The course is mandatory for the first year students in master landscape Architecture and open for other students with bachelor degree.
The course seeks to understand the fortress, and how this has changed over time and how understanding its distinctive form can help to shape the city's future. The fortification, terrain and vegetation, combining with the seaside is a significant basis of the fortress.
The place is today a culture fortress and the task is to amplify and accentuate this place to be one of the intact fortresses in Europe. Through studies of similar historic places in Denmark such as Kronborg, Kastellet and Frederecia, the course examines the underlying geometries for these military installations.
The goal is to draw up a plan for how parts of the now-demolished outer fortress can be reinterpreted and incorporated into the city's growth with reference to historical background. The goal is to strengthen the city's sense of being a modern cultural city with historical identity and great recreational values in the city center.
The course work in all scales.
The course requires individual work efforts, with the basis of lectures, project reviews, external speakers, field trips and surveys. Group work in models and joint projects.
Requirements for work:
The course requires mandatory daily attendance and work and teaching is in the studio, excursions is mandatory to pass the exam. The school's lecture series has to be followed, and like croquis drawing, these are mandatory.
The name Fredrikstad was first used in a letter from the King Frederik II dated 6 February 1569. The temporary fortification built during the Hannibal War (1644–1645) between Sweden and Denmark-Norway, became permanent in the 1660s.
The work on the fortifications was first led by William de Coucheron and later Johan Caspar von Cicignon. During the next 60 years, several fortifications at the Fredrikstad Fortress were built, including Isegran, Kongsten, and Cicignon. In 1735. Most of the buildings in the old city burned down during a fire in 1764. In the 1840s, timber exporting from Fredrikstad started to gain momentum. In the 1860s, several steam powered saws were built along the river, and in 1879 the railway reached Fredrikstad, leading to further growth. With the decline of the timber exports as a result of the modernization of wood-processing industries in the early 1900s, Fredrikstad's production changed to other types of products. It later became one of Norway's most important industrial centres, famous for its large shipyard, Fredrikstad Mekaniske Verksted.
Links:
http://www.fredrikstadfestning.no/
http://www.kulturminnesok.no/kulturminnesok/kulturminne/?LOK_ID=116956http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~oddharry/dsfmc/etext/frkstad.html
https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Fredrikstad_festning?uselang=nb
Presence required | Comment |
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Not required |
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Workload activity | Comment |
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Lectures | The course requires mandatory daily attendance and work and teaching is in the studio, excursions is mandatory to pass the exam. |