staff has remained fairly constant at Compagnie: funded by the Province of
around 15-20 people. Since 2006, the number of Groningen, together with Wageningen
guest PhD candidates has increased steadily, and University, the Municipality of Hoogezand-
continues to do so. The GBI programme draws Sappemeer and the Province of Groningen.
considerable interest from external parties and •• PGDEPW (Projectgroep Duurzame Energie
international PhD candidates in particular. The in Projectontwikkeling van Woningbouw):
research group currently hosts PhD candidates Agentschap NL funded interdisciplinary
from Germany, Greece, China, Indonesia, Iran and long-term EOS research, in partnership with
Turkey, to name only a few. These guests bring the universities of Eindhoven and Maastricht,
their own funding or scholarships. Cauberg Huygen engineers, in cooperation
with EIA Annex 44.
•• REAP (Rotterdam Energy Approach & Planning):
funded by the Rotterdam Climate Initiative,
together with DSA and JA architects,
Rotterdam Public Works and the City Planning
& Traffic Department.
94 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
•• SREX (Synergy of Regional Planning and •• Climate Proof Cities, involving TU Delft (GBI,
Exergy): Agentschap NL funded interdisciplinary Urbanism, OTB and Applied Sciences),
long-term EOS research, together with the TU Eindhoven, Utrecht University, Wageningen
Universities of Wageningen and Groningen, University, Deltares consultants, TNO and
Hogeschool Zuyd Heerlen, and TNO Building KWR, and various municipalities (Haaglanden,
and Underground. Rotterdam, Amsterdam, Tilburg, Arnhem-
•• VMRG – Dutch Association of Metal Façade Nijmegen-Tiel, Utrecht)
manufactures: several research projects, •• E-novation IEE consortium: GBI and the
SenterNovem IPC research grants, Universities of Leuven, Leeds, Prague, Paris,
collaboration in Conferences Nicosia and Copenhagen, together with the
Municipality of Delft and Biesterbos Plan
Development
3.5 Participation in consortia •• IPC (Innovation Performance Contract) studies
GBI participates and plays an active role in the with the VMRG on the Add-on Façade (partially
following ongoing or recently launched consortia: funded by ASW gevelbouw, Solarlux, and
•• Closing Cycles in the Built Environment, Hallington Doors) and on the Breathing Window
a consortium of GBI with market parties (partially funded by Facadis, Merford, Heycop,
Dura Vermeer, Search, Unica and energy Kremers Aluminium, De Groot en Visser, Licotec
company Delta. Daklicht, Van Hengstum bv, and Vorsselmans).
•• Concept House: funded by a consortium of
market parties (Eneco, Faay, Rotterdam GW,
Living Lab, Raab Karcher, Renson, R&R systems,
Schöck, Unica, Uniline, VDM), with real-time
case studies as the Concept House Village in
the Rotterdam City Harbours, for Clean
Tech Delta
95
4
4.2 Significance of the contribution
to the field
Scientific relevance We firmly believe that innovation, particularly
in the area of sustainability, is brought about by
and quality technology, not as a separate discipline but as
an integrated part of design and planning. New
technology is developed with the support of fun-
damental technical knowledge and new technical
design and planning strategies are introduced and
disseminated onto the market. This is demonstrat-
ed by externally funded research projects.
4.3 Coherence
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of The chairs and staff involved in the GBI pro-
the research gramme form a strong, coherent group which
Green Building Innovation (GBI) traditionally covers the fields of building technology that are
covers technical aspects of the indoor environ- essential to the mission, vision and objectives
ment, the outdoor environment and the dividing presented. The chairs of Building Physics, Building
line between the two, as well as the essential flows Services and Climate Design & Sustainability form
that enable living, working and travelling: energy, a tripod of fundamentals, technology and applica-
water and materials. These latter aspects have tion of climate design. They have close links with
led GBI to propose innovative concepts at various the chairs of Design of Constructions and Product
scale levels. Based firmly on existing knowledge Development, which focus respectively on facades,
and experience, GBI focuses on themes that are buildings, products and components. Finally, Archi-
currently significant in terms of their societal tectural Engineering encompasses the entire field
and scientific value. Examples of such themes are of the integration of technology into sustainable
climate and energy planning and design, e-novation architecture and urban planning, with a research
(energy renovation of buildings), autonomous emphasis on the development of new ‘smart’ or
housing concepts, closing cycles (control of the adaptive materials.
essential flows), comfort and health, and green
product development (materials, elements, building
artefacts and services). 4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
The two Building Technology sections involved in
the GBI programme have performed well over the
last seven years, as demonstrated by their scientific
output and the funding acquired, as well as by the
extensive attention and cooperation the group has
received from both the market and media.
96 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
a result of their various honorary functions, a wide lectures by speakers including Sir David King,
range and large number of peer-reviewed publica- Ken Yeang, Michael Braungart and the Dutch
tions, and a number of awards from both academia Crown Prince Willem Alexander. Dobbelsteen has
and commercial practice. Eekhout, for instance, received much acclaim for his energy research in
won the World Wide Quality Award XXI Century Rotterdam, which was broadcast on the national
and the Pioneers Award for Space Structures in news. Linden has set a new ISSO standard for
2002. Timmeren and Roggema & Dobbelsteen won, adaptive thermal comfort, an academic innovation
respectively, the SB05 and SB08 best scientific based on Fanger’s comfort research in the 1970s
paper awards. [Linden et al. 2006].
The group has a long research tradition within the
Eekhout is an acclaimed member of the framework of SenterNovem (now part of Agent-
Netherlands Academy for Technology and schap NL) and fundamental research projects with
Innovation and the first designer since 1856 to applied qualities co-funded by the construction
be admitted to the Royal Dutch Academy of Arts industry, provinces and municipalities. Examples of
& Sciences (KNAW). Asselbergs was previously the these are the EOS-LT LOWEX research project (on
city architect of Haarlem. Knaack organises an low-exergetic design) and DESAR EET project (on
appraised series of façade conferences. Decentralised Sanitation and Reuse).
The GBI research group recently organised the
acclaimed international conference Smart and
Sustainable Built Environments (SASBE2009),
chaired by Prof. Andy van den Dobbelsteen PhD
and Arjan van Timmeren PhD. SASBE2009 hosted
Key publications
•• Dobbelsteen A. van den, Arets M. & Nunes R., 2007. Sustainable design of supporting s tructures
– Optimal structural spans and component combinations for effective improvement of
e nvironmental performance, in: Construction Innovation, Vol. 7, No. 1 (54-71).
•• Eekhout M. & Tomiyama T. (eds.), 2008. Delft Science in Design 2. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Linden A.C. van der, Boerstra A.C., Raue A.K., Kurvers S.R. & De Dear R.J., 2006. ‘ Adaptive
temperature limits: A new guideline in The Netherlands – A new approach for the assessment
of building performance with respect to thermal indoor climate ’. Energy and Buildings. Vol 38.
No.21. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 8-17.
•• Timmeren A. van, Sidler D. & Kaptein M., 2008. ‘ Sustainable decentralized energy generation
& sanitation ’. Journal of Green Building. Vol 2. No.4. College Publishing, Glen Allen, p. 137-150.
•• Wilde S. de & Dobbelsteen A. van den, 2004. ‘ Space use optimisation and sustainability -
Environmental comparison of international cases ’. Journal of Environmental Management.
Vol. 73, No. 2. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 91-101.
97
Key books or chapters of books
•• Dobbelsteen A. van den, Dorst M. van & Timmeren A. van (eds.), 2009. Smart Building in a
Changing Climate. Techne Press, Amsterdam.
•• Eekhout M., 2009. Tubular Structures in Architecture. Cidect, Geneva.
•• Gommans L.J.J.H.M. & Dobbelsteen A.A.J.F. van den, 2007. Synergy between Exergy and Regional.
Planning. In: Brebbia, C.A., Popov, V. (eds.) 2007. Energy and Sustainability, p. 103-112. WIT press,
Southampton.
•• Knaack U. , Klein T. , Bilow M. & Auer T., 2007. Facades. Birkhauser, Basel.
•• Roggema R., 2009. Adaptation to Climate Change: A Spatial Challenge. Springer,
Dordrecht/Heidelberg/London/New York.
•• Dobbelsteen A. van den, Jansen S. & Timmeren A. van, 2007. Naar een energiegestuurd
Omgevingsplan voor Groningen. TU Delft, Delft. Results of the study are included in the provincial
environmental plan (POP) of the Province of Groningen. Presented to the Prince of Orange.
•• Eekhout M., 2008. Methodology for Product Development in Architecture. IOS Press,
Amsterdam.
•• Façade Group/Knaack et al., various years. The Future Envelope book series. Distributed
internationally by IOS Press Amsterdam – widely acclaimed book series/
•• Façade Group/Knaack et al., various years. Imagine book series. Distributed internationally by
010 Publishers Rotterdam – widely acclaimed book series aiming at architects.
•• Tillie N., Dobbelsteen A. van den, Doepel D., Jager W. de, Joubert M. & Mayenburg D., 2009.
REAP – Rotterdam Energy Approach & Planning; Rotterdam Climate Initiative – TV news
broadcast and radio coverage resulting in significant spin-off.
key dissertations
•• Dobbelsteen A. van den, 2004. The Sustainable Office – An exploration of the potential for factor
20 environmental improvement of office accommodation. Copie Sjop, Delft.
•• Ebbert, T., 2009. ReFace. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Poelman, W., 2005. Technology Diffusion in Product Design. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Tenpierik, M.J. (2009); Vacuum Insulation Panels Applied in Building Constructions. Wöhrmann
Print Services, Zutphen.
•• Timmeren A. van, 2006. Autonomie & Heteronomie – Integratie en verduurzaming van essentiële
stromen in de gebouwde omgeving. Eburon, Delft.
98 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
key events
•• 1st and 2nd Congress of Design Platform: Delft Science in Design. 2005, 2007. TU Delft, Delft.
•• Kennisdag Nederlands-Vlaamse Bouwfysicavereniging (NVBV), 2005 and 2009; TU Delft, Delft.
•• HRH The Prince of Orange’s visit to Groningen, 1st April 2008. Personal presentation to the
prince by Andy van den Dobbelsteen, on Energy potential mapping studies. Eemshaven.
•• SASBE2009, 3rd CIB international conference on Smart and Sustainable Built Environments,
15-19 June 2009. TU Delft, Delft.
•• Annual Future Envelope conference series, 2007-2010. Faculty of Architecture, TU Delft, Delft.
99
Poster of yet another book launch from the
Facades Research Group, held in the DSD.
100 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
Front cover picture of the second book in
the imagine book-series: Deflate-ables.
101
5
tural projects. Further examples are the design
and use of renovation facades on German offices
Societal Relevance and NEXT, an innovative solution for a service-
integrated façade. A number of prototypes have
and quality been manufactured (e.g. in the Building Technology
Laboratory) and used in presentations to academic
and industrial audiences.
The many conferences and seminars organised by
GBI staff for academia and commercial practice
also demonstrate the relevance of the GBI’s work
to architecture and the built environment – these
include The Future Envelope conference series,
Challenging Glass and SASBE2009, which received
a commendation from the CIB.
5.1 Socio-cultural, technical and/or
economic quality
The research of the Green Building Innovation 5.4 Evidence of the appreciation
research group is closely linked to societal issues in of stakeholders
the field of sustainable development and techno- The best evidence of the value placed on these con-
logical innovation. Many of its research projects, tributions by stakeholders is probably the continuing
both completed and ongoing, were initiated with demand for contributions in the form of research
parties from the public and commercial market and and consultancy, as well as repeated requests for
have served both scientific development in new the presentation of earlier findings and proposals.
areas and dissemination in the built environment or Provinces, municipalities and the building industry
building industry. The latter would not be possible continue to approach GBI’s research staff concern-
without a solid foundation of financial, material and ing innovative projects that are seen as cutting
human resources. edge in both the market and the academic world.
The Department of Building Technology in general
and the Green Building Innovation programme in A stakeholder analysis based on a questionnaire
particular (or its predecessors) have always had a sent to around 30 stakeholders – with 11
strong bond with the market. responses received – also revealed the value
that academic, institutional and commercial
organisations place on GBI’s projects. A wide range
5.2 Key results/highlights of questions were answered with an average
The impact of GBI’s research is generally highly score of 4 on a scale from 1 to 5. Where standard
visible: the results have been adopted by stake- deviations were relatively large, we intend to
holders outside the university, such as in the improve the lower scores in order to raise the
planning, design and manufacturing sectors. average to improve our research even further.
These can be seen in the general studies and
publications by GBI’s architectural staff, based
on a strong relationship between private practice
and academia. Energy potential studies have been
integrated into official plans such as the Provincial
Environmental Plan (POP) of Groningen, Rotterdam
Energy Approach and Planning (REAP) and the
application of the bent scale elements developed
and tested by our group in high-quality architec-
102 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
5.5 Dissemination strategies Other evidence can be found in the honorary func-
The output record of GBI staff members includes tions of GBI key staff on boards and committees,
scientific publications in journals and books, as well most notably the position of Eekhout in the Royal
as expert publications for the market and proto- Dutch Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW) and
types for academia and industry. Our strategy is his special professorship in Nottingham, Luscuere’s
to disseminate research findings and ideas for the guest professorship in Tianjin, China, and Knaack’s
improvement of the built environment or the build- professorship at Detmold Hochschule, Germany.
ing industry through a balanced cross-section of
media: not just scientific journals but also specialist
magazines, websites and newspapers – including 5.7 Commissioned research by
for example a regular GBI column in the daily build- societal actors
ing newspaper Cobouw. The books by the Façade As stated, the activities of GBI are grounded
Research Group are also internationally renowned. in both the private-sector (building industry,
developers, contractors, architects, urban
planners, consulting companies) and the public-
5.6 Evidence of impacts sector markets (state authorities, provinces,
Again, repeated demands for more contributions, municipalities) and a great deal of research is
new books and interviews is good evidence of this funded by institutions such as NL Agency, KvR
impact, which cannot be gauged from scientific programme, STW and the EU.
output alone. Many interviews have been given by
key GBI staff members, who have been asked for
their expertise and research projects, published
in expert magazines, newspapers and even glossy
magazines and also in several expert appearances
on television and radio broadcasts.
The Prince of Orange (right) and Rector Prof. Jacob Fokkema PhD
(left) listen to the keynote speech by Ken Yeang PhD (middle) at
the opening ceremony of the 3rd CIB international conference on
Smart and Sustainable Built Environments (SASBE2009),
organised by the GBI research group [photo: Michiel Fremouw].
103
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 484 89% 688 63% 843 59% 696 69% 792 60% 688 53% 604 34%
External funding 60 11% 400 37% 574 41% 314 31% 535 40% 606 47% 1,176 66%
Total funding 544 100% 1,088 100% 1,417 100% 1,010 100% 1,327 100% 1,294 100% 1,780 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 561 94% 736 91% 788 84% 750 92% 1,064 91% 1,027 93% 759 85%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
104 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 7 0 5 0 3 0 5 0 4 0 7 0 2 0
Non-refereed articles 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 3 0
Books 2 0 4 0 4 0 10 2 16 0 6 0 9 0
Book chapters 7 2 19 0 13 0 14 1 39 2 17 0 12 0
PhD-theses 0 0 2 1 0 1 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 0
Conference papers 54 3 56 2 69 6 53 11 95 5 54 1 41 3
Professional publications 41 0 41 0 41 2 59 1 44 4 28 7 31 5
Editorships journals/book 0 0 5 1 5 0 2 1 5 0 9 0 11 1
Total publications 111 5 133 4 135 9 145 17 205 11 123 8 109 9
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
105
8 Academic reputation
Advisor
2008 ENCI-Quarry Design session Gommans Maastricht NL
sustainability
2009 Decentralized Water Infrastructures Expert panel Timmeren Berlin DE
2009 Integration un Koordination Expert Panel Teuffel Hamburg DE
Table d. Spotlight
Presentation
2009 Center for Architecture Teuffel New York US
recent projects
2009 Urban Emergencies Organiser Timmeren Delft NL
2009 TV news (Het Journaal) and radio news broadcast: REAP Interview Dobbelsteen Rotterdam NL
106 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
Table e. Prizes, awards, competitions
Roggema,
2008 Best scientific paper award SB08 conference Melbourne AU
Dobbelsteen
2008 German Steel Structures Award: ESTA office building DSTV Teuffel Senden DE
2009 CIB PC Commendation SASBE2009 Dobbelsteen Manchester UK
2003/> Society for Renewable Insulation Materials Honorary member Tenpierik Blaricum NL
2003/> University of Nottingham Special Professor Eekhout Nottingham UK
2007/8 3TU Speerpunt Bouw Formateur Eekhout Delft NL
2007/> Tianjin University Guest professor Luscuere Tianjin CN
2008/> Dutch-Flemish Building Physics Society Honorary Chair Linden Arnhem NL
2003/> Royal Dutch Acadey of Arts & Science (KNAW) Full member Eekhout Amsterdam NL
2003/> Academy for Technology and Innovation Full member Eekhout Amsterdam NL
2006/> CIB Working Commission 116 Joint coordinator Dobbelsteen World UN
2009/> Post-Academic Education (PAO) Advisory Board Knaack Delft NL
2009/> European Façade Network Co-founder Knaack Europe EU
107
9
9.3 Supervision
Depending on the complexity or multi-disciplinarity
Next generation of the project, PhD students are supervised by
one or more professors. PhD candidates also have
a daily supervisor (usually an associate professor
or senior researcher who has already attained a
PhD). Candidates need to show their progress and
research plan after approximately nine months,
and a ‘go/no go’ decision will be made concerning
continuation after one year. After this ‘go/no go’
decision, PhD candidates continue to present to
their supervisors and group members at various
occasions in the later years of their research.
They critically review the contents and progress,
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding but also help the candidate to further their
Within GBI there is a strong link between the progress. In addition, GBI’s PhD candidates fall
PhD research and the MSc theses, which is highly under the Graduation School, providing a broader
unusual among architecture faculties. The Inter- platform for exchange.
national Façade Master’s programme organised PhD candidates are encouraged to contribute to
by the GBI group is a clear example of this. GBI and participate in national and international confer-
encourages MSc students to choose a research ences, symposia and workshops, to present and
subject that fits the research themes of the GBI obtain feedback on their results so far, to build
programme. To do this, bi-annual presentations up an international network and learn from other
are held on the latest research projects and topics research projects.
related to the GBI programme, so that they can Every PhD candidate draws up a personal
be taken up by students. education plan with their supervisor and discusses
their progress (or otherwise) in annual result and
development meetings, for which annual reports
9.2 Structure of programmes are written and an evaluation form is filled in by
As discussed in section 1, GBI addresses themes the candidate and their supervisor.
that include the basic competences of the
scientific areas involved, as well as urgent societal
and scientific themes. PhD candidates working 9.4 Success rates
within GBI usually fall under one of these themes, Beginning with a faculty with a limited tradition
but they may also overlap with more than one of fundamental research and few PhD projects,
theme. As described under 9.3, general meetings the GBI group has over the past seven years
are held both for the GBI programme as a whole developed increasing numbers of PhD projects
and on a thematic basis, under the coordination of good to very good quality. Because of the
of a responsible GBI staff member. Continuous Netherlands’ four-year PhD model, GBI has only
background research and involvement in academic recently begun to produce significant numbers of
and market groups is taking place to enhance finished doctorates, receiving honours appreciation
our competences. above the TU Delft average of 10%. It should be
emphasised that a high number of PhD candidates
will finish their doctoral research during or shortly
after this research review. In spite of the difficult
financial situation in which the university and
faculty find themselves, the acquisition of new GBI
108 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
PhD candidates who are fully externally funded has
continued, which has kept PhD numbers in balance,
while continuing to ensure improvements in PhD
supervision, guidance and output performance.
109
10
presents problems to some of the researchers,
most find it an inspiring working environment
Viability which stimulates positive communication.
Moreover, continuous improvements in accom-
modation are undertaken by the faculty’s facility
management.
110 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
Detail of mock-up
cardboard facade.
111
11 SWOT analysis
Strengths weaknesses
GBI is run by relatively young associate professors As with other groups in the Faculty of Architecture,
and experienced older professors who cooperate GBI has so far had little experience with funding
well together and are enthusiastic to take on new from major scientific funding organisations, such as
assignments. GBI works easily with other academia, NWO/STW, who do not provide many opportunities
institutes and market parties. for technology or design-focused research.
GBI’s programme is relevant and urgent to society Nevertheless, more effort could be put into the
and science. acquisition of funding in several subject areas.
GBI staff include a growing proportion of PhD GBI staff have produced too few publications in
candidates and staff who have already completed international peer-reviewed CFIS journals.
PhDs themselves. Productivity per FTE research This should be improved.
staff is relatively good. GBI’s published output is
well-balanced between scientific, expert and
popular publications.
Building Technology has excellent connections and
partnerships and is a forerunner in inter-university
partnerships.
Opportunities threats
There are many possibilities for funding and part- Due to further cuts in direct government funding,
nerships in the area of sustainability, climate and money for fundamental or specialist research in
energy. Many parties show interest in cooperating the basic GBI competence areas will probably
with the GBI research group, both from academia be reduced; this may involve too much focus on
and the market. ‘Bridging the Gap’ [Eekhout, 2009] short-term and temporary projects. Furthermore,
proposes a novel research plan for all construction- decoupling primary research funding from output
related faculties in the Netherlands, culminating performance will takes away an incentive to publish
in the 3TU.BOUW (the 3TU Federation Centre more and better quality.
of Competence for the Built Environment). This The drawback to the many opportunities for fund-
approach will create opportunities to establish per- ing and cooperation from national and international
manent partnerships with the industry and society, requests is that most time is spent on preparing
ensuring a regular flow of income for researchers. project proposals, instead of research itself.
In addition, GBI receives a great number of requests
for PhD internships from across the world.
112 G r e e n B u i l d i n g I n n o vat i o n
12
12.2 Research topics planned for the
near future and their prospects
Strategy Just like the GBI as a whole, the research
programme is based on stable, permanent basic
competences, which in the near future (the
next 5 to 10 years) will focus on the temporary
sustainability themes as presented in section 1.4.
Sustainability will remain an important issue, and
is in fact an open-ended issue, but its themes may
vary in the near future, as instigated by parties
involved with the 3TU.BOUW, for example. It is
quite possible that in the near future the focus
will be on becoming ‘fossil-free’, on smart grids and
networks in the built environment, and on sustain-
12.1 Strategic planning; investments able mobility, developments to be seen already in
and collaboration our recent projects.
GBI aims at viable and suitable project proposals,
in cooperation with partners from the academic
world, consulting companies and other commercial 12.3 Flexibility and anticipation
and industrial bodies, each in their respective role. of expected changes
There is still a world to be won out there. Active In view of recent financial difficulties, but in fact
involvement in 3TU.BOUW (the 3TU Federation already in practice with the GBI group for several
Centre of Competence for the Built Environment) years already, we intend to become relatively
will support this. independent from primary academic funding
With the Valorisation Task Force (VTF), the TU Delft (initially coming from the Ministry of Education)
Valorisation Centre and 3TU.BOUW, a structural by acquiring external funding for our projects.
approach to major scientific funding organisations, Prerequisite to this will be a direct coupling of
such as the EU and NWO/STW, will enable us to these finances to the group involved, so that
learn about the qualities of a good proposal from where money is attracted in, money can be
other faculties and through reviewing processes. spent. At present the faculty is working on the
preliminary stage of this transition.
Our intention is to keep the number of PhD
candidates constant or growing. This can only be
realised with external money, and is therefore
related to larger research projects. Where PhD
funding through externally funding is not possible,
we admit self-funded PhD candidates for topics
that are relevant to the programme. Together with
the Graduate School, PhD candidates will receive
proper supervision and encouragement. This will be
made possible by an additional tier between the (as-
sociate) professors and PhD candidates, formed by
young doctors who can take responsibility for daily
doctoral supervision and research project leader-
ship. There will be a strong emphasis on publications
in international peer-reviewed CFIS journals, start-
ing with PhD candidates at their earliest stages.
113
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Objectives: Through a multi-disciplinary approach,
1 Objectives and
we aim to meet four challenges:
•• To define building performance and quality,
and to develop the computational means to
research area assess in design the many various aspects that
constitute them.
•• To apply the understanding of performance and
quality to the computational design process,
so as to plan, construct and operate buildings
where the reality meets or exceeds the aspira-
tions that motivated their production.
•• To develop design, communication and
decision-making practices, and their computa-
tional support, which enable stakeholders to
1.1 Vision, mission and objectives effectively apply the understanding of building
Vision: The developments of architecture and performance and quality in an informed and
building design are driven by attempts to achieve balanced way so as to achieve mutually
step changes in performance; the most important acceptable outcomes.
way to attain this is to use innovative computa- •• To continually re-examine the relations between
tional tools, techniques and methods in the design, performance/quality, function, materials,
manufacturing and construction process. Consider- systems, society, and architectural form within
ing performance as a driver in the building design an investigation of computationally enhanced
and planning process is a prerequisite to achieve holistic design strategies.
buildings that better perform, function and oper-
ate, consume fewer resources in construction and
operation, and offer a healthier and more comfort- 1.2 Societal concerns and issues
able environment to its occupants, while still being In recent years there has been a clear change in
economically viable. perspective on the efficiency of the built environ-
ment, driven by the appreciation that resources of
Mission: The mission of the Computation & materials and energy are not endless and that the
Performance research programme is to improve environmental performance of the built environ-
the performance of buildings and the built environ- ment should be improved drastically. This has
ment through scientific inquiry into novel ways of strengthened the observation that many facilities
evaluating and influencing building performance comprising the built environment, particularly
using computational methods for measurement, offices, residences and various public-building
prediction and simulation of buildings’ perform- types, underperform. “Performance” in this context
ances, form finding, design generation and analysis, denotes the ability of buildings to meet technical
information modelling, decision-making and design and non-technical requirements (e.g., physical as
communication. Performance in this context refers well as psychological) placed upon them by their
to technical performance as well as qualitative owners, users and society at large.
performance —physical and psychological.
1.3 Position
The Computation & Performance (C&P) research
group plays a prominent role internationally in the
area of computational design research and its
application to performative architecture in
117
2 Composition
Guests 0 2 6 9 7 9 12
Total research staff 30 11,9 32 11,9 39 14,3 48 15,9 58 19,3 62 20,8 63 17,3
Prof. Patrick Teuffel PhD Managing partner Teuffel Engineering Consultants Stuttgart De
Michael Bittermann PhD Design executive Bittermann & Weiss Holzhaus GmBH Gerchsheim De
119
In the Netherlands
3 Research
•• Utrecht University (Faculty of Social Sciences)
•• The Hague University of Applied Sciences
•• University of Applied Sciences Utrecht
environment •• TNO
•• EGM Architects
Informatics [DI], Structures [S] and Adaptive •• Middle East Technical University (METU)
•• Bilkent University
Building Systems [ABS]), the Department of
•• Bill Harvey Associates
Architecture (Hyperbody [HY}) and the Faculty
of Civil Engineering and Geosciences (Structural In North and South America
Design Lab [SDL]). The resulting interdisciplinary •• Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
research group is nationally and internationally •• Princeton University
embedded in Architecture (e.g., BNA – Royal •• University of Tennessee
Institute of Dutch Architects) and Building and •• Universidade Federal da Bahia
121
4.2 Significance of the contribution
4 Scientific relevance
to the field
The developments of architecture and building
design are driven by attempts to achieve step
and quality changes in performance and the most important
way is the use of innovative computation in the
design, manufacturing and construction process.
This is highly recognised in the field of architecture
and the built environment and forms the central
idea behind the research programme. The signifi-
cance of the research contributions stands out
clearly in our collaborations with other research
institutes and with the professional world, exempli-
fied in numerous design and research projects
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of commissioned from industry and practice.
the research
The Computation & Performance research
programme is very well received in academia and 4.3 Coherence
practice. The combination of computational and Originally, in 2003, the research group was divided
performative design and research is considered in four parts, with a large part contributing to
very important in today’s academic and profession- the BLOB-ICT research programme, and a smaller
al world, as has been emphasised in our contacts part contributing to the ZAPPI research pro-
with internationally renowned architecture and gramme, the Hyperbody research group, which
engineering offices and the expressions of interest had just started, and the Structural Design Lab
we have received from researchers interested in in the Faculty of Civil Engineering. Since then,
joining our research group as PhD student or post- the research portfolio has been realigned and
doc. The approach expressed through the four consolidated and the Computation & Performance
research challenges and the ideas generated on research group was formed in summer 2008.
the topics of adaptive building systems, interactive Its formation acknowledges the overlapping
architecture and decision support systems for research fields and interests of the constituent
sustainable buildings generate a lot of positive groups, the underlying chairs/groups as core
reactions. The quality of the research expressed subgroups and anchor points for the researchers,
through research results, publications and the existing, bottom-up research and educational
collaborations is recognised as high. relations and collaborations, and the shared vision.
The coherence of the research group has since
been strengthened by allowing researchers to
participate in more than one subgroup. In terms
of FTE, the Design Informatics and Hyperbody
research groups form the primary research
centres of the C&P research group.
Key results/highlights
•• A formalism for representational flexibility for design supporting information exchange and
design querying (results from a five-year personal grant of Rudi Stouffs from NWO (Netherlands
Organization for Scientific Research), 2005). Has led to a joint project with researchers from
Carnegie Mellon University in the context of a research project funded by the National Science
Foundation concerning the comparison of as-built with as-designed building information.
•• A knowledge model with which to assess a building’s transformation, applied to the
transformation value of nursing homes in the Netherlands (with the Netherlands Board for
Healthcare Institutions, 2007).
•• Theory of unbiased human vision enabling the analysis of perceptual properties of spaces by
means of computation (part of the PhD dissertation of Michael Bittermann, 2009).
123
key publications
•• Bier, H., Bodt, K. de & Galle, J., 2006. ‘Prototypes for Interactive Architecture’. Interactive
Technologies and Sociotechnical Systems. Springer-Verlag, Berling Heidelberg, p. 21-28.
•• Coenders, J.L., 2007. ‘Barriers in computational structural design’. Journal of the International
Association for Shell and Spatial Structures (IASS). Volume 48, No. 4, IASS Madrid, p. 51-62.
•• Bittermann, M.S., Sariyildiz, I.S. & Ciftcioglu, Ö, 2007. ‘Visual perception in design and robotics’.
Integrated Computer-Aided Engineering. Volume 14, No. 1, IOS Press, Amsterdam, p. 73-91.
•• Stouffs, R., Krishnamurti, R. & Park, K., 2007. ‘Sortal structures: supporting representational
flexibility for building domain processes’. Computer-Aided Civil and Infrastructure Engineering.
Volume 22, No. 2, Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken, p. 98-116.
•• Gürsel, I., Sariyildiz, S., Akin, Ö & Stouffs, R. , 2009. ‘Modeling and visualization of building lifecycle
performance assessment’. Advanced Engineering Informatics. Vol 23, No. 4, Elsevier, Amsterdam,
p. 396-417.
•• Final report on “Thermal comfort in summer; general preliminary aspects concerning daylight and
sunlight” for the “Vela” roof – UNIPOL project in Bologna, Italy, July 2009 (in collaboration with
Green Building Innovation research group).
•• Computational support for Lifecycle Integral Performance assessment (CLIP), software tool for the
EU-funded Energy Performance Integration for public Corporate Real Estate (EPI-CREM) project in
partnership with Dutch Government Building Agency (Rijksgebouwendienst), November 2009.
•• iWEB, real-time collaborative design laboratory opening, 2006.
key dissertations
•• Biloria, N., 2007. Adaptive corporate environments: Creating real-time interactive spatial
systems for corporate offices incorporating computation techniques. T.U. Delft.
•• Bier, H., 2008. System-embedded Intelligence in Architecture. T.U. Delft.
•• Bittermann, M.S., 2009. Intelligent Design Objects (IDO): a cognitive approach for performance-
based design. Boekenbent, Barneveld.
key events
•• 9th EuropIA International Conference, 2003. Istanbul, Turkey (in collaboration with Istanbul
Technical University).
•• 3rd International Conference on Innovation in Architecture, Engineering and Construction (AEC)
2005. Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
•• Game Set and Match II International Conference, 2006. Delft, The Netherlands.
•• Challenging Glass International Conference On Architectural And Structural Applications Of Glass,
2008. Delft, The Netherlands.
•• Open Platform, SmartGeometry international workshop, 2009. San Francisco, USA.
key exhibitions
125
5.2 Key results/highlights
5 Societal relevance
•• protoSPACE Laboratory for multidisciplinary
collaborative design and new media research
established, 2006 [HY}
and quality •• Flextool model developed for the calculation
of the transformation value of care dwellings,
2006 [DI]
•• InteractiveWall: Prototype For An Emotive
Wall, commissioned by Festo, Hannover Messe,
Germany, 2009 {HY]
•• Computational support for Lifecycle Integral
Performance assessment (CLIP) software tool
developed for use by the Dutch Government
Building Agency (Rijksgebouwendienst), 2009 [DI]
5.1 Socio-cultural, technical and/or
economic quality
The Computation & Performance research is 5.3 Key knowledge contributions to
highly valued within the professional field. The practices and policies
combination of computational and performative •• Knowledge on semantic information modelling
design and research is considered very in conceptual design to Mecanoo and Philips,
important to further their practices, as has been 2007 [DI]
emphasised in our contacts and collaborations •• Knowledge on thermal performance evaluations
with internationally-renowned architectural and considering summer overheating, daylight and
engineering offices. The emphasis on both techni- wind and their impact on the design of a large
cal performance and socio-cultural performance roof structure in Bologna for the Open Project
is quintessential to our research approach and Office, Bologna, 2009 [DI]
is also emphasised in commissioned research,
design explorations and public exhibitions. These
projects commissioned by industry partners and 5.4 Evidence of the appreciation
public and semi-public organisations, such as of stakeholders
Festo, Philips, Dutch Government Building Agency Presenting our research findings at meetings
(Rijksgebouwendienst), Netherlands Board for (symposia, workshops, network meetings, stake-
Healthcare Institutions (Bouwcollege), etc., also holder meetings, tradeshows, exhibitions, etc.) with
illustrate the growing attention to valorisation societal stakeholders (in industry, practice, public
within the research programme. and semi-public organisations) yields wide approval.
The best evidence of this is follow-up projects
commissioned by the same or related stakeholders.
127
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 351 94% 478 73% 598 74% 910 94% 941 88% 1,117 86% 751 65%
External funding 21 6% 176 27% 212 26% 62 6% 130 12% 186 14% 397 35%
Total funding 372 100% 654 100% 810 100% 972 100% 1,071 100% 1,303 100% 1,148 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 358 94% 491 92% 619 92% 872 92% 1,228 93% 1,435 91% 1,159 91%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 3 0 3 1 2 0 3 0 10 0 5 0 2 0
Non-refereed articles 1 0 0 0 2 0 2 0 4 1 1 0 0 0
Books 1 0 1 0 1 0 4 0 4 1 1 0 0 1
Book chapters 16 0 1 0 17 0 33 0 23 20 16 9 8 2
PhD-theses 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 3 0
Conference papers 67 0 24 3 46 0 60 1 60 4 42 4 50 12
Professional publications 25 0 7 0 19 0 23 3 7 5 22 5 13 0
Editorships journals/book 3 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 1 1 7 0 0 0
Total publications 116 0 36 4 89 1 127 5 109 32 95 18 76 15
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 1 0 1 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2001 0 1 1 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 1 100%
2002 0 1 1 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2003 1 1 2 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 0 0%
2004 1 2 3 1 33% 3 100% 3 100% 3 100% 3 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2005 3 0 3 1 33% 1 33% 1 33% 1 33% 1 33% 1 33% 1 33%
Total 6 5 11 4 36% 6 55% 6 55% 6 55% 7 64% 2 18% 2 18%
129
8 Academic reputation
2004 First International Conference on Design Computing and Cognition Vice chair Stouffs Cambridge us
2005 AEC2005 Int Conf on Architecture, Engineering and Management Organisation/chair Sariyildiz Rotterdam nl
2006 Dutch Pavilion Big 5 Design and build Oosterhuis Dubai uae
2007 Computation Group - lecture series at MIT Invited lecturer Bier Cambridge us
2009 IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation Paper presentation Bitterman Trondheim no
2005 European Steel Award: V-House, Nesya - Norway ECCS Nijsse Brussels be
2006 National Steel Award: Cockpit in Acoustic Barrier Bouwen met Staal Oosterhuis Zoetermeer nl
2007 Arthur G. Hayden Medal: innovative bridge design: Nescio bridge A'dam ESWP Paul (Arup) Pittsburgh us
2007 Hangai prize; most talented young engineer in the IASS IASS Coenders Beijing cn
2009 GOOD DESIGN™ Award: FESTO Interactive Wall Chicago Athenaeum Oosterhuis Chicago us
2003 Foundation Arts and Public Space, SKOR Board member Sariyildiz Amsterdam nl
2009 Delft University of Technology Research fellow Bitterman Delft nl
2004 IEEE Computational Intelligence Society Senior member Ciftcioglu New York us
2003/8 Delft Women in Science DEWIS Founder and chair Sariyildiz Delft nl
2003/4 Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning & the Environment Member council Sariyildiz The Hague nl
2003/9 CUR Building & Infrastructure, general code committee Chairman Weeren, van Gouda nl
2006/9 Delft University of Technology Board of Doctorates Rector in PhD cmte Sariyildiz Delft nl
2007/9 City Induction, Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation (FCT) Consultant Stouffs Lisbon pt
Ext scientific
2009 Institute for Smart Structures, University of Tennessee Teuffel Knoville us
advisor
131
9.2 Structure of programmes
9 Next generation
PhD students are encouraged to participate in, and
take advantage of, the following programmes:
•• Yearly PhD research reviews with peers and/or
stakeholders
•• The Faculty of Technology, Policy and
Management offers courses and workshops for
PhD students, to train people in communication
and didactical skills
•• The Research School Integral Design of
Structures organises a yearly symposium for
PhD students to foster knowledge exchange
and offer PhD students feedback on their work
•• The newly established Graduate School for
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding Architecture and the Built Environment will
Starting with highly motivated PhD candidates formally organise PhD support and supervision
with research and/or experience in practice, or a at faculty level and offer courses on research
significantly demonstrated potential for research, methods, skills, study and writing
the objective of our PhD training is to develop
the candidates’ academic potential and their We also have joint PhD students with Istanbul
ability to independently conclude a rigorous and Technical University and Middle East Technical
intensive four-year PhD research programme. This University, taking advantage of additional
is achieved through solid supervision and struc- supervision and support at the partner university.
tural support in the form of training courses (PhD
skills and knowledge development), peer reviews,
and conference participation (research school 9.3 Supervision
and international scientific conferences). We aim Each PhD student is being supervised by at least
to further strengthen this structural support one professor and one co-supervisor or daily
at faculty level, focusing both on the personal supervisor, usually a senior researcher with a PhD.
development of the PhD student and high-quality The supervisor and co-supervisor are always from
supervision. the chair/group the PhD student is affiliated with.
If the interdisciplinary character of the research
project warrants a second supervisor (professor)
from a different chair/group or research pro-
gramme, this second supervisor is brought into the
research project. Double supervision will become
more and more the norm in order to increase
collaboration and cross-fertilisation.
The PhD student has monthly meetings with all
supervisors, and more often with the daily super
visor. PhD students are encouraged to participate
in symposia, workshops and international
conferences to learn from other participants
and to receive feedback on their work.
133
a large collection of scientific specialist literature
10 Viability
in the field of architecture and related disciplines,
a large model shop and CAM-Lab, a Building
Technology laboratory for the production of scale
1:1 designed building elements and research on
glass, and the protoSPACE laboratory for multi-
disciplinary collaborative design and new media
research (established by the Hyperbody group).
All laboratories are available to the entire faculty
and are regularly updated and improved in order
to fully support education and research.
135
11 SWOT analysis
Strengths weaknesses
Our research staff brings together a wealth of While one of our group members (Rudi Stouffs)
national and international experience in innovative has received a large personal research grant
research and practice. Our research bridges from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific
fundamental technical research and application Research (NWO), we must acknowledge that we
design, and includes both mono-disciplinary and are not successful enough in gaining funding from
interdisciplinary research. Staff members with a national and European research and science foun-
strong scientific background (in architecture, civil dations (e.g., NWO, STW, European Commission).
engineering, material science, and/or computer While this is a problem common to most research
science) contribute the fundamental technical re- groups within the faculty, partly because there
search, while part-time researchers with a position have not been many opportunities for research on
in practice keep a finger on the pulse with respect design and technology for the built environment,
to social needs and changes. The protoSPACE labo- greater effort is required. Our research output in
ratory for multidisciplinary collaborative design and international, peer-reviewed, academic journals
new media research, established by the Hyperbody (preferable with significant citation index ranking)
group, is a one-of-a-kind research environment. should be increased as well.
Opportunities threats
There is an increasing pressure from developers/ Financial cutbacks are not only reducing the size of
users and from legislation to increase building the research group but are also requiring research
performance, improving design quality and reducing staff to spend more time on teaching and other
design cost. This drives the way forward to auto- activities. This threatens to impact the necessary
mated processes. Increasing use of BIM, para- critical mass to develop and maintain a research
metric modelling and bottom-up simulation driven group and programme, and to reduce the super
generative design, the exploration of real-time visory support available to PhD students to develop
collaborative design processes, and the study of their research project and their own research
dynamically adaptive buildings and building systems, capacity. We must also guard against joining the rat
offer opportunities to support this revolution. We race of proposal writing and running after funding
see an increased interest from researchers and opportunities from national and European research
PhD students elsewhere to join us, often bringing and science foundations. In the same vein, we must
their own funds, or to collaborate on research refrain from focusing only on short-term successes
projects and proposals. Opportunities to receive while failing to maintain our strategic advantages.
research funding have improved.
12 Strategy
aspects. Multidisciplinary approach brings
together researchers from different subgroups
and the Green Building Innovation research
group and opens up opportunities for funding
applications.
•• Eco-city modelling: Applying our knowledge and
expertise in information and knowledge model-
ling to sustainable planning at urban or regional
level. Builds upon current PhD research and
collaborations with the Green Building Innova-
tion research group, ETH Zurich and TU Lisbon.
•• protoBIM: The next generation of BIM must
be a dynamic BIM in support of both para
12.1 Strategic planning; investments metric modelling and the design and operation
and collaboration of dynamic buildings, right from the conceptual
In the past (2005-2007), we have invested our level to the detail level of any building project.
financial resources strongly in building a critical Real-time links with multiple stakeholders of
body of PhD students. From here on, we are con- varying specialisations through cutting edge
sidering a different strategy. Firstly, emphasising adaptive interfaces and dynamic data base
self-funded PhD students (or ones who have their systems would define a major step change in
own scholarship). Secondly, post-docs may prove to computation and performance for the built
be a better financial investment. They tend to be environment.
easier to assess (as applicants) based on past ex-
perience, they can be productive much faster, they
can be assigned to upcoming projects more easily 12.3 Flexibility and anticipation
or actively participate in seeking external funding, of expected changes
and they can strengthen the support structure for We specifically chose not to fully centralise any
PhD students. In order to increase success with decision-making on research directions within the
external funding, it is important that we collabo- Computation & Performance research group, but
rate even more with other research groups within to retain and foster strong research subgroups
and outside the faculty in order to gain critical with their own research foci, while facilitating and
mass as well as the multidisciplinary knowledge and encouraging collaboration between subgroups both
expertise that is often necessary to target the at the strategic level and at the research activity
changing societal concerns and research topics to level. This decentralised approach offers subgroups
be addressed in funding programmes. the flexibility to foster and develop their own
strengths and makes the research group less
dependent on individual key researchers. Above all,
12.2 Research topics planned for the we must ensure to maintain a positive, creative
near future and their perspectives and challenging atmosphere in which researchers
Considering our current research activities and remain highly motivated and strive to bring out the
the opportunities presented in section 11, we can best in themselves.
identify the following research topics for future
development:
•• Adaptive building systems: Instant adaptation
of the building to environmental impacts and
user behaviour, such as sun, wind, tempera-
137
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1
urban landscape and cross-national comparisons.
The aim is to deepen our contribution to know
Mission, vision ledge in our specific disciplines and methodologies
whilst also enabling interdisciplinary research.
and objectives
1.2 Societal concerns and issues
The urban environment is a subject of intense
public concern. The impact of rapid change in
the physical form and the distribution of urban
development on the quality of the environment,
economic opportunities, social cohesion and cul-
tural identity is widely debated. The patterns and
effects of urban change, their wider impacts on
1.1 Mission, vision and objectives society, and the appropriate means of intervention
Mission: The Urbanism research group’s core task are all of increasing complexity and uncertainty.
is to mobilise its multidisciplinary knowledge, skills The Urbanism research group addresses these
and reputation to create more sustainable living concerns in relation to research on: the impact of
environments. The priority is to contribute solu- urbanisation of deltas and coastal areas in which
tions to the urgent challenges of urbanisation in 60 percent of urban development is located;
the context of climate change. We must achieve the contribution of urban and landscape design
excellence in research, international recognition and planning to adapting urban areas for climate
for the quality and value of our scientific work, change and rising sea levels; the creation of deci-
and raise the standing of urbanism as an academic sion tools to assist in designing more sustainable
research discipline in science and society. patterns of urban development and renewal; and
methods of territorial management that empower
Vision: The Urbanism research group aspires to communities and balance the need for both
make a major contribution to urbanism research continuity and change.
and practice in the Netherlands, and to be among
the very best in its peer group. We will exploit
the worldwide prestige of the Dutch tradition 1.3 Position
of urbanism to maintain active international The Urbanism research group holds a unique posi-
knowledge exchange, lead research consortia and tion in this field, resulting from a very particular
attract eminent guest professors and high-quality tradition of urbanism in the Netherlands, which
PhD and Master’s students. The truly international combines design, engineering and policy disciplines
composition of the group will create a rich aca- and professions. Thus, the Urbanism group enjoys
demic environment for investigating the physical, a wide multidisciplinary composition encompassing
social and cultural variations in which urbanism is the disciplines of landscape and urban design, urban
practised. The research group will provide a flag- development, spatial planning and environmental
ship for the internationalisation of TU Delft in the technology.
European Research Area, Asia and Latin America.
140 Urbanism
city programme, makes counter-proposals for
1.4 Research area existing cities and stores its knowledge using an
The Urbanism research group focuses on impor- evolutionary gaming programme.
tant issues within urbanisation around the world.
It considers the Dutch territory as an important U-Lab: Today’s issues and challenges demand
laboratory. Four teams work simultaneously in this a fundamental renewal of the techniques and
field, each of which addresses specific topics: instruments of design and planning. The fact that
the Netherlands is located on a delta, which will
The Randstad Centre for Strategic Spatial Planning create new challenges as a result of climate-
and Design: the question of the regional scale is change and ecology, makes it necessary to
an increasingly dominant issue within urbanisation reorganise the technical nature of urban design
worldwide, and one which makes it necessary to and consider partnerships with other disciplines
develop new concepts, approaches and methods of such as hydraulic engineering.
planning and design. In the international literature
The Randstad Holland has for many years been Urban Landscape Architecture: the unique Dutch
considered a key example of a poly-nuclear urban tradition and future of making Dutch landscapes
region. Contributing to concepts and strategies are relevant at more than just the local level.
for the future development of the Randstad and The transformation of these landscapes through
conducting studies are among the centre’s most continuing urbanisation, changing land use and
important goals. climate change is creating unprecedented chal-
lenges for the designs of the future landscapes
The Why Factory (T?F): T?F is a global urban think and urban landscapes. This focus on landscape
tank and research institute, run by Faculty of design is organised within the Urban Landscape
Architecture, Delft University of Technology and Architecture team.
MVRDV. It was founded in 2008 with the ambition
of expanding the argumentative power of the
architectural and urbanistic professions. Research
on the Future City is carried out through the
interactive composition of three fields. It specu-
lates on possible theoretical models in the model
141
142 Urbanism
Seminar and exhibition
'Memory of the City', 2005.
143
2 Composition
Guests 43 58 60 61 50 39 40
Total research staff 116 19,8 155 25,2 159 25,9 168 31,3 173 34,2 150 31,0 153 26,1
Rotterdam/
Prof. Henco Bekkering Partner/director HKB Stedebouwkundigen NL
Groningen
Prof. Eric Luiten Advisor on Spatial Quality Province of South Holland The Hague NL
Prof. Han Meyer PhD Chairman Board International New Town Institute Almere NL
Meta Berghauser Pont PhD Owner and Director PERMETA architects Amsterdam NL
Rene van der Velde Landscape architect Strootman Landscape Architects Amsterdam NL
Prof. Maurits de Hoog Senior Urban Advisor Urban Planning Department Amsterdam NL
144 Urbanism
3
3.2 Number and affiliation of
guest researchers
Research In 2009 alone, the Urbanism research group
hosted 79 guest researchers, 39 of whom are
environment conducting a PhD. The current guest researchers
hail from a wide range of countries and are a very
and embedding important means of maintaining contact with part-
ner universities. They include Prof. Gabriel Dupuy
(Université de Paris I-Panthéon-Sorbonne), Prof.
Juval Portugali (Tel Aviv University), and Prof. Nikos
Salingaros (University of Texas). Among the guest
are Prof. Paul Drewe and Prof. Jurgen Rosemann
(National University of Singapore).
145
Mary Landrieu (Senior United
States Senator from the State of
Louisiana) receives during her 2009
visit to Delft the publication Dutch
Dialogues, 2009.
146 Urbanism
3.4 Actual collaborations with stakeholders 3.5 Participation in consortia
We are involved in a very large number of collabo- •• Adaptive Strategies (Dutch Knowledge
rations, only a selection of which can be given here: for Climate Programme): TU Delft, City of
Rotterdam, Arcadis Engineers, Deltares,
•• American Planning Association (APA), Tulane UNESCO-IHE, INBO Architects and
University (New Orleans) and Harvard Dura-Vermeer Constructors.
University (Boston Mass) on delta-urbanism •• Atlas of the Dutch Water Defence Line:
(Meyer & Hoog). University of Amsterdam, Wageningen
•• European Commission DG Agri, DG Regio, University and Atelier Rijksbouwmeester.
the Commission Inter-Service Group on Rural •• Closed-Open Rijnmond (Knowledge for Climate
Development and numerous regional govern- Programme): TU Delft Faculty of Civil Engineer-
ments in nine countries of the EU through the ing, HKV-Engineers, RIVM, ABF-research.
EU 7th Framework Project: RUFUS (Nadin, Nes, •• Comparative Planning Systems and
Wandl). Methodology: German Academy of Spatial
•• Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Research, Dortmund University, Turin
Environment (VROM), City of Amsterdam, Polytechnic University, Nordic Centre for
City of Rotterdam, and Municipality Westland Spatial Development Stockholm, KU Leuven,
on Spacemate research (density in urban Technical University Prague and the University
development) (Berghauser Pont and others). of Thessaly.
•• Nieuwland Erfgoedcentrum Lelystad and •• Delta Flood Technology: Participants - TU Delft
Provincie Flevoland on the Digital Polder Atlas (ULab and representatives of the Faculty of
of the Netherlands. Civil Engineering), University of Twente,
•• RijksInstituut voor Volksgezondheid en Milieu TU Eindhoven, Wageningen University, Deltares,
(National Institute for Public Health and the UNESCO-IHE.
Environment) (RIVM). •• European Planning Systems (for National Hous-
•• United Nations Environment Programme and ing and Planning Advice Unit, UK): De Montfort
International Environment Technology Centre University Leicester and advisors at HafenCity
(IETC) on the project: ‘Every Drop Counts’ University Hamburg, University College Cork
(Schuetze and others). Ireland, and the Université de Bretagne
•• International New Town Institute (INTI) and Occidentale Brest, France.
the Universities of Tel Aviv, Istanbul Bilgi, •• Rural Futures (RUFUS): Leibniz University
Istanbul Mimar Sinan, and the Istanbul Hannover, INRA INRA-SAD Mirecourt
Metropolitan Planning and Urban Design Centre France, University of East Anglia UK, Lund
on the application of complexity theory in urban University Sweden, Wageningen University,
development. SPRINTconsult Germany.
•• Connected Cities Interreg IIIC €1.3 •• The Green City Calculator: City of Rotterdam,
million network of 25 partners in 10 European Rotterdam Climate Initiative, City of Almere,
countries, combining both local and regional Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the
authorities and research organisations Environment, Dutch Green Building Council.
(Hoeven, Spek).
•• Why Factory collaboration with ABT
Consultancy, Berlage Institute, Arup, DGMR
Consultancy, the Netherlands Architecture
Institute and many others (Maas).
147
4
4.2 Significance of the contribution
to the field
Scientific relevance The Urbanism group is a major player within this
field, employing an average of 65 FTE staff during
and quality the seven-year review period and dedicating an
average of 30 FTE to research. Also, the research
culture is relatively strongly embedded in Urbanism
within the context of the Built Environment
disciplines.
4.3 Coherence
Much progress has been made in strengthening
the coherence of research within the Urbanism
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of group by combining the efforts of staff skilled
the research in urban and environmental design, landscape
The quality of the urban environment is a architecture and spatial planning. There are three
determining factor in the social, economic and envi- research programmes: Randstad, ULab and Urban
ronmental performance of societies and the quality Landscape, which are currently being incorpo-
of life of their citizens. National and international rated into research groups at the OTB Research
research programmes are giving increasing focus Institute and the Why Factory. A new Chair in
to the engineering, design and policy questions Politics and Design (from 2009) is giving particular
prompted by these changes, for example opportu- emphasis to working across the design engineering
nities arising from the Dutch government’s Report and policy fields.
on Architecture 2008, which adopts the policy to
strengthen the position of Urbanism.
4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
Research activity and skills in the Urbanism group The full list of outputs from 2003 to 2009
are very relevant to these questions and often demonstrates a significant increase in the number
innovative in their approach. For example: research of publications since 2003 with a peak in 2007.
on urbanising deltas brings together urban design, The trend in outputs mirrors changes in staff
spatial planning and civil engineering in an original numbers dedicated to research. The overwhelming
and much- needed combined research project weight of publication is in books, book chapters and
(Meyer and others); advanced tracking technolo- conferences with relatively few journal articles.
gies are used to investigate pedestrian oriented
urban designs (Spek and others); space syntax The Urbanism group is also playing a significant
methodology has been applied to understanding editorship role in peer-review journals: Journal
neighbourhood security and archaeological remains Design Research, Inderscience (Klaasen) and
(Nes); and a combination of quantitative, qualitative Planning Practice and Research, Routledge (Nadin),
and mapping methods is informing strategies to l’Architecture d’Aujourdhui, Archipress (Maas);
improve the resilience of cities to climate change and in the book series Design, Science and Planning,
(Ronwiriyaphanich, Lin, Esch and others). Techne Press (Klaasen) and Research in Urbanism
Series, IOSpress (Hoeven).
148 Urbanism
4.5 Results and outputs
key results/highlights
•• Expansion of PhD programme with 90 PhD registrations and 44 doctoral degrees during the
seven-year period, with scholarship funding from Alfa-Ibis, NWO, Nuffic and national and regional
governments.
•• Series of International Forums on Urbanism (IFOU) conferences Modernization and
Regionalization (2006), Permacity (2007), City and Water (2008), The New Urban Question (2009).
•• EU 7th Framework Project RUFUS: Rural Futures (2008-11), led by Leibniz University, Hannover
with seven partners, and a €269K value to the Department of Urbanism.
•• The first comprehensive survey and analysis of the formal properties of Dutch polder types
resulting in an inventory of the 9000 polders in the Netherlands and publication of results in the
now standard text in Dutch and English.
•• The Green City Calculator that quantifies and compares the “greenness” of a city. This programme
computes data from the city and turns it into an accessible, comparable and measurable state-
ment on its sustainability.
key publications
•• Fernando Maldonado, A. M., 2008. Expanding networks for the urban poor: water and
telecommunications services in Lima, Peru, Geoforum. Vol 39, No.6. Elsevier, Amsterdam,
p. 1884-1896.
•• Meyer H., 2009. Reinventing the Dutch Delta: Complexity and conflicts, Built Environment,
Vol 35, No.1. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 432–451.
•• Nadin, V. & Stead, D., 2008. European spatial planning systems, social models and learning, DISP.
Vol 172, No.1. ETH, Zürich, p. 35-47 (shortlisted for AESOP best journal paper annual award).
•• Steenbergen, C., 2003. The Design Experiment of the Great European Gardens and Landscapes,
Birkhaüser, Basel.
•• Steenbergen, C., Reh, W., Nijhuis S. & Pouderoijen M., 2009. De Polderatlas van Nederland,
Pantheon der Lage Landen, Thoth, Bussum.
•• Drewe, P. Klein, J. L. and Hulsbergen, E. K. Fernandez Maldonado, A. M. and Nasrallah, R., 2008.
The Challenge of Social Innovation: in Urban Revitalization, Techne Press, Amsterdam.
•• Hooimeijer, F. & Toorn Vrijthoff, W. (eds.) 2007. More Urban Water: Design and Management
of Dutch Water Cities, Taylor & Francis, London/Leiden.
•• Read, S. J., Rosemann and J. van Eldijk (eds.) 2005. Future City, Spon Press, London.
149
Key outputs with major impact on practices and policies
•• sLIM-seminars for professional practitioners and policy makers 2004 – 2009: Intensive Land-use and
Public Space (2004), Living on the Edge (2005), Urban Densities (2007), Self-Organization and the City
(2008), Urban Deltas (2009).
•• Connected Cities: An EU Interreg IIIC North-west Europe funded project exploring urbanism, sustainable
transport and territorial cohesion. TU Delft was lead partner of 25. Results were published in five theme
issues of the Nova Terra professional journal, NIROV. (Netherlands Institute for Spatial Planning and
Housing), The Hague.
•• Spatial Metro: An EU Interreg North-west Europe funded project investigating pedestrian mobility and
city regeneration. Outputs included the book: Hoeven, F. D., van der, Smit, M. G. J. and Spek S. van der (eds.)
2008. Street-level Desires: Discovering the City on Foot, Pedestrian Mobility and the Regeneration of the
European City Centre, TU Delft, Delft.
•• The Why Factory, 2009. Visionary Cities, 12 reasons for claiming the future of our cities. NAi Publishers,
Rotterdam.
•• Dutch Dialogues cooperation resulting in the book: Meyer, H., Morris, D. & Waggonner, D. 2009.
Dutch Dialogues, New Orleans – Netherlands: Common Challenges in Urbanized Deltas, Sun, Amsterdam.
•• UNEP cooperation on water management resulting in the major report: Schütze T. (ed.) 2008. Every Drop
Counts. Environmentally Sound Technologies for Urban and Domestic Water Use Efficiency.
United Nations Environment Programme – Environment Management Centre, Osaka/Shiga.
key dissertations
•• Berghauser Pont, M.Y. & Haupt, P.A., 2009. Space, Density and Urban Form. Delft University Press,
Amsterdam.
•• Klaasen, IT (2003) Knowledge-based Design: Developing Urban & Regional Design into a Science,
Delft University Press, Amsterdam.
•• Pinzon Cortes, C.E., 2009. Mapping Urban Form: Morphology studies in the contemporary urban landscape.
TU Delft.
•• Spek, S. C. van der, 2003. Connectors: the Way Beyond Transferring, Delft University Press.
key events
•• Complexity Theories of Cities, International Conference, 2009. Delft (Funded by the Royal Netherlands
Academy of Arts and Sciences, KNAW).
•• Fifth International Space Syntax Symposium, Delft, 2005.
•• International Symposium Polders: a Theatre of Land and Water, International Architecture Biennale,
Rotterdam, 2005.
•• Smart Architecture & Sustainable Built Environments (SABSE) 2009 International Conference, 2009.
Delft.
•• Why Factory launch in Delft by the Dutch Minister of Education, Culture and Science, Ronald Plasterk,
and the symposium My Future City, Delft, 2009.
150 Urbanism
key exhibitions
•• Three expositions and public debates on Dutch Urbanism Today: Transformations of the Urban Landscape,
2003. Working for the City, 2005. The Memory of the City, 2006.
•• International exhibition: A Wider View on Cultural Landscape Challenges in Europe, Apeldoorn 2008.
151
5
5.2 Key results/highlights
•• Dutch Dialogues: workshops, conferences,
Sociatal relevance publication and advice contributing to recon-
struction of New Orleans as a sustainable
and quality delta-city (Meyer and de Hoog) (2008-2009).
•• Editing of the collected papers of Nikos
Salingaros in Principles of Urban Structures;
and Gabriel Dupuy (formerly only available in
French) in Urban Networks - Network Urbanism,
Amsterdam, Techne Press, 2009 (eds. Klaasen
& Schaick).
•• Netherlands Architecture Institute commission
for research and, analysis and building of
15 polder models.
5.1 Socio-cultural, technical and/or •• Rotterdam Stadsregio commission for
economic quality comparative research into public open space
The agenda for Urbanism research is strongly provision in the metropolitan context.
conditioned by societal priorities. We recognise
that patterns of physical urban development are
critical to the objectives of economic competitive- 5.3 Key knowledge contributions to
ness, sustainability and social cohesion. practices and policies
•• Schütze T. (ed.) 2008. Every Drop Counts.
In the Netherlands, researchers are working on Environmentally Sound Technologies for Urban
socially relevant projects, such as the impact of and Domestic Water Use Efficiency. United
climate change on urban and rural development, Nations Environment Programme –
urban containment and dispersal, the well-being Environment Management Centre, Osaka/Shiga.
of people in the built environment, the post-war •• Berghauser Pont, M.Y. & Haupt, P.A. 2001/2009.
housing stock, accessibility to services, the quality Spacemate Instrument for Describing Space
of landscape and public places, and the effective- Usage in Quantitative and Qualitative Terms,
ness of tools for design and planning. (was first developed by Ermeta Architects in
2001 in cooperation with Bureau Parkstad but
In other countries, many of our staff and PhDs are has been further developed, disseminated and
conducting research on urgent questions regarding applied through PhD research.
the social and economic impacts of rapid urbanisa- •• Stead, D. & Nadin, V., 2008. Spatial Planning:
tion. The international staffing and orientation in Key Instrument for Development and Effec-
Urbanism has provided a platform for international tive Governance for the Countries of Central
research including research-led studios organised and Eastern Europe, Geneva, United Nations
by Read, Sepulveda, Vollebregt and others. Economic Commission for Europe, Geneva,
UNECE (also translated into Russian and other
languages).
152 Urbanism
5.4 Evidence of the appreciation less experienced staff. PhD theses are published
of stakeholders in collaboration with Techne Press and others are
Strong evidence of stakeholders’ appreciation can summarised on the web and held in the TU Delft
be found in the sources of funding from EU Interreg repository. Independent projects communicate
programmes, national ministries, provinces, their results through websites such as
municipalities, the Netherlands Architecture Fund, www.connectedcities.eu, www.rufus-eu.de,
and NGOs. A reasonable amount of external income www.spacemate.nl and www.thewhyfactory.com.
for client-led research has come from social actors
who are prepared to pay for the work – evidence T?F publishes studies through a series of books
of the importance they assign to this research. in collaboration with NAi Publishers in Rotterdam
Over the latter part of the review period we have and Tonik graphic design office in Amsterdam and
set aside resources in the form of staff time to through Films in collaboration with Wieland en
make more substantial funding bids on issues of Gouwens, animators in Rotterdam and the BBC in
social and academic interest defined by the group. London. It discusses them through television pro-
grams with the VPRO in Hilversum and exhibitions
Delta urbanism research was commended by in different places (in 2008: Netherlands Architec-
the US Senator Mary Landrieu after a Congres- ture institute, Hong Kong Design Institute.
sional delegation visited the Netherlands. Senator In 2009: NAI and Aedes Gallery Berlin).
Landrieu reported in writing that she was ‘inspired’
by the innovative methods for water management.
5.6 Evidence of impacts
Research outputs regularly lead to further work Urbanism research is cited in other academic and
through follow-up projects for the same or new professional publications. Books and dissertations
clients. For example, previous work on mapping are sold internationally on a commercial basis by
polders is to be continued by the Nieuwland publishers keen to continue working with the
Heritage Centre and extended to the Province of group. Evidence is also found in the numbers
North Holland. attending exhibitions, such as the 35,000 visitors
who came to see Luiten’s A Wider View on Cultural
Dutch Minister of Education, Culture and Science, Landscape Challenges in Europe in Apeldoorn
Ronald Plasterk, opened the Why Factory labora- in 2008.
tory.
The Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the 5.7 Commissioned research by
Environment (VROM) funds Urbanism’s chair of societal actors
Design and Politics. •• American Planning Association, City of New
Orleans and The Netherlands Embassy in
Washington DC, USA: Dutch Dialogues.
5.5 Dissemination strategies •• National Housing and Town Planning Advisory
Important media for the dissemination of research Unit, UK: European Planning Systems and their
includes: edited books through one of our three Impact on the Provision of Housing.
book series (such as Hulsbergen et al. (eds.), Shift- •• Municipal Office for Spatial Planning Amsterdam
ing Sense in Spatial Planning, Looking Back to the (DRO): New Waterscapes in Amsterdam.
Future (2005, Techne Press); and special editions
of journals (e.g. Nova Terra). These media allow for
the publication of personal research and confer-
ence papers and support the skills development of
153
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 752 76% 1,131 83% 1,399 81% 1,567 75% 1,808 81% 1,730 79% 1,415 65%
External funding 241 24% 236 17% 336 19% 530 25% 435 19% 460 21% 763 35%
Total funding 993 100% 1,367 100% 1,735 100% 2,097 100% 2,243 100% 2,190 100% 2,178 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 768 88% 1,092 89% 1,260 85% 1,551 91% 2,036 90% 2,080 90% 1,619 84%
Other costs 101 12% 132 11% 230 15% 161 9% 216 10% 232 10% 299 16%
Total expenditure 869 100% 1,224 100% 1,490 100% 1,712 100% 2,252 100% 2,312 100% 1,918 100%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
154 Urbanism
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 2 0 0 4 1 1 3 0 6 0 2 0 2 0
Non-refereed articles 0 0 2 0 1 0 7 0 3 0 2 0 9 1
Books 3 1 8 3 16 4 12 0 19 0 18 1 17 4
Book chapters 38 6 28 13 80 30 79 13 64 7 69 16 61 10
PhD-theses 1 3 3 2 2 0 2 0 0 4 4 3 2 2
Conference papers 25 14 39 6 64 20 67 12 85 6 58 1 49 11
Professional publications 44 1 38 29 53 15 35 9 54 5 46 5 46 2
Editorships journals/book 8 3 4 4 15 2 13 3 15 13 18 2 15 0
Total publications 121 28 122 61 232 72 218 37 246 35 217 28 201 30
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2001 1 1 2 0 0% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2002 0 2 2 0 0% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 0 0% 1 50%
2003 3 3 6 0 0% 0 0% 3 50% 3 50% 3 50% 3 50% 0 0%
2004 4 0 4 1 25% 1 25% 1 25% 1 25% 1 25% 1 25% 2 50%
2005 2 2 4 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 4 100% 0 0%
Total 10 8 18 1 6% 4 22% 7 39% 7 39% 7 39% 8 44% 3 17%
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 1 1 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2001 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2002 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2003 1 0 1 0 0% 1 100% 1 - 1 100% 1 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2004 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2005 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
Total 1 1 2 0 0% 1 50% 1 50% 1 50% 2 100% 0 0% 0 0%
155
8 Academic reputation
2004 UNESCO International Conference on Sustainable Land Use Decisions Nadin Beijing cn
2006 Korea City Forum "everyone's ideal city" De Bois Seoul kr
2007 Int Symp Architecture and Renewable Energy Sources, Ass. of Hungarian Architects (MÉSZ) Schuetze Budapest hu
2008 2nd WSEAS/IASME Int Conf Energy planning, energy saving, environmental education de Jong Corfu gr
2008 Conf Security of Global Port Cities, Indiana University Meyer Bloomington us
2009 Int Conf on Cultural and Ecological Landscapes – CYUT Luiten Taichung tw
2009 Sustainable architecture and urbanism conference, Univ of Petra van Nes Petra jo
2005 5th international space syntax symposium Organisation, chair van Nes Delft nl
Rosemann,
2006 International Forum on Urbanism 2006 Organisation, chair Beijing cn
Bekkering et al.
2007 Urbanism on Track - Expert meeting tracking technologies Organiser Spek, Schaick Delft nl
2008 International expert meeting Randstad 2040 Organiser Hoeven, Nadin Delft nl
2008 IFLA world conference in the Netherlands Chair Luiten Quebec ca
Co-leader Dutch
2008 Workshops Reconstruction New Orleans ‘Dutch Dialogues’ Meyer New Orleans us
delegation
2009 Opening of the Why Factory / Symposium “My Future City Organiser Maas Delft nl
2005 Polders. A Theatre of Land and Water IABR Curator Steenbergen Rotterdam nl
2006 The Memory of the City Curator Meyer Delft nl
2008 A Wider View on Cultural Landscapes in Europe, Triënnale Apeldoorn Curator Luiten Apeldoorn nl
2008 Triennale Landscape Architecture 2008, consisting of 12 exhibitions Board member Sijmons Various
2007 Award for Best Paper at the Planning Cultures Int Symp HafenCity Univ Nadin/Stead Hamburg de
2009 Gerd Albers Award 2009 Best publication: ‘New Rhythms of the City’ ISOCARP de Hoog The Hague nl
156 Urbanism
Table f. Honorary positions
2005 Bodembescherming in Behoud en Ontwikkeling - mid term review Cmte member Luiten The Hague nl
2008 EU 7th Framework Programme (FP7) Evaluator Stead Brussels eu
2009 STW Open Technology Programme Evaluator van der Hoeven Utrecht nl
2005/> Netherlands Architecture Fund Advisory cmte Velde Rotterdam nl
2009 Luxembourg National Research Funds Core Programme Reviewer Nadin Luxembourg lu
2003/> Journal of Design Research - human aspects as central issue of design Editor-in-Chief Klaasen Olney uk
2004 Scientific series Design/Science/Planning (Techne Press) Editor Klaasen Amsterdam nl
2003/> Planning Practice and Research (Routledge) Editor-in-Chief Nadin Oxford uk
2003 Town Planning Review (Liverpool Univ Press) Editorial board Nadin Liverpool uk
2005 European Journal of Transport and Infrastructure Editorial board Stead Delft nl
Co-editor,
2003 Blauwe Kamer - Journal for Landscape Luiten Wageningen nl
Chief-advisor
2003/> Nova Terra NIROV Editor Hoeven The Hague nl
2008/> Vitale Stad (Vital City), trade journal urban renewal and vitality Editor in Chief de Bois Amsterdam nl
2003 Een Cultuur van Ontwerpen Ministerial Advisor Sijmons The Hague nl
2003/> Dutch Architects Register Vice chair of board Bekkering The Hague nl
2009 Advisory team City of Dublin, Ireland Member Schrijnen Dublin ie
Ministerial
2009 Kunst van Leven – Modernisering Monumentenzorg Luiten The Hague nl
scientific advisor
2008 City of New Orleans Scientific Advisor Meyer New Orleans us
157
9
Increasing PhD numbers, applications and the
wider variety of funding mechanisms has prompted
Next generation the introduction of many changes in the manage-
ment of the PhD process. All PhDs undergo a
first-year peer-review procedure with external
professorial level panel members. In 2008, a
departmental level admissions procedure was
introduced which involved the collective scrutiny
of applications, together with a more systematic
approach to PhD training. These are all important
precursors to the new Faculty Graduate School.
The group fully supports the creation of the
Graduate School, which will provide a platform
for PhD training, interaction of PhDs across the
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding faculty and debate on themes relevant to
Over the review period, the Urbanism group architecture and the built environment.
has pursued an explicit objective to expand PhD
research with the result that it now has the
largest number of PhD candidates and successful 9.2 Structure of programmes
doctoral degrees in the faculty. The objective of PhDs are organised in a four-year programme.
expansion has been achieved with a very positive In the first year, the candidate prepares a com-
impact on the group. Numbers have grown from prehensive research proposal and a long paper,
12 in 2003 to 52 in 2009. The ratio of PhD which is assessed by a professorial panel following
candidates to research FTEs was 2:1 in 2009. The a public presentation. The European Postgraduate
new objective is to maintain PhD numbers at this Master’s in Urbanism programme (EMU) provides a
level but to widen the pool of supervisors. Since pre-PhD track for exceptional students who may
2008, there has been a decline in the proportion graduate from EMU and move directly into PhD
of candidates on TU Delft salaries and a sharp research. For these candidates the PhD can be
increase in those funded by scholarships, including completed in three years.
grants from Nuffic, the China Scholarship Council,
INTI, and national governments. During the review period, PhD training has been
based primarily on the TU Delft-wide provision,
including courses on generic PhD skills with needs
determined on an individual basis. Candidates have
also been able to join other courses in the Master’s
and EMU programmes including those on meth-
odology. A few candidates have taken courses at
other universities. From 2008, the Urbanism group
introduced its own course, with the help of
external consultants, specifically to support
academic writing skills. In future the Graduate
School will provide courses introducing students
Dissertation by Ina Klaasen PhD. to the rudiments and methods of design, urban
studies and technical research. The programmes
incorporate a variety of existing teaching forms,
including advanced EMU, MSc and graduation
studio courses and seminars.
158 Urbanism
9.3 Supervision still doing research, 29 percent were having
PhD candidates typically have a chief supervisor difficulties making progress. The group has
and a daily supervisor. They are given assistance in reviewed supervision and support to these
finding the supervisor best able to supervise the students and is trying to ensure that they get
research. In special cases the school may assign a additional support.
second supervisor. Supervisors may only be changed
under exceptional circumstances when judged
beneficial to the research performance and disser- 9.5 Educational resources
tation. TU Delft provides training for supervisors. The faculty has excellent study facilities in the
university and faculty libraries, and special facilities
such as computer hardware and software.
9.4 Success rates The admission, reception and induction of interna-
Doctoral study is a significant and successful part tional PhDs have not always been trouble-free and
of Urbanism’s research output. From 1999 to in 2009, the university introduced new procedures
February 2010, 105 candidates started a PhD in and an induction course for all PhDs.
Urbanism; 39 have obtained their doctoral degrees,
14 withdrew from the programme and 52 are
still working towards their PhD. The output and
recruitment of PhD candidates to the Urbanism
group has been fairly even across the period from
1999. A comprehensive review of progress at the
end of 2009 indicated that of the 52 candidates
159
10
10.2 Available infrastructure
In addition to the faculty’s overall infrastructure,
Viability the Urbanism group calls on good, and in places,
exceptional research infrastructure. Of note is the
extensive digital library of landscape analysis and
design drawings from the Netherlands and abroad.
It contains a thematic GIS database of maps and
is equipped with the most advanced hardware and
software, putting it amongst the best facilities in a
faculty of architecture in Europe.
160 Urbanism
Opening of The Why Factory attended by
Ronald Plasterk (Dutch Minister of Education,
Culture and Science), standing left of
Prof. Winy Maas in Glasshouse East, 2009.
161
11 SWOT analysis
Strengths weaknesses
Our location and knowledge of the Dutch ‘land- Experience and skills in peer-reviewed publications
scape metropolis’ the Randstad, and the reputation and academic research bidding is concentrated
of Dutch urbanism are major advantages. We have among a few people. The research programmes are
an international body of committed researchers not managing research activity as closely as we
with links to domestic practice and global net- would like.
works, a large body of PhDs, and an emphasis on We need to focus more on the proportion of
research-driven Master’s studios. women in senior positions, the visibility of the
There is a breadth of disciplinary expertise in research programmes, planning and organising of
design, engineering and policy in urban studies; research teams around bidding opportunities, the
strong integration of research and social concerns management of PhDs, and support for research
through client-led research. using GIS.
Our key resources are staff time and enthusiasm; There is a risk of becoming over-committed to
a steady stream of research commissions; and good short-term client-led research with insufficient
specialist design and media facilities in the faculty. focus on proactive bidding and publication.
Opportunities threats
There is increasing interest in the vital contribution Some competitors are more productive in peer-
that urbanism can make to adaptation for climate reviewed publications and in accessing funding.
change, building urban resilience, and avoiding the The great losses in research materials and time
costs of poorly coordinated urban development. suffered as a result of the 2008 fire remain an
The strong interest in Dutch expertise in urbanism issue for some staff.
and planning from elsewhere in Europe, Asia and Decreasing resources may squeeze out research
Latin America continues to be a major advantage. activity, prevent us from making a change in
Research funding bodies are paying more attention culture and damage PhD completion rates.
to urban development. There are competing demands from teaching,
The planned merger of OTB and the faculty will speculative bidding for short-term income
bring research staff with more experience in con- generation and many international links.
tract funding, academic publishing, and scientific We have fewer resources for promoting new
expertise into the research group. research. Additional demands are made on
The inclusion of the Why Factory brings practical departmental budgets. Promotion of excellent
experience. PhD students to academic posts is rarely possible.
We risk losing excellent young researchers.
162 Urbanism
12
The necessary steps to achieving this shift in
balance are
Strategy 1. to give revised research programmes (which
will be combined with the OTB programmes) a
more significant and visible role in the creation
of research teams, the determining of individual
research areas and the recruitment of PhDs;
2. to strengthen the ‘research culture’ by further
developing staff competencies in academic pub-
lication, contract funding and PhD supervision;
3. to consolidate our extensive international rela-
tionships and use the reputation of Urbanism at
TU Delft and our international studios to access
or create strong multinational research groups;
A reorientation of research activity in the and
Urbanism group has begun and will continue. This 4. to improve the cohesion of the Urbanism PhD
will require greater focus on academic programme- community, widen the pool of supervisors, and
led research projects, which in turn means much increase monitoring and support within the
more responsive mode external funding bids. There framework of the Graduate School and
will also be a rebalancing of professional publication TU Delft PhD initiatives.
and academic peer-reviewed publication. This is a
change in emphasis rather than a transformation;
we must continue to make the most of what we
do best.
163
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1
Mission: The IMBE research group aims to encour-
age and evaluate innovations in the management
Objectives and of the built environment and contribute to the
best possible alignment between supply and
research area demand by developing and testing evidence-based
knowledge on a) performance requirements and
constraints, adding value through real estate, and
successful and sustainable real estate strategies
(product-oriented research); and b) the planning,
briefing, design, construction, management and
redevelopment of the built environment (process-
oriented research).
briefing
initiation
& design
Physical environment
Society Area
Stakeholders
Individuals Building
use &
construction
management
166 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
We aim to become a recognised key academic
player in this field by delivering theories, conceptu-
al frameworks, (benchmark) data, key performance
indicators, guidelines, process models and decision-
support systems based on empirical research and
research-by-design.
167
1.3 Position 1.4 Research Area
The particular contribution of our group to the •• Real Estate Management
field is its integrated and multidisciplinary approach •• Design & Construction Management
•• Urban Area Development
to the design, development and maintenance of
•• Stakeholders
buildings and urban areas. In order to achieve
•• Design Quality
the optimum connection between the process of •• Economics of the Built Environment
planning, design and construction and the quality •• Life Cycle Approach
of the product, we conduct in-depth studies of •• Sustainability
the phases prior to design (initiation and briefing, •• Decision Making
exploring performance criteria, stakeholder
analysis) and after construction (maintenance,
renovation, transformation) and of the processes
of partnership and innovation during the design
and construction phase, with particular regard to
spatial quality, utility value, stakeholder needs and
constraints, legal issues and decision making.
168 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
2 Composition
Guests 6 10 9 7 19 24 31
Total research staff 37 12,2 41 13,0 47 16,4 52 18,7 63 17,4 71 20,0 72 15,5
Theo van der Voordt PhD Senior researcher Center for People and Buildings Delft nl
169
3
Engineering (e.g. Deciding about Design Quality),
Civil Engineering and Geosciences (e.g. Supply Chain
Research Integration), and Technology, Policy and Manage-
ment (e.g. Environmental Law).
environment
In order to improve our connections with prac-
and embedding titioners (demand and supply side), extend our
research capacity, and support the multidisciplinary
research approach, we have founded three know
ledge centres together with external parties:
1. The Center for People & Buildings (CfPB)
was founded with the Governmental Building
Agency and ABN AMRO Bank in 2001. Its
research focuses on the relationships between
3.1 Embedding people, working processes and places of work.
The IMBE research group has close connections 2. The Centre for Process Innovation in Building
with the Housing Quality research group of the and Construction (CPI) was founded in 2002
same Real Estate & Housing Department). We run with the Faculty of Civil Engineering and
a number of joint projects with Architecture (e.g. Geosciences and TNO. The centre’s objective is
on the Transformation of Vacant Buildings and to promote innovation in the area of building
the Future Role of the Architect), Urbanism (e.g. processes throughout the building industry.
the Knowledge City and Corporations & Cities)
and Building Technology (e.g. Sustainability) and
work with the Delft Faculties of Industrial Design
OTB
REM UAD DCM Housing
Research Institute
for the Built
Building Economics • Building Law • Computational Design
Environment
170 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
3. The Knowledge Centre for Urban Area Develop- 3.2 Number and affiliation of
ment (SKG) was founded in 2006 with the guest researchers
Ministry of Spatial Planning (VROM), TU Delft A number of our staff members are visiting
and other public and private partners. The professors at other universities, just as we receive
research focuses on the formation of partner- external academic staff visits to our group in Delft
ships between public and private partners and from time to time, such as Rick Peiser (Harvard),
interaction between different knowledge fields Francis Duffy (DEGW), Rachel Luck (University
such as real estate, design, process manage- of Reading), Spiro Pollalis (Harvard), Siri Hunnes
ment and finance. Blakstad (Norwegian University of Science and
Technology Trondheim), and Jonathan Barzelai
The IMBE group works with other universities (Dalhousie University Canada).
and business schools in the Netherlands. It also
has close working relationships with universities in
the USA, the UK, Asia and Brazil. Our researchers
participate in international networks such as the
International Council for Building Research Studies
and Documentation (CIB), the Association of Euro-
pean Schools of Planning (AESOP) and EuroFM.
171
3.3 International and national positioning 3.4/5 Actual collaborations with
The international position of the research group stakeholders and participation in consortia
can be demonstrated by: IMBE regularly collaborates with:
•• the invitation of IMBE staff members as •• TNO (Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific
(key note) speakers at international conferences Research)
such as CIB (Working committees W096, •• Ministry of VROM
•• Dutch Government Building Agency
W104, W060, T57), the Association of European
(Rijksgebouwendienst)
Schools of Planning (AESOP), the Association
•• Institute for Construction Law
of Researchers in Construction Management •• Regieraad Bouw
(ARCOM), the eCAADe (European CAAD •• the PSIBouw
association). •• Bouwend Nederland
•• its organisation of workshops (ENHR– W19, •• the Forum Gebiedsontwikkeling
Knowledge Management in Design Projects). •• Agentschap NL (formerly Senter Novem)
172 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
4
market analysis and forecasting. This was due to
the academic and societal debates and demand
Scientific relevance for knowledge. The particular themes that we
currently focus on are integrated urban area
and quality development, supply chain integration, informa-
tion management systems, strategies to reduce
and prevent vacancy, willingness to pay, and real
estate strategies for higher education on a campus
level. Future priorities will include the alignment
of organisations and cities, integrated contracts,
SMEs in construction, valuation studies, design-
ing for flexible demand, real estate strategies of
health care organisations and municipalities, and
sustainability by transformation.
4.1 Quality and scientific relevance of
the research
The quality that distinguishes us is our multidiscipli- 4.2 Significance of the contribution
nary approach, which integrates the interests and to the field
constraints of various stakeholders over the whole The research group contributes to:
life cycle in order to achieve a high-quality built •• Improved understanding of the spatial impact
environment from the social, cultural, functional, of trends on the labour market, organisational
technological, legal and economic perspectives. change, changing activity patterns and work
We constantly seek to combine our fundamental flows, and technological innovations in com-
research themes with issues that arise from the munication.
field in practice. Before 2003, we focused mainly •• Concepts and theories with regard to identify-
on successful real estate strategies in the office ing critical success factors for cooperation,
and retail sectors, on design management, and on innovation and integration in design and
construction management processes.
•• Ways to cope with a growing need for spatial
quality and cost effectiveness, adding value
through real estate management and design
and construction management, and sustainabil-
ity in a dynamic market.
173
4.3 Coherence 4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
The IMBE research group is divided into three The group publishes in both professional journals
units: and double blind peer-reviewed international
1. Real estate management. journals, such as:
2. Urban area development. •• Cities
3. Design and construction management (Figure 2). •• Design Studies
key publications
•• Vries, J.C. de, Jonge, H. de & van der Voordt, D.J.M., 2008. ‘Impact of real estate interventions
on organisational performance.’ Journal of Corporate Real Estate. Vol 10, No.3. Emerald Group
Publishing Ltd., Bingley, p. 208-223.
•• Volker, L., Lauche, K., Heintz, L. & de Jonge, H., 2008. ‘Deciding about design quality: design
perception during a European tendering procedure.’ Design Studies. Vol 29, Elsevier, Amsterdam,
p. 387-409.
•• Keeris, W.G., 2008. ‘A different look on risk by property investments.’ Journal of European
Real Estate Research. Vol 1, No.2. Emerald Group Publishing Ltd., Bingley, p. 151-161.
•• Remoy, H. & Voordt, D.J.M. van der, 2007. ‘A new life: conversion of vacant office buildings
into housing.’ Facilities. Vol 25, No.3/4. Emerald Group Publishing Ltd., Bingley, p. 88-113.
•• Chao-Duivis, M.A.B., 2006. ‘An analysis and comparison of the Dutch standard contract for
integrated contracts (turnkey/design and build) and the FIDIC yellow book.’ International
Construction Law Review. Vol 23, No.4. Informa UK Ltd., United Kingdom, p. 450-478.
174 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
Key books or chapters of books
•• Emmitt, S., Prins, M. & Otter, A. (eds.), 2009. Architectural management: international research
& practice. Wiley-Blackwell, Oxford.
•• Soeter, J.P., Koppels, P.W. & Jong, P. de, 2009. The future development in the Dutch construction
market. In: Les Ruddock (ed.), Economics for the modern built environment, p. 229-248. Taylor
& Francis/Spon Press, London.
•• Loon, P.P. van, Heurkens, E., Bronkhorst, S., 2008. The Urban Decision Room; an urban
management instrument. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Hooimeijer, F. & Toorn Vrijthoff, W. van der (eds.), 2006. More urban water; design and
management of dutch water cities. Urban Water Series, 10. Taylor & Francis/Balkema, Leiden.
•• Voordt, D.J.M. van der, & Wegen, H.B.R. van, 2005. Architecture in use; an introduction to
the programming, design and evaluation of buildings. Elsevier Architectural Press, Oxford.
key dissertations
•• Gehner, E., 2008. Knowingly taking risk; Investment decision making in real estate development
(published in 2008 by Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft).
•• Chen, Y., 2007. Shanhai Pudong; urban development in an era of global-local interaction
(published in 2007 by IOS Press Academic Publishers, Amsterdam).
•• Sebastian, R., 2007. Managing Collaborative Design (published in 2007 by Eburon Academic
Publishers, Delft).
•• De Vries, J.C., 2007. Presteren door vastgoed (Performance by Real Estate) (published in 2007
by Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft).
•• Peek, G.J. 2006. Locatie-synergie; een participatieve start van de herontwikkeling van
binnenstedelijke stationslocaties (Location synergy, a participatory start of the redevelopment
of inner city railway locations) (published in 2006 by Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft).
key events
•• International Conference Changing roles: New Roles, New Challenges (2009) organising
committee including conference proceedings.
•• International Conference Corporations and Cities (2008) organising committee including a book
publication.
•• European Facility Management Conference (2008) scientific committee including conference
proceedings.
•• 2nd International Conference: World of Construction Project Management (2007) organising
committee including conference proceedings.
•• CIB meeting of W096 on Architectural Management (Yearly from 1998 to recent) organising
committee including conference proceedings.
key exhibitions
•• Building for Bouwkunde (2009, NAi Rotterdam) – exhibition and award ceremony of the open
international ideas competition new Faculty of Architecture TU Delft.
175
5
research is our extensive involvement in realising
a new building for the Faculty of Architecture
Societal relevance after the fire of 13 May 2008 (Ideas Competition,
Thinktank, Campus vision), the TU Delft campus
and quality strategy and real estate portfolio development.
5.3 Key knowledge contributions to
practices and policies
The research contributes to the development and
testing of new strategies and tools for successful
and sustainable management of the built environ-
ment, both now and in the future, by amassing a
body of knowledge on themes such as:
5.1 Socio-cultural, technical and/or •• The impact of real estate strategies on
economic quality attaining organisational goals and objectives,
The social relevance of the research is evidenced •• Managing the campus of the future in
by the research projects commissioned and by the connection with the Knowledge City
knowledge centres affiliated with the department •• Implications of new policies and legislation
of Real Estate and Housing. Professors from IMBE on cooperation in construction.
are involved in the management teams of the re- •• The effects of complex multi-actor decision-
search centres. Both junior and senior researchers making processes on time, quality and costs.
are involved in the management and implementation
of projects. The problem statements and aims of Subjects addressed in our research include the
the projects are being discussed with public and evaluation of new workplace concepts, the legal
private partners. Preliminary findings, conclusions and societal impact of integrated contracting,
and recommendations are discussed in workshops collaborative design, sustainable urban redevelop-
and at national and international conferences ment, the redevelopment of obsolete urban areas,
and usually attract positive feedback. Clients and the reduction of failure costs through supply-chain
related organisations are often involved in follow- management, past performance measurements by
up activities. This indicates that the research contractors, and the changing role of the architect.
issues have a high level of societal relevance and
are useful to the stakeholders.
176 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
5.6 Evidence of impacts
Because of our research activities, we are often
invited to participate in steering committees,
discussion groups, think tanks, symposia and so on.
5.4 Evidence of the appreciation Based on the quality and output of our research,
of stakeholders many staff members have built up long-term
Public and private clients, consultants, developers, professional partnerships with other academic
contractors, designers and (representatives of) scholars and professionals. This is also shown in our
end-users apply research findings and deliverables diverse and dynamic research portfolio.
in practice. Research findings are published in
both the professional and scientific media. The
knowledge gained from the research projects is
implemented in the Faculty of Architecture’s BSc
and MSc programmes and in its external teaching
activities (Master City Developer, TIAS Nimbas
Business School, Nyenrode University, Amsterdam
School of Real Estate, Fontys School of Applied
Sciences, Hogeschool Rotterdam, Den Haag and
Utrecht). Several papers and theses written by
our MSc and PhD students have received awards
from professional institutions and been published
as books.
177
Transformation of
previously vacant
office building.
178 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
Jury deliberation “Building for
Bouwkunde” ideas competition.
Exhibition of the
“Building for Bouwkunde”
ideas competition.
179
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 442 81% 612 59% 852 60% 859 58% 858 56% 1,074 66% 686 56%
External funding 101 19% 428 41% 568 40% 617 42% 668 44% 553 34% 550 44%
Total funding 543 100% 1,040 100% 1,420 100% 1,476 100% 1,526 100% 1,627 100% 1,236 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 463 91% 718 90% 811 89% 964 92% 1,285 93% 1,418 92% 1,007 90%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
180 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 5 0 4 1 3 0 1 1 3 0 5 1 2 1
Non-refereed articles 2 0 1 1 1 0 4 0 1 0 1 0 1 0
Books 4 0 4 6 9 6 8 5 10 1 8 1 11 0
Book chapters 10 0 22 10 9 1 14 1 29 2 14 1 31 9
PhD-theses 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 0
Conference papers 19 0 18 9 38 9 70 10 50 13 40 6 34 5
Professional publications 33 1 39 2 35 6 51 11 37 35 64 20 62 10
Editorships journals/book 1 0 2 0 1 3 2 3 7 1 5 1 6 1
Total publications 74 1 90 29 96 25 151 31 140 52 138 30 147 26
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2001 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2002 2 1 3 0 0% 2 67% 2 67% 2 67% 2 67% 1 33% 0 0%
2003 0 2 2 1 50% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2004 1 1 2 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 1 50% 1 50% 0 0%
2005 2 3 5 0 0% 4 80% 4 80% 4 80% 4 80% 1 20% 0 0%
Total 5 7 12 1 8% 8 67% 8 67% 8 67% 9 75% 3 25% 0 0%
181
8 Academic reputation
Wamelink, Prins,
2009 Int Conf Changing Roles, New roles - New Challenges Organisation Noordwijk NL
Geraedts, Hobma
2009 Conference of Dutch Institute for Construction Law 40 year Chair Chao-Duivis Amsterdam NL
2009 Working Conference Center for People and Buildings Organisation Pullen, Voordt Delft NL
2006/9 METU, Value Management Association Hong Kong, COBRA, IDDS Scientific cmte Prins Hong Kong CN
Chair module,
2007 Workshop BIM in Construction / Stanford university Wamelink Stanford US
advisor
2008/9 International open ideas competition Building for Bouwkunde Organiser Volker Delft NL
Arkesteijn, Volker,
2008/9 Think tank envisioning faculty of the future Theme coordinator Delft NL
van de Putte
Scientific cmte
2009 Building Brains Wamelink, Volker Delft/Utrecht NL
participant
2005 VOGON PropertyNL Research Award 2005 VOGON Geraedts, Voordt Amsterdam NL
2006 Research Paper Award Int Conf PRoBE PRoBE Vries Delft NL
Building Stock
2007 Best Young Researcher Award Remoy Tokyo JP
Activation
2008 Research Paper Award at 24th ARCOM conference CIOB Volker Cardiff UK
2009 Changing Planning Cultures Paper Award 4th IFoU Conf Heurkens Delft NL
2010 Royal Award ('Officier in de Orde van Oranje Nassau') Queen Beatrix Jong Lansingerland NL
182 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
Table e. Honorary positions
2004/9 Dutch Association of Cost Engineers (DACE) Board member Prins Nijkerk NL
2004+9 European Society for Construction Law Secretary Chao-Duivis The Hague NL
2005 Cornell's International Workplace Studies Program Visiting professor Voordt Ithaca US
2007 Nyenrode Business Universiteit - Real Estate Valuation Professor Hordijk Breukelen NL
2009/> Housing association DUWO Board member Heijer Delft NL
Scientific board
2007/9 PSIBouw (Prog in Process/System innovation in Building/Construction) Chao, Wamelink Gouda NL
member
2007/> Stichting Bouwresearch SBR - programme committee Board member Wamelink Rotterdam NL
2008/> Standards committee on the classification of building costs (NEN 2631) Cmte member Jong Delft NL
2008/> Post Master Institute for Architecture Program cmte Prins Delft NL
2009 Platform Vernieuwing in de Bouw Board member Jonge Gouda NL
Member editorial
2004 The International Construction Law Review Chao-Duivis London UK
board
2007/9 Cities Reviewer Chen, Volker, Remoy London UK
2009 Facilities Editorial board Voordt Bingley UK
2009 Architectural Engineering and Design Management Guest editor Prins Loughborough UK
Member policy
2007/9 Advisor Evidence Based Reasoning policy CfPB Volker Delft NL
board
2008/> DHV Senior Consultant Wamelink Amersfoort NL
2009 Metropole Price for Area Development Assessment cmte Franzen The Hague NL
183
9
of Building Economics (Willingness-to-pay, Analysis
and Forecasting of the Real Estate Market),
Next generation Building Law (Integrated Project Deliveries) and
Computational Design (Preference Based Design).
9.3 Supervision
Each PhD candidate is supervised by one professor
in monthly meetings, and also by a day-to-day super-
visor (usually a senior researcher with a PhD) on a
weekly or twice-weekly basis. Furthermore, PhD
candidates are encouraged to participate in sym-
posia, workshops and international conferences, to
learn from other participants and seek feedback
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding on their work. Once a year, PhD candidates are
The IMBE research group supports the concept obliged to present their progress in a colloquium.
of research-based education – that is to say, it Two external peer reviewers and promoters assess
implements research findings into the BSc and the candidate on the basis of a progress report
MSc programmes and, by the same token, seeks and their presentation and their responses to the
to promote links between the work done by questions raised. The PhD candidates also meet
students, such as essays graduation theses, and once a month to discuss urgent matters in the
the research programmes of the various depart- organisation and content of their projects.
ments. MSc students are encouraged to choose a
research subject that is linked to IMBE’s research
programme. MSc students are taught both qualita- 9.4 Success rates
tive and quantitative research methods for design, The number of PhD students fluctuates every year.
management and engineering. This education Most PhD students require a little over four years
builds on BSc courses in philosophy of science and to finish the dissertation. Only a few discontinue
stimulates to different types of design oriented their research before attaining their PhD (see
research. Table 7b). There was a significant increase in the
number of PhDs awarded in the period 2005-2010
because of substantial investment originating from
9.2 Structure of programmes the revenues of earlier externally funded research
The PhD research is closely linked to the organisa- projects.
tional structure of the IMBE group, including real
estate management (PhD projects on Performance
by Real Estate, Cause, Cope and Prevent of 9.5 Educational resources
Structural Vacancy, and Managing the University Each PhD candidate prepares a personal educa-
Campus), design and construction management tional plan. Depending on their individual knowledge
(PhD projects on Knowingly Taking Risks, Deciding and skills, PhD candidates are encouraged to follow
about Design Quality and Managing Collaborative courses in research methods, scientific writing in
Design) and integrated urban area developments English, presenting research findings, or courses
(PhD subjects such as The Inner Historic City, relating to the subject of their research. Our
Location Synergy, Shanghai Pudong, and Strategy department regularly organises workshops for
as a Force). This is also the case for our core areas young researchers on subjects such as how to get
started, scientific debating, networking or market-
ing yourself effectively.
184 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
10 Viability
185
11 SWOT analysis
Strengths weaknesses
• Our multidisciplinary and integrated approach • Low number of papers in renowned scientific
with strong links between management, design journals.
and technology. • The need for developing sound handbooks and
• Our broad problem-oriented scope (different key publications.
stakeholders, different aspects, all phases of • The need for better external financial support
the lifecycle). by participation in long-term research
• A strong record of past performance. programmes (NWO, EU).
• High societal relevance demonstrated by the • The need for better collaboration in joint
positive support from the profession. international research projects and publications.
• An independent position. • The need for improvement in the integration of
• The strong connections with our knowledge our core areas into key research projects.
centres and well-established professional and
academic networks.
Opportunities threats
186 I n n o vat i o n s i n t h e M a n a g e m e n t o f t h e B u i lt E n v i r o n m e n t
12
•• On the individual and team levels, appoint-
ments are being made to increase the output of
Strategy scientific papers, with more intensive planning
and monitoring of output progress, support
from more experienced researchers with a track
record of high performance, training in scientific
writing and a reduction of time spent on profes-
sional papers in favour of scientific papers.
•• More effort will be channelled into participation
in long-term international research programmes
by connecting individual projects into group
projects and more intensive co-operation and
participation in international academic networks.
•• Participation in large-scale long-term pro-
IMBE aims to continue being a highly qualified grammes and in the Graduate School will be
multidisciplinary research group by continuous used to attract more PhD students and inte-
reflecting on our research programme and its grate them into scientific networks, as well as
results, both internally (through discussions, retaining post-docs.
colloquia, critical appraisals etc.) and externally
(learning from paper reviews, responses to
conference presentations, participation in
international workshops and projects etc.).
Current areas of activity such as successful
real estate strategies, integral analyses of area
development and innovations in design and
construction management will also be continued.
We will also maintain a balance between our
broad scope and focus points. Adaptations in the
research programme and strategies to change
and make further improvements include a number
of issues:
•• Due to societal needs, there will be greater
focus on sustainability in cross-sectional
research.
•• The merger with the OTB Research Institute
will be used to further the exploration of
mutual interests and the elaboration of joint
projects, in particular in urban area develop-
ment and quality management.
187
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1 Objectives and
research area
Mission: Our aim is to develop knowledge that will
be used to support practices in the building, regen-
eration and maintenance of housing in the decades
to come. Societal demands require a functional
and environmental transformation of the current
housing stock quality. The Housing Quality (HQ)
programme uses multidisciplinary approaches to
provide new scientific insights through a combina-
tion of four perspectives: technical knowledge
of the health and sustainability of dwellings;
organisational knowledge for the management of
housing providers; knowledge of effective policy
instruments and enforcement procedures and
innovation of building and maintenance processes.
1.1 Vision, mission and objectives
Vision: The quality of the housing stock is of Objectives: The objectives include fundamental
major importance to the occupants’ quality of contributions to the scientific fields that relate
life, to the ecological footprint in urban areas to the improvement of housing quality; contribu-
and to economical assets. This quality has to be tions to the innovation of the educational curricula;
maintained and improved considerably in coming and insights that can be utilised for improving the
decades to support the increasing demands of actual quality of the housing stock. The programme
occupants, to reduce the ecological burden and aims to be a frontrunner at national level and to
to contribute to CO2 reductions. These major be a key player in specific niches of the interna-
challenges require innovative, multidisciplinary tional research arena, particularly in the areas of
scientific research, in which technical engineering assessment methods for energy efficient housing,
approaches are combined with social sciences. building regulations, and strategic management of
social landlords.
Product Organisation
Quality
Safety
Usability
Health
Energy
Environment
Governance Process
190 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
1.2 Societal concerns and issues to energy and other quality issues in dwellings, in
Increasing the environmental and socio-economic combination with the evidence on poor perform-
sustainability of the housing stock constitutes the ance in the building industry, demands strong
largest investment challenge within the built envi- policy, management and process innovations.
ronment. Climate change is one of the major global
challenges of our time. It has, and will continue
to have in the coming decades, a huge impact on 1.3 Position
how we think about the physical quality of housing The academic discipline of Housing studies the
in all its dimensions: technique, management, way in which society meets the accommodation
governance and processes. It has recently become needs of households. The position of the academic
clear that the need for a dramatic reduction of CO2 discipline of Housing within the wider field of
emissions will, now more than ever, have a major architecture is to contribute to the realisation
impact on the direction taken with respect to new- of a sustainable housing stock. In doing so, HQ
ly built houses as well as existing housing stock. focuses not so much on the aesthetical quality,
The building stock in the European Union accounts but on the quality of housing in terms of safety,
for about 40 percent of total EU energy consump- comfort, health, energy saving, environmental
tion. Energy saving in the built environment has and socioeconomic sustainability as well as the
been rated so highly by the European Union that it processes that can improve this quality.
has opted for a communal approach. In 2000, the
European Committee adopted an action plan in line
with this to improve energy efficiency, stating that 1.4 Research area
the use of energy in the Union should be reduced Within HQ, research questions address the task
by one percent annually until 2010. This was the of improving housing quality. Firstly, in relation to
precursor to the slogan ‘20% in 2020’. the product: what constitutes sustainable housing
stock and how can the sustainability of the existing
Although crucial to society, transformation of the housing stock be improved? Secondly, in relation to
housing stock is not a simple matter. It is ham- the processes, organisation and governance: how
pered by the characteristics of existing building can the actors involved in the housing market con-
structures as well as a lack of innovative tribute to the realisation of sustainable housing,
approaches within the construction sector. The and how can the transformation process of the
cost of failures in the Dutch building industry existing housing stock be improved, for example,
amounts for more than 10 percent of its turnover. by ensuring adequate organisation, cooperation
Total investment costs in homes were 46 billion and policy instruments? These questions form the
euros in 2007, which means an annual wastage basis of the research being carried out within four
of 4.6 billion euros. In recent years there have themed groups: Sustainable and Healthy Housing
been many problems with construction safety (product), Housing Management (organisation),
and building physics. In many cases, the faults are Policy Instruments and Enforcement Procedures
not due to a lack of technical knowledge but to (governance) and Innovation of Building and
carelessness in the building process. Furthermore, Maintenance Processes (processes) - see Figure 1.
the possibility to stimulate sustainable housing
management and development through central
government regulation is limited. Non-profit and
commercial housing organisations have become
much more independent and are now major actors
in determining housing policies, for which they
require new strategies, skills and resources. Thus,
the need for higher performance with respect
191
2 Composition
Guests 0 0 0 2 2 4 5
Total research staff 14 9,5 25 13,2 19 13,9 27 18,0 26 17,3 29 20,6 25 17,4
192 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
3 Research
environment
Furthermore, an increasing number of contacts
are being laid with several regional universities of
applied sciences like Utrecht and The Hague where
Dr Vincent Gruis and Dr. Laure Itard are part-time
lecturers. Some of the academic staff are affiliated
with the Netherlands Graduate School for Housing
and embedding and Urban Research (Nethur).
193
Important international platforms relevant to the the Corpovenista programme (2004-2008) with
HQ programme include the International Council housing associations and SBR (organisation for
for Building Research Studies and Documentation knowledge transfer to the building sector), which
(CIB) and the European Network of Housing was linked to a large national subsidy programme
Research (ENHR). Almost all of our researchers are (BSIK – Habiforum - Innovative use of land).
coordinators and regular members of one or more Regeneration of urban areas was the central
working groups within these organisations, and subject of the programme.
regularly take part in international conferences or
working-group activities.
3.5 Participation in consortia
Throughout the years, we have participated in
3.4 Actual collaborations with stakeholders a series of EU projects in various programmes.
In 2009, we took the initiative to start the These include: Build-on-RES and EPA-ED in the
Housing Quality 2020 programme (Knowledge SAVE/ALTENER programme, Demohouse and
development for energy transition of the housing Green Solar Cities in the CONCERTO programme,
stock). Based on our ongoing research agenda, we ERABuild in the ERA-network, Hopus in the Urbact
managed to secure the commitment and financial II programme, SHELTER in the IEE programme
support of fifteen Dutch Housing Associations and and Beem-Up in the 7th Framework programme.
Aedes, the Federation of Housing Associations for We currently have a number of new applications
a four-year research and knowledge dissemination pending for the IEE and 7th FP programme. The
programme. The aim of HQ 2020 is to develop opportunities for participating in EU projects are
practical knowledge underpinned by fundamental on the increase. The EU considers the improve-
research to support the housing associations in ment of the quality of the housing stock, with an
their decision-making processes to implement their emphasis on the energetic performance, a priority.
energy transition ambitions. Technical innovations having been developed, it is
now time for large scale implementation. There is,
A similar approach lead to the MOVe programme. therefore, a great focus on policy, management
During the 1990s, Dutch housing associations and process innovation. At a national level, we have
underwent a transformation from task-oriented, participated in consortia working on programmes
government-driven organisations to independ- funded by national subsidies and have collaborated
ent, market-oriented organisations with public with market parties on such programmes as men-
objectives. The term ‘social entrepreneurship’ was tioned in 3.4. Other projects included Rigoureus
introduced to identify the way in which hous- (EOS), Building the future (EOS) together with
ing associations should operate in their new role TNO’s centre for applied sciences and the ECN
positioned between State, market and society. The Energy research Centre of the Netherlands. More
MOVe programme (‘Maatschappelijk Ondernemer- recently, we participated in the Climate Proof Cities
schap en Voorraadbeleid van woningcorporaties’ programme (FES subsidies) and in NICIS (BSIK
– Social Entrepreneurship and Housing Stock Policy subsidies), which involved seven municipalities.
of housing associations) has been established to
fund scientific research into the development
of social entrepreneurship in housing manage-
ment and to facilitate the transfer of knowledge
between science and housing associations through
the organisation of master classes for partici-
pating housing associations. During the review
period, there have been various other collabora-
tive projects with stakeholders. The largest was
194 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
Construction failure in
balconies in a building project,
Wippolder, Delft.
195
4 Scientific relevance
and quality
4.2 Significance of the contribution
to the field
The Housing Quality research contributes to the
development of the scientific discipline of housing
in relation to the societal challenges of sustainable
housing transformation and management.
It focuses, in particular, on theories for innovation
and organisation. The stimulation and diffusion
of innovations that contribute to a sustainable
housing stock is crucial to the achievement of the
environmental and socio-economic objectives for
the performance of the housing stock.
196 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
4.4 Quality of the scientific publications
The quantity and quality of the Housing Quality
research group has improved considerably in the
review period. All research staff publish interna-
tionally in peer-reviewed journals. In recent years,
an increasing number of articles have been pub-
lished in journals from the ISI list. Furthermore,
the impact scores of these journals have increased.
We publish in journals in the fields of housing,
building, energy, and policies and regulations.
Important journals include: Housing Studies, Urban
Studies, Building Research and Information, Energy
and Buildings, Building and Environment, Energy
Policy, Environment and Planning B: planning and
design, Open House International and the Interna-
tional Journal of Law and the Built Environment.
Key results/highlights
•• Theory, models and tools for strategic asset management of housing associations.
•• Theory, models and tools for performance-based maintenance contracting.
•• Modelling and ordering of systems for building regulations and control.
•• The application of LCA tools for housing quality policy decisions.
•• Modelling of relation between energy efficiency regulations and actual energy use by occupants.
Key publications
•• Gruis, V.H., Nieboer, N.E.T. & Thomas, A., 2004. Strategic asset management in the social rented
sector: approaches of Dutch and English housing associations. Urban studies, Vol 41 No. 7. SAGE
Publications, Thoasand Oaks, p. 1229-1248.
•• Beerepoot, M., 2007. Government regulation as an impetus for innovation: evidence from energy
performance regulation in the Dutch residential building sector. Energy policy, Vol 2007, No. 35.
Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 4812-4825.
197
•• Guerra Santin, O., Itard, L.C.M. & Visscher, H.J., 2009. The effect of occupancy and building
characteristics on energy use for space and water heating in Dutch residential stock. Energy and
buildings, Vol 41, No. 11. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 1223-1232.
•• Meijer, F.M. & Visscher, H.J., 2006. Deregulation and privatisation of European building-control
systems? Environment and Planning B: Planning and Design, Vol 33, No. 4. Pion, London, p. 491-501.
•• Meijer, F.M., Itard, L.C.M. & Sunikka, M.M., 2009. Comparing European residential building stocks:
performance, renovation and policy opportunities. Building research and information, Vol 37,
No. 5/6). Routledge, Oxford, p. 533-551.
•• Beerepoot, M., 2004. Renewable energy in energy performance regulations: a challenge for EU
member states in implementing the energy performance of buildings. DUP Science, Delft.
•• Gruis, V.H., Visscher, H.J. & Kleinhans, R.J. (eds.), 2006. Sustainable neighbourhood transformation
Amsterdam. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Meijer, A., 2006. Improvement of the life cycle assessment methodology for dwellings. IOS
Press, Amsterdam.
•• Koopman, M., van Mossel, H.J. & Straub, A. (eds.), 2008. Performance measurement in the Dutch
social rented sector. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Gruis V. & Nieboer N. (eds.), 2004. Asset management in the social rented sector; policy and
practice in Europe and Australia. Kluwer Academic Publishers, Dordrecht.
•• Nieboer, N.E.T., 2003; Strategisch beslissen over het woningbezit; voorraadbeleid van
Nederlandse woningcorporaties en vastgoedbeleggers. DUP Science, Delft.
•• Visscher, H.J., Meijer, F.M,Beekman, N., Droste, E. & Langman, M.A., 2003. Certificering op het
gebied van bouwregelgeving. DUP Science, Delft.
•• Hasselaar, E. & Rijsbergen, O. van, 2005. Toetslijst Gezond en Veilig Wonen. Nederlandse
Woonbond, Amsterdam.
•• Straub, A., Vijverberg, G.A.M. & Mossel, H.J. van, 2005. Prestatiegericht samenwerken bij
onderhoud. Basisinformatie Bouwkundig Onderhoud. SBR, Rotterdam.
•• Duijm, F., Hady, M., Ginkel, J.T. van & Bolscher, G.H. ten, 2007. Gezondheid en ventilatie in
woningen in Vathorst; onderzoek naar de relatie tussen gezondheidsklachten, binnenmilieu
kwaliteit en woningkenmerken. GGD Eemland, Amersfoort.
key dissertations
•• Klunder, G., 2005. Sustainable solutions for Dutch housing. Reducing the environmental impacts
of new and existing houses. DUP Science, Delft.
•• Hasselaar, E., 2006. Health performance of housing, indicators and tools. IOS Press under the
imprint DUP, Amsterdam.
•• Beerepoot, M. 2007. Energy policy instruments and technical change in the residential building
sector. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
198 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
•• Mossel, H.J, van, 2008. The purchasing of maintenance service delivery in the Dutch social
housing sector optimising commodity strategies for delivering maintenance service to tenants.
IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Cum Laude: Heijden, J.J. van der, 2009. Building regulatory enforcement regimes, Comparative
analysis of private sector involvement in the enforcement of public building regulations. IOS
Press, Amsterdam.
key Events
key Exhibitions
In 2005, Prof. Thomsen organised an exhibition of the entries for the Dutch Refurbishment Award
(‘Nationale Renovatie Prijs’) at the Faculty of Architecture in Delft.
199
200 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
Renovation with high energy
ambitions, Poptahof, Delft.
201
5 Societal relevance
and quality
5.2 Key results/highlights
1.
2.
Criteria for performance-based maintenance
contracting
Formulation of an assessment guideline for a
certification scheme for private building control
3. Harmonisation protocol for LCA databases and
calculation methods
4. Assessment method for a healthy indoor
climate
5. Development of a decision-making model for
heat and cold networks for housing associations
202 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
presentations, and the commissioning of new 5.7 Commissioned research by
research. Furthermore, we present our results at societal actors
national conferences and courses for profession- Throughout the years, several dozens of national
als. Twice a year, we give two four-day courses on companies, branch organisations and governmental
Strategic Portfolio Management and on Profes- bodies and housing associations have commissioned
sional Maintenance of Housing Stocks. us to carry out contract research. For some time
now, we have also managed to interest groups
of commissioners to form a consortium and
5.6 Evidence of impacts participate in projects or programmes that run for
Our conferences and courses always attract a several years. This offers us better opportunities
large number of participants. Professional books to link our scientific research aims to their projects.
and reports are well distributed. Commissioners
keep coming back to us with new projects.
Renovation to passive
house level, Roosendaal.
203
6 Earning capacity
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 745 49% 830 43% 1,027 49% 1,223 51% 1,345 53% 1,471 58% 1,062 50%
External funding 771 51% 1,122 57% 1,078 51% 1,160 49% 1,175 47% 1,051 42% 1,059 50%
Total funding 1,516 100% 1,952 100% 2,105 100% 2,383 100% 2,520 100% 2,522 100% 2,121 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 891 69% 1,006 67% 1,125 68% 1,455 69% 1,522 69% 1,805 68% 1,689 78%
Other costs 397 31% 498 33% 522 32% 659 31% 694 31% 854 32% 478 22%
Total expenditure 1,288 100% 1,504 100% 1,647 100% 2,114 100% 2,216 100% 2,659 100% 2,167 100%
3,0
External funding
2,5
Direct funding
2,0
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
204 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 10 13 10 16 16 13 19
Non-refereed articles 1 2 6 3 3 1 2
Books 4 4 0 6 7 6 1
Book chapters 1 6 4 6 7 14 8
PhD-theses 1 0 2 2 1 1 2
Conference papers 25 32 38 56 44 50 44
Professional publications 65 62 58 65 89 71 65
Editorships journals/book 3 12 3 8 13 10 4
Total publications 110 131 121 162 180 167 147
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
205
8 Academic reputation
2008 Visions for social housing: international perspectives (Conference The Smith Institute) Gruis London UK
The Future of Housing: Rethinking the UK housing system for the 21 st century
2009 Windsor UK
(BSHF consultation)
2009 SASBE2009 (Smart and Sustainable Built Environments), CIB Hal Delft NL
2009 Finnish Real Estate Federation, Annual Housing Day Thomsen Helsinki FI
2007 World Congress, CIB Visscher Cape Town ZA
2003/9 Annual conference of European Network for Housing Research Workshop leader Nieboer Europe EU
2007 Bi-annual international ENHR conference, Sustainable Urban Areas Organisation Visscher Rotterdam NL
2005 International IBPSA Conference Building Performance Simulation Organisation Itard Montreál CA
2007/9 International Passive House events and conference in Brussels Organisation Mlecnik Brussels BE
2009 Management and Innovation Sustainable Built Environment, MISBE 2011 Organisation Hal Delft NL
2007 15 jaar Bouwbesluit (15 years Building code), Min VROM Keynote, panel Visscher The Hague NL
2008 Annual conference Federation of Amsterdam Housing Associations Speaker Gruis Amsterdam NL
2008 Corpovenista symposium Co-organisation Visscher Delft NL
2007 MOVe symposium "Professionals in het veld" Organisation Overmeeren Delft NL
2008/9 Dutch national building award (Nederlandse Bouwprijs) Jury member Hal Utrecht NL
2009 Elected in top 100 most influential Dutch Sustainability Leaders Trouw newspaper Hal Amsterdam NL
2009 Elected in top 10 most influential Dutch Sustainable Building Leaders Building Business Hal Maarssen NL
2009 2nd prize Architecture and Philosophy Competition Istanbul Culture Uni Medir Istanbul TR
2008 Winner SEV (Housing Experiments Steering Group) essay competition SEV Gruis Rotterdam NL
2006 Honourable mention for article in Property Management Emerald Nieboer Bingley UK
206 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
Table f. Election to academies or academic professional associations
2003/> Netherlands Graduate School of Urban and Regional Research, NETHUR Senior member Gruis Utrecht NL
2007 Nyenrode Business University, Sustainable Housing & Development Professor Hal Breukelen NL
Member working
2006/> UNEP/SETAC Life Cycle Initiative: Indoor Exposure Assessment & LCA Meijer Brussels BE
group
2003/8 Int Building Performance Simulation Association Netherlands/Flanders Board member Itard Eindhoven NL
2003 Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment (Min VROM) Consultant Hal The Hague NL
2003/9 Woonbron housing association, Board of Supervisors Board member Thomsen Rotterdam NL
2008 SWW Housing Association Policy advisor Overmeeren Woerden NL
2009 Advisory committee Indoor Environment Label (2008-2010) ISSO Member Meijer Rotterdam NL
2003 Expert panel Certification Bouwbesluittoets, Min VROM Member Visscher The Hague NL
207
9 Next generation
9.4 Success rates
Traditionally, our PhDs worked part-time and
completed their work in about 6 years. In 2004,
we began offering full-time PhD positions. In
the first few years, some of the students failed
and ended their projects prematurely. However,
success rates have improved considerably since
and in the last few years most PhDs finished within
four to four-and-a-half years.
9.3 Supervision
PhDs always have at least one promoter and one
daily supervisor/mentor, sometimes more. Policies
for the supervision and mentoring of PhDs have
been formulated at institute level and in greater
detail at research group level. All senior staff have
followed a course for supervising and mentoring,
which is now subject to peer-review sessions
several times a year.
208 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
10 Viability
10.3 Innovative capacity
Improving Housing Quality through policy, man-
agement, processes or technical innovations is
important at all times. Societal circumstances,
however, change and influence the priorities and
requirements for quality topics. At the end of
the last decade, environment and sustainability
entered our research domain. Around 2007, CO2
and energy issues emerged to become important
driving factors in our programme as we strive to
link new research insights directly to new areas
of research. Most recently, innovations in building
and maintenance processes and the influence of
the end users of dwellings, the occupants, have
10.1 Resource management become more important to our projects. The two
Financial management starts with drawing up new PhD projects started each year provide us
three-year budget plans for each research group. with the opportunity to innovate the programme
Half-way through the year, the budget for the next and address issues that are gaining importance.
year is established. This budget includes contribu-
tions from direct funding, staff costs (including
new posts) and additional costs. This budget also
shows the amount of contract research and/or
subsidies to be earned. Senior staff are responsible
for the acquisition of these subsidies. Our group
has always enjoyed a high earning capacity and
most years has yielded positive results. Sometimes
it is difficult to find new staff with the right back-
ground for our job vacancies. Over the past few
years, we have also been recruiting personnel from
countries outside the Netherlands, including:
Finland, Mexico, Ireland, Portugal, Turkey and Spain.
209
11 SWOT-analysis
Strengths weaknesses
The multidisciplinary approach (technical and social We have a clear focus when it comes to managing
sciences) for improving the quality of the housing housing quality from various perspectives. For our
stock, with a strong emphasis on energy efficiency research, on the other hand, we have to employ
and sustainability, makes the HQ programme a broad range of scientific theories and methods.
unique. The group is well known for its expertise Having enough in-house knowledge of the relevant
and is often invited to join consortia. We manage scientific disciplines remains a challenge. This can
to combine practice-orientated research very also prove problematic when it comes to obtain-
well with the development of scientific output in ing funding from the Netherlands Organisation for
highly ranked journals. Furthermore, the group has Scientific Research (NWO), which focuses mostly
proven to be stable in its focus and organisation on theoretical monodisciplinary research. There are
within an environment that has undergone a great too few financial resources available for large-scale
deal of change and restructuring. Further testa- measurements in the collection of research data.
ment to this is the group’s steady production of
two dissertations per year.
Opportunities threats
Our field of research corresponds very well with The University’s financial situation and that of the
the research agendas of national and EU funding Faculty of Architecture pose a threat to our share
programmes. These programmes tend to place of basic funding. Architectural design is the domi-
a stronger emphasis on implementing technical nating discipline in the Faculty and attracts the
innovations through policy, management and proc- most students. In financially stricken times, the
ess innovations. The collaboration between OTB Faculty’s other disciplines are at most risk. HQ has
and the Faculty of Architecture and the links to a significant earning capacity but we aim to keep a
universities of applied sciences through some of balance of at least 40% basic funding. If this sum
the senior members of our group provide greater were to decrease, we would have to reduce the
opportunities for cooperation. They also offer new size of the group, which will have consequences for
options for sharing and disseminating knowledge our multidisciplinary research programme. Further-
and for collecting research data. more, the competition in our field is growing. More
and more universities and universities of applied
sciences are setting up new chairs and research
groups in this field.
210 h o u s i n g qu a l i t y
12 Strategy
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1.3 Position
The group aims at a comparative, multidisciplinary
Objectives and research approach. Three disciplines play a relative
large role within this multidisciplinary approach:
research area 1. Land surveying: Land surveying is about the
interaction between property rights, legal
instruments, valuation and geoinformation.
This field contributes to a clear engineering
approach in the sense of ‘designing’ instruments,
even though these are mostly legal and insti-
tutional instead of technological. There is also
a great need for comprehensive research from
an institutional perspective to understand the
way these instruments work (or fail to work)
1.1 Vision, mission and objectives in different or changing contexts, including the
Vision: Governance issues in relation to land impact of information technology.
development and geoinformation have a big role 2. Planning: Planning is in itself a multidisciplinary
to play in fostering sustainability, inclusiveness and scientific discipline. Within this field, one
territorial cohesion. important aspect the group will address is
the interaction of land-development decision-
Mission: Our Mission is to improve the knowledge making and planning and another is how
available for effective land management. different planning agencies can work together
for optimum impact on the built and natural
Objectives: Governance of Geoinformation and environment.
Land Development programme combines strong 3. Law: The Land tenure and property rights
societal relevance with an engineering approach. research theme has a strong legal bias, and
It aims to contribute to both practice and academic legal considerations also help to condition the
debates on geoinformation studies, land tenure scientific relevance of the other two themes
and property rights and land development. covered by the group (Land development and
Geoinformation studies).
214 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
1.4 Research area
The Governance of Geoinformation and Land
Development programme studies three themes in
depth (Figure 1):
•• Land development, which is about the interac-
tion between planning and property markets.
•• Land tenure and property rights, which focuses
on the legal relations between people and
land, the transparency of the way these legal
relations are implemented by land administra-
tion authorities, and the balance of public and
private interests.
•• Geoinformation studies, which deal with the in-
stitutional arrangements whereby geographical
or spatial information is provided for. These
activities may lead to the creation of a coher-
ent spatial data infrastructure (SDI).
•• Europeanization is a common characteristic of
all three areas studied by the group.
geoinformation
Land development
studies
land tenure
and property
rights
215
2 Composition
Guests
Total research staff 10 4,5 14 6,0 16 8,1 20 10,2 19 11,0 19 10,1 16 6,7
216 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
3
3.3 International and national positioning
The field of planning, law and property rights has
Research developed over the last years. Exemplary is the
establishment of the International Academic
environment Association on Planning, Law and Property Rights
(PLPR), in which several members of the research
and embedding group participate. This association has been devel-
oped out of an existing Track at the Association of
European Schools of Planning (AESOP). Further-
more the group is active in the European Network
of Housing Research (ENHR), the International
Federation of Surveyors (FIG), the Urban Data
Management Society (UDMS) and the Global
Spatial Data Infrastructure Association (GSDI).
3.1 Embedding
The group is positioned in the OTB Research
Institute for the Built Environment (OTB), a dedi- 3.4 Actual collaborations with stakeholders
cated research environment, and infrastructure Our participation in boards, committees and
for both direct and externally funded research. other relevant bodies ensured dissemination of
The group has been part of the Delft Research our research results in these networks. At the
Centre for Sustainable Urban Areas, which has national level, we point to the many positions of
resulted in joint projects with other programmes Jaap Besemer, such as, Chair of ITC Foundation,
within this centre. Presently the activities of this Vice Chair of Netherlands Geodetic Commission of
centre are contributed to the Delft Research the KNAW, Vice Chair of the supervisory board of
Initiative for the Environment. The group has also Geofort, and member of the ‘Waarderingskamer’
a relation to the faculty of Technology, Policy and the entity that supervises the appraisal and
Management. The chairs and educational activities, registration of property for taxation purposes.
i.e. in the domain Land: Use and Development, Danielle Groetelaers is editor of Vastgoedrecht,
of this group are for a large extent embedded in a professional journal in property law. Jitske de
this faculty. Jong is member of the Mining Council, an official
advisory body of the Ministry of Economic Affairs,
and is member of the board of the ‘Centraal Fonds
3.2 Number and affiliation of Volkshuisvesting’, the authority that supervises
guest researchers housing associations. Bas Kok has been president
The group has hosted several guests, such as, of the GSDI, chair of the GSDI Legal and Economic
Professor Thomas Kalbro (Royal Institute of Working Group, and has been active in the Euro-
Technology, Stockholm), Dr. Sang-Bong Im (Rural pean Umbrella Organization for Geoinformation.
Research Institute, Korea), Dr Sence Turk Willem Korthals Altes, has been scientific director
(Istanbul Technical University) and Professor of the Habiforum programme for Innovative Land
Harlan Onsrud (University of Maine). Use, and is managing director of the OTB, mem-
ber of the board of NETHUR and member of the
council of advice of the Dutch association of land
agents. Hendrik Ploeger is professor at the VU
University Amsterdam, and is affiliated to various,
both Dutch and International, legal science publica-
tions. Tuna Tasan-Kok is editor and review editor
of the Journal of Housing and Built Environment.
217
Herman de Wolff is member of the Council of
Advice of the Institute for Building Law. Jaap
Zevenbergen is professor at ITC and treasurer of
the (Dutch) Association of Law and Administration
in developing and transition countries.
218 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
Various publications produced in the framework of the Governance
of Geoinformation and Land Development programme.
219
4
4.3 Coherence
The research programme for the period
Scientific relevance 2009-2014 addresses three research themes.
220 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
Geoinformation studies dealing with institutional Another 26 papers are published in the following
arrangements whereby geographical or spatial refereed journals:
information is provided for in the public sector by •• Cartography and Geographic Information Science
private companies and by private persons. With •• European Journal of Spatial Development
proper coordination, these activities lead to the •• European Review of Private Law
•• Geomatica
creation of a coherent spatial data infrastructure
•• International Journal of Spatial Data Infrastructure
(SDI). Access to geoinformation, the use and
Research
re-use of it, is central in this theme. Questions •• International Planning Studies
relate to the efficiency of access, the mode of •• Journal of Comparative Law
provision (public sector or market? New business •• Journal of Housing and the Built Environment
models required?), aspects in relation to the •• Journal of Location Based Services
market for geoinformation (New demands? New •• Journal of Service Science & Management
data and data providers, new threats?), and the •• Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate Research
•• Notarius International
question whether there is still a justification for
•• Planning Practice & Research
a specific emphasis of geoinformation apart form
•• Planning Theory & Practice
other type of information (Is spatial special?). •• Structural Survey
•• Town Planning Review.
221
4.5 Results and outputs
Key results/highlights
•• The group has acquired funds from the Dutch Science Foundation (NWO) for two projects, i.e.
research on Instruments for Internalising Landscape Values in Metropolitan Landscapes, which
has resulted in a PhD of Van Rij and a variety or articles and papers, and a research on Location
Privacy, which resulted in several publications in books, journals and proceedings.
•• The participation of the group in two BSIK -programmes (1) the Habiforum programme on
innovative land use and (2) the programme Space for Geoinformation. Professor Korthals Altes
has been member of the scientific steering committee (2003-2009) and scientific director
(2006-2009) of the first programme, Professor De Jong was member of the scientific committee
of the second programme. This has resulted in many projects and publications.
(BSIK is a Dutch acronym for ‘Order concerning Subsidies for Investment in Knowledge
Infrastructure’; this is a government scheme set up in 2004 to stimulate innovation throughout
the Netherlands.).
•• In 2009, the group organised (with GSDI association, EC, Geonovum and BSIK Space for
Geoinformation) the 11th GSDI (Global Spatial Data Infrastructure) conference with 1500
participants. Highlights are the publication of a peer reviewed book edited by the group, the
organisation of two Master classes for almost 100 students and a pre-conference workshop.
•• Publication of monographs and papers in Dutch Legal science, such as, F.H.J. Mijnssen, P. de Haan,
C. van Dam & H.D. Ploeger (2006) Mr. C. Asser’s handleiding tot de beoefening van het Nederlands
burgerlijk recht, goederenrecht, algemeen goederenrecht (Kluwer, Deventer) and J. de Jong &
H.D. Ploeger (2008) Erfpacht en opstal (Kluwer, Deventer), and several papers in journals as
Bouwrecht and Weekblad voor Privaatrecht, Notariaat en Registratie.
•• Co-operation with most of the other programmes in the OTB, both for contract and direct funded
research, as a result of the transfer of the group (in 2003) from the department of surveying in
the Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences towards OTB.
Key Publications
•• Korthals Altes, W.K., 2009. ‘Taxing land for urban containment: reflections on a Dutch debate.’
Land Use Policy, Vol 26, No. 2. Elsevier, Amsterdam, p. 233-241.
•• Loenen, B. van, 2009. ‘Developing geographic information infrastructures: the role of access
policies’ International Journal of Geographical Information Science, Vol 23, No. 2. Taylor & Francis,
London, p. 195-212.
•• Veen, M. van der, & Korthals Altes, W.K., 2009. ‘Strategic urban projects in Amsterdam and New
York: incomplete contracts and good faith in different legal systems’. Urban Studies, Vol 46, No. 4.
Sage, London, p. 947-965.
•• Korthals Altes, W.K., 2006. ‘Stagnation in housing production: another success in the Dutch
‘planner’s paradise’?’ Environment and Planning B: Planning & Design, Vol 33, No. 1. Pion, London,
p. 97-114.
•• Kok, B.C., & Loenen, B. van, 2005. ‘How to assess the success of national spatial data
infrastructures.’ Computers environment and urban systems, Vol 29, No. 6. Elsevier, Amsterdam,
p. 699-717.
222 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
Key books or chapters of books
•• Loenen, B. van, Besemer, J.W.J. & Zevenbergen, J.A. (eds.), 2009. SDI convergence: research,
emerging trends and critical assessment. NCG-KNAW Netherlands Geodetic Commission, Delft.
•• Ache, P, Andersen, H.T., Maolutas, T., Raco, M. & Tasan-Kok, M.T. (eds. 2008) Cities between
competitiveness and cohesion. Discourses, realities and implementation. Springer, Germany.
•• Crompvoets, J., Rajabifard, A., Loenen, B. van & Delgado, T.C. (eds. 2008) A multi-view framework
to assess SDIs. RGI Wageningen, University of Melbourne, Melbourne.
•• Janssen-Jansen, L., Spaans, M. & Veen, M. van der (eds. 2008) New instruments in spatial
planning. An international perspective on non-financial compensation. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
•• Zevenbergen, J.A., Frank, A. & Stubkjaer, E. (eds. 2007) Real Property Transactions - Procedures,
transaction costs and models. IOS Press, Amsterdam.
Key dissertations
•• Veen, M. van der, 2009. Contracting for better places: a relational analysis of development
agreements in urban development projects. TUD Technische Universiteit Delft. IOS Press,
Amsterdam.
•• Rij, H.E. van, 2008. Improving institutions for green landscapes in metropolitan areas. IOS Press,
Amsterdam.
•• Loenen, B. van, 2006. Developing geographic information infrastructures; the role of information
policies. DUP science, Delft.
•• Groetelaers, D.A., 2004. Instrumentarium locatieontwikkeling, Sturingsmogelijkheden voor
gemeenten in een veranderde marktsituatie [Legal provisions to facilitate land development:
Local authorities’ management opportunities in a changing market situation]. DUP Science, Delft.
•• Dijk, T. van, 2003. Dealing with Central European land fragmentation: A cricital assessment on
the use of Western European instruments. Eburon, Delft.
223
5
that promotes a re-use of public-sector informa-
tion. Examples of re-use are real-estate markets,
Societal relevance environmental protection, disaster preparedness
and location-based services like navigation.
and quality
Research insights got, next to BSc and MSc
courses the group is involved in, their way through
educational programmes for practitioners, such as,
civil servants of national government agencies that
have followed extensive courses on Land develop-
ment, and engineers from Arcadis, who followed a
course, consisted of 40 full afternoons organised
by the group.
Sustainable land management is part of Agenda 21, The group has also been active in contracts geared
agreed on at the UN Conference on Environment towards both increased understanding and the
and Development (UNCED) in Rio de Janeiro (1992). transfer of insights from the research community
Specific knowledge is needed about the relation- towards societal practice, which is shown by the
ship between private property and public goals following selection.
such as sustainable land management, inclusiveness 1. Research on land development practice for
and territorial cohesion. a better foundation for improvement of land
development instruments (i.e. the new Spatial
The interaction between government and markets planning law), for both the Ministry of Spatial
is of growing societal relevance, due to the Planning, as for associations of the parties
introduction of market-based instruments and the that work with these instruments, i.e. the
cuts in government funding. Legal instruments Association of Dutch Municipalities (VNG), the
are changing to cope with these changes in land Co-operating Provinces (IPO), and development
development processes, and local authorities are companies (NEPROM).
reconsidering their roles in this field. 2. Contributions to the evaluation of land develop-
ment, e.g. for Municipal Audit organisations in
Research on land tenure and property rights may Amsterdam and Enschede in relation to financial
be applied at different levels: nationally (e.g. leading management and strategies, the province of
to improvements in the use of Dutch instruments Utrecht in relation to regulation and de-
of land law), at a European level (e.g. comparative regulation, and, together with the Faculty of
research on European land law and systems of Architecture, for a development company and
land administration against the background of the the Ministries of Spatial Planning and
development of a common mortgage market) or in Agriculture, to evaluate the results of
a global context (e.g. improvements in land regis- red-for-green practices in planning.
tration in developing countries). The challenges of 3. Research and advise towards the use of
the increasing complexity of our society can often non-planning instruments for planning issues,
only be met by increased understanding of spatial such as leasehold (Municipality of The Hague),
patterns and processes. a public property development company
(Municipality of Delft), instruments for the
To this end, the right geoinformation should be green area of Midden Delfland after the ending
available and easily accessible to different cat- of a specific purpose law (Province of South
egories of users. This is in line with the recently Holland) and the strategic use of these
published Digital Agenda for Europe (EC, 2010) instruments (Municipality of Almere)
224 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
4. Research and advise to providers of govern-
mental geoinformation in relation to new legal
provisions and marketing, such as for the Data-
ICT Service of Rijkswaterstaat (Directorate
General for Public Works and Water Manage-
ment) and the Cadastre in relation to access of
information, to the State Service for Cultural
Heritage in relation to geoinformation about
listed buildings, and for the Ministry of Internal
Affairs about policy and practice in other
countries.
5. Research and advise on land registration
and information, i.e., in the Caribbean (Aruba,
Bahamas, Netherlands Antilles, and Suriname)
Africa (Ethiopia, Uganda) and post-conflict and
post-disaster areas (Aceh, Kosovo) for a variety
of organisations, such as the Dutch Cadastre,
Ministry for Foreign Affairs, Worldbank and
UN Habitat.
Midden-Delfland
€ 40.000 to € 50.000
Price that can be paid for the land
based on the agricultural production
€ 20.000
Land price for which agricultural land
is sold in Midden-Delfland
225
6
The share of the programme that has been
financed by contract research has grown
Earning capacity (Table 6.a). The programme has been able to
acquire research grants from NWO.
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Direct funding 388 86% 358 60% 552 72% 475 52% 577 58% 513 53% 383 51%
Research grants 0 0% 7 1% 70 9% 70 8% 70 7% 36 4% 0 0%
External funding 61 14% 232 39% 145 19% 375 41% 354 35% 422 43% 361 49%
Total funding 449 100% 597 100% 767 100% 920 100% 1,001 100% 971 100% 744 100%
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Staff costs 303 67% 413 69% 541 71% 657 71% 713 71% 687 71% 513 69%
Other costs 147 33% 185 31% 226 29% 263 29% 288 29% 284 29% 231 31%
Total expenditure 450 100% 598 100% 767 100% 920 100% 1,001 100% 971 100% 744 100%
3,0
Research grants
2,5
External funding
1,5
1,0
0,5
0
’03 ’04 ’05 ’06 ’07 ’08 ’09
226 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 3 4 6 10 10 7 7
Non-refereed articles 4 6 10 1 5 1 2
Books 0 0 0 2 0 1 0
Book chapters 8 10 3 3 10 16 12
PhD-theses 1 3 0 1 1 1 2
Conference papers 9 17 25 34 25 29 23
Professional publications 36 32 35 55 50 44 28
Editorships journals/book 1 4 1 3 6 5 5
Total publications 62 76 80 109 107 104 79
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
227
8
The group also has an impact on the field through
editorships. Tasan-Kok is editor and book review
Academic reputation editor of the Journal of Housing and the Built
Environment. Ploeger is a member of the editorial
board of the Dutch journal Bouwrecht (Building
Law), the editorial board (Private Law section) of
Ars Aequi publishers, and the editorial advisory
board of the International Journal of Law in the
Built Environment. Zevenbergen is regional editor
of the Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate
Research.
228 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
9
CODATA, US National Academy of Sciences
held at the OECD Headquarters in Paris (2008)
for which the workshop summary has been Next Generation
published by the National Academies Press
(Washington DC, 2009).
4. Zevenbergen has been invited as key-note
speaker on the Symposium on Land Administra-
tion in Post Conflict Areas from FIG, Kosovo
Cadastral Agency and UN Habitat in the Palais
des Nations, Geneva, 2004 to present (with
Van der Molen) the UN Habitat comprehensive
evaluation exercise of the Kosovo Cadastre
Support Programme. This resulted in a role as
editor of the ‘Handbook for planning immediate
measures from emergency to reconstruction’ The group participates in two graduate schools
(UN Habitat, Nairobi, 2004) Later he has worked accredited by The Royal Netherlands Academy of
with UN Habitat in the post-disaster (and post- Arts and Sciences (KNAW), i.e, the Netherlands
conflict) area of Aceh, work which contributed Graduate School of Urban and Regional Research
to a UN Habitat publication on ‘Land and (NETHUR) of which Willem Korthals Altes has been
Natural Disasters: Guidance for Practitioners’. member of the board during the whole assessment
He has been invited again for a presentation on period, and Ius Commune in which researchers
Land Administration in post conflict areas with of the theme Land Tenure and Property Rights
weak land records for a workshop in Geneva participate in the programme on Property Law. The
(2009). He was in the team that, commis- OTB provides a two-year part-time postgraduate
sioned by the Worldbank, assessed rural land course in Housing, Urban and Mobility Studies for
certification in Ethiopia, which resulted in a junior staff. OTB has a specific policy paper on the
paper in the ISI-journal World Development. process and supervising of PhDs, there is a monitor-
Follow-up research was and invited presenta- ing programme, a PhD-mentor and a PhD Council.
tion at the conference ‘Land Governance of the
Millennium Development Goals’ (Worldbank/
FIG, Washington DC, 2009).
5. In 2008, Van Loenen and Ploeger were invited
by the European Land Information Service
(EULIS) project to present in Berlin their
view on the road towards a European real
property market.
229
Amsterdam Zuidas Amsterdam
[photo: Municipality of Amsterdam].
230 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
10
The Land tenure and Property rights theme
group builds on our research on land law and land
Viability registration performed in the past, and aims to
contribute in a substantive way to the ongoing
legal debate on the influence of EU policies and
legislation on land law and land registration.
231
11 SWOT-analysis
Strengths weaknesses
The position within the OTB provides a dedicated The field which the programme addresses is
research context for use based scientific research. rather wide. This makes it for researchers in the
Within OTB there are several research groups programme often necessary to co-operate with
with which co-operation works very well as can colleagues from outside the programme. Having
been seen from joint projects and publications. a multidisciplinary approach has its drawback
The group’s multidisciplinary approach provides that the group cannot be at the forefront of the
excellent opportunities for this kind of research disciplinary debate of all disciplines with we use
as societal problems in relation to governance in our research, and which involves that we must
of geoinfomation and land development do not focus on channels and publication outlets that are
convey themselves to one discipline. The group has open to multidisciplinary approaches towards the
published an increasing number of international improvement of the Governance of Geoinformation
peer reviewed publications, and has many and Land Development.
international contacts. The group has a healthy
mix of funding sources, including 2 NWO-financed
projects, and good financial assets
Opportunities threats
The combination of OTB and the Faculty of The present financial crisis may have a negative
Architecture provide new opportunities for impact on university funds, research grants
cooperation, sharing and disseminating knowledge and contract research commissioned by public
and new options for collecting research data. authorities, and private parties. This results in a
The present crisis on the property market stiff competition for the scarce funds still available.
results in a societal awareness for a need for The group has, e.g., experienced that a 14.5 points
better Governance of Geoinformation and Land score (out of 15) has not been enough for
Development, and, more specifically for the themes FP7 funding.
addressed in the research programme of the group.
232 G o v e r n a n c e o f G e o i n f o r m at i o n a n d l a n d d e v e l o pm e n t
12
More operational ambitions are as follows:
•• The publication of more influential papers in
Strategy international peer-reviewed journals
•• Combining research with a direct application in
a practical context with scientific reflection on
the issues involved
•• Maintaining a proper balance between retaining
our position as a national player in our field
and increasing our involvement in international
networks
•• Making sure that the group produces at least
one PhD a year
•• Participation in international research networks
•• The development of a centre of expertise on
The programme was evaluated in late 2003 by Geoinformation Sudies supported by TNO, an
an international review committee chaired by organisation that manages the geoinformation
Professor Michael Batty. This evaluation, and regarding the Geological Survey of the
the previous evaluation (chaired by professor Netherlands, the Cadastre, National Govern-
Witteveen in 2000), prompted the group to take ment and private parties.
several actions in relation to strengthening its •• Building further relationships within the Faculty
international research profile. These actions have of Architecture.
been re-invoked by the transfer of the group to
the OTB in 2003. Links have been established with
other groups within OTB on aspects as the organi-
zation of urban restructuring (Urban regeneration
group), the relationship between housing and land
markets (Housing studies group), regional land
development policies (Urban and regional studies
group), building codes (Housing quality group) and
geoinformation infrastructures (GIS technology
group). The international visibility has strongly
been improved through more publications in
refereed journals and other publications that
address an international academic audience, and
by more involvement in international academic and
research networks.
233
* Berlage
and debate their polemical architectural and urban
propositions with the stakeholders.
235
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1.2 Societal concerns and issues
As an independent foundation, the Berlage
Objectives and Institute takes part in Dutch governmental policy
on culture, focusing specifically on architecture.
research area Partially funded by the Dutch Ministry of Educa-
tion, Culture, and Science for this purpose, the
Institute also aims to nurture the professional
community in the Netherlands by offering a place
for cultural debate and international encounter
and exchange. In this respect, this post-academic
laboratory focuses on research and design issues
relevant to the Netherlands more than ever before.
Guests 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Total research staff 9 3,8 9 3,8 9 3,8 9 3,8 9 3,8 9 3,8 18 3,8
239
3
3.3 National and international positioning
The Berlage Institute is part of, and operates in,
Research an environment of high-performance prestigious
institutions in the field of architectural education
environment and design, such as the AA, the Bartlett and LSE
(London), Columbia University (New York),
and embedding and others.
241
Studio at Berlage Institute.
Key publications
The Institute’s flagship publication Hunch inventively expands and complements the architectural
and urban research, ideas, and projects being pursued at the Berlage Institute. It is highly topical and
aims to provide a bridge between the culture of Dutch architecture and the international discourse
on architecture, urbanism, and landscape.
Hunch 12 Bureaucracy
This issue presents twelve contributions by leading and emerging architects, critics, and scholars in
which the role of bureaucracy in shaping contemporary architecture is explored. It covers themes
varying from government regulations and new models of organisation for professional practice to
contrasting forms of urbanism and diverging interpretations of economic value in relation to cultural
capital. The authors focus on how to select the determinants that affect the built environment.
At the same time, they rethink these processes in order to influence the buildings. Along with
these topical contributions — which are supplemented by marginalia in the form of short stories,
annotations, terminologies, and inventories — the issue also features four 1,000word texts and a
visual essay, which reflect on broader theoretical aspects of the culture of architecture.
Hunch 13 Consensus
This issue covers themes ranging from decision-making strategies, participatory forms of urbanism,
and top-down planning methods, to the collaborative process of the architecture studio, the political
implications of commissioning star architects, and the realisation of universal planning principles.
The contributors focus on how collective thought influences and enriches the development, design,
and planning of cities. Along with topical contributions — which are supplemented by marginalia in
the form of annotations, inventories, terminologies, and short stories — the issue also presents a
series of “peripheralia,” consisting of four interviews with renowned architectural theorists and
practitioners, and a visual essay and a text reconsidering the role of images in architectural history
and theory.
Dutch architecture and urban culture has never limited itself to local issues; in fact, its respective
innovation has been dependent on its international outlook. In a globalised world, the Dutch context
cannot limit itself to national boundaries in relation to cultural, socio-economic, and environmental
issues. It is pertinent to collaborate and share knowledge and expertise with colleagues and
institutions worldwide. The Berlage Institute is a platform for exchange between other worldwide
experiences and established traditions as well as the distribution of Dutch local expertise in urban
planning, public housing, and design to gain broader awareness of the built environment. Our most
significant impacts on practices and policies are through our platform activities and our graduates.
key dissertations
•• d'Hooghe, A., 2007. ‘The Liberal Monument. A Definition of Urban Design as the Manifestation
of Romantic Late-Modernism’. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Aureli, P.V., 2005. ‘The Possibility of Absolute Architecture’. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
•• Vidler, A., 2005. ‘Histories of the Immediate Present: Inventing Architectural Modernism,
1930-1975’. TU Delft Architecture, Delft.
key events
From lectures and round-table discussions to exhibitions and conferences, each year a public
programme of events complements the research topics currently being pursued at the Berlage
Institute. Each term, a lecture series is presented around a central topic. Recent lecture programmes
include:
245
Under Construction: Recent Architectural Propositions
The programme brought together architectural practitioners to discuss the ideas, methods, and
design intentions that shape their own architectural projects. The overall aim was to present the
theoretical and ideological motivations and foundations that guide contemporary emerging
architectural practices through the lens of a building currently under construction.
key exhibitions
247
5.6 Evidence of impacts 5.7 Commissioned research by
Recent examples are the invitation by societal actors
commissioner Richard Burdett to contribute to A recent example is the project 'Diyarbakir,
the Architecture Biennale in Venice (2006), the Accommodating the Displaced', which focused on
invitation to be curator of the Third International creating good housing and living conditions for the
Architecture Biennale Rotterdam (2007), numerous immigrant streams in Kurdistan and was performed
invitations to teach Master Classes, such as in collaboration with the IHS (Rotterdam) and
recently at the Strelka Institute of Architecture local partners in Turkey, with financial support
in Moscow, and an exhibition and book launch of from the Netherlands Ministry of Foreign Affairs
the project Rome, the Centre(s) Elsewhere, at the (Matra Programme). Other projects include the
Festa dell’ Architettura in Rome (2010). 'Croatian Archipelago' (final results presented to
the Netherlands and Croatian Prime Ministers),
and research commissions by the City of Lille and
furniture-manufacturing company Steel Case.
Seminar by
Prof. Winy Maas (TU Delft).
Funding K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Expenditure K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ % K€ %
Master Class by
Prof. Yushi Tsakumoto.
249
7 Output
STAFF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests STA FF Guests STA FF Guests STAFF Guests
Refereed articles 0 1 2 2 0 0 0
Non-refereed articles 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Books 0 0 2 3 0 0 2
Book chapters 4 4 11 8 5 4 3
PhD-theses 0 0 3 0 1 0 0
Conference papers 3 3 0 0 1 0 2
Professional publications 5 4 4 15 3 11 3
Editorships journals/book 1 0 1 1 0 0 0
Total publications 13 12 23 29 10 15 10
Enrolment S u c c e s s r at e s
T o ta l
G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d G r a d u at e d Not yet discon-
Gender g r a d u at e d
S ta r t i n g ≤ 4 years ≤ 5 years ≤ 6 years ≤ 7 years finished tinued
(1-9-’10)
year
male female t o ta l nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr % nr %
2000 0 0 0
2001 1 0 1 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 0 0% 1 100% 0 0%
2002 2 0 2 1 50% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 2 100% 0 0% 0 0%
2003 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2004 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
2005 0 0 0 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 - 0 -
Total 3 0 3 1 33% 2 67% 2 67% 2 67% 2 67% 1 33% 0 0%
Cambridge,
2003 Against Reality: Travel Dialogues - Harvard and Princeton University Organiser van Toorn US
Princton
2008 City of Tomorrow Organiser Declerck Brussels BE
2008 Critical Judgment: Architectural Criticism and the Politics of City Form Organiser Declerck, Frausto Rome IT
2008 Recent Research: Berlage Institute - University of Thessaloniki Lecturer Mimica Thessaloniki GR
2009 City Visions Europe - Bordeaux, Kosice, Mechelen and Pilsen Co-organisation Declerck Europe EU
2009 The New Urban Question - IFOU Conference Co-organisation Rosemann, Docter Delft NL
2003/> European Forum for Architectural Policies EFAP President Docter Brussels EU
251
9
9.2 Structure of programmes
The three-year programme, headed by Dr. Pier
Next generation Vittorio Aureli is organised and structured as a
critical forum where participants are asked not
only to pursue their individual studies but also to
share these studies as part of a collective debate.
Candidates are not full-time, but are required to
take part in all these events. Participation consists
of individual tutorials with the supervisor, monthly
seminars with invited guest scholars, a yearly
international colloquium, and symposia. These
activities are venues for discussion and constitute
occasions for candidates to deliver content related
to his or her thesis in the form of presentations,
9.1 Objectives and institutional embedding papers, and publishable essays.
The Berlage City as a Project PhD programme was
initiated during the academic year 2009–2010.
The PhDs conduct their research at the Berlage 9.3 Supervision
Institute but defend their work at Delft University The institute provides full-time daily supervision
of Technology (TU Delft). They are supervised by for PhD researchers together with a strong collec-
the Faculty of Architecture’s Berlage chair. The tive component in the programme (joint seminars,
programme has been conceptualised to understand colloquia etc). The candidates (researchers) meet
the city’s form as an act that defines a political regularly (at least once a month) in Rotterdam to
intentionality, thus establishing a precondition for meet and discuss each other’s latest results and
engagement with the city’s complex nature. progress and to receive tutorials (guidance and
A fundamental issue at stake is form in relation feedback) from their second supervisor.
to the political. The term “city” is defined not as
a mere mass of flows and programmes but as a
political form. The terms political and form are 9.4 Success rates
assumed to be the fundamental criteria that The PhD programme at Berlage was initiated in
construct the essence of the city. If the essence 2009/2010. It is too early to report on success
of political action is the attempt to project a form rates.
of coexistence among individuals, it may be said
that architectural form inevitably implies a political
vision. Even if there is no political architecture, 9.5 Educational resources
there is certainly a political way of making and The Berlage Institute has a state-of-the-art
reading architectural form. Far from being just an printing and binding studio that enables it to
aesthetic category, physical form represents the produce easy-to-distribute reports and publica-
political understanding of the city as a constant tions. Researchers regularly use the well-equipped
dialectic process of inclusion and exclusion. This library of the Netherlands Architecture Institute
commitment to formal and material responsibility (Rotterdam) and the Faculty of Architecture of
is meant to be a departure from the laissez-faire TU Delft. As guest researchers they have access
rhetoric of flexibility and indeterminacy that has to all academic facilities TU Delft Architecture has
paralyzed recent discussion on the city. to offer.
253
11 SWOT-analysis
Strengths Weaknesses
The Berlage Institute has a well-established In applied research, there is sometimes friction
international reputation as 'postgraduate labo- between the expectations of the external part-
ratory of architecture'. It is seen as one of the ner and the academic freedom that the institute
most important centres of innovative design retains. Pursuing research opportunities that rise
research and as a meeting place for cutting-edge externally may also cause the different compo-
professionals. The formal affiliation with TU Delft nents of the programme to sometimes lose a clear
strengthens this position substantially. The small- common thematic focus. Projects that are clearly
ness of the institute and its relative flexibility to too random or too ad-hoc should be resisted in
focus its programme on current issues is seen as favour of a more coherent research portfolio.
an important asset. The institute has a strong
position as a research & development partner.
The circle of highly-renowned visiting professors
and lecturers that frequent the institute and the
active network/networks of alumni form the most
relevant resource.
Opportunities Threats
As well as sustainability, we observe a general new The competition is larger and better equipped.
interest in the social agenda of architecture and We are up against usually well-funded academic
urbanism. The institute is capable and eager to institutions with generous funding and high-quality
address this. There are current opportunities to resources. The Institute is struggling to catch up
link up with highly positioned partners on a project with developments in computer-aided design and
basis (e.g. Erasmus University/HIS or the Research model-making. The current financial situation is in
Lab by the Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning dire straits due to the recession. We have seen
and the Environment). Furthermore, we see oppor- vaporising income from commissions and sponsor-
tunities emerging from changes in technology and ship, as well as a drop in applications. Keeping quali-
markets on both a broad and narrow scale, from fied personnel to maintain the existing reputation
changes in government policy related to your field, is also becoming a serious point of concern.
and from changes in social patterns, population
profiles and life style changes.
255
Colophon
Editor
Frank van der Hoeven PhD
Authors
Tom Avermaete PhD, Henny Coolen PhD,
Rob Docter, Prof. Andy van den Dobbelsteen PhD,
Frank van der Hoeven PhD, Prof. Willem Korthals Altes PhD,
Prof. Vincent Nadin, Lara Schrijver PhD, Rudi Stouffs PhD,
Marie-Thérèse van Thoor PhD, Prof. Henk Visscher PhD,
Leentje Volker PhD, Theo van der Voordt PhD,
Cor Wagenaar PhD
Data
Bart Ariaans, Inge Meulenberg
Text editing
Taalcentrum-VU, Amsterdam
Graphic design
Sirene Ontwerpers, Rotterdam
Print
Grafisch Goed, Rotterdam
Publisher
2010, TU Delft Architecture, Delft
ISBN/EAN
978-90-79814-06-0
CONTACT address
Faculty of Architecture (Building 8)
Julianalaan 134 • 2628 BL Delft
Tel. 015 278 9111 / +31 15 278 9111
E-mail: [email protected]
http://100.bk.tudelft.nl
Correspondence
P.O. Box 5043 • 2600 GA Delft