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Diploma project

Tu-Uyen Phan NguyenMaria Skarvatun


Erik Fenstad Langdalen
Alena Beth Rieger
Nick Coates
Even Smith Wergeland
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Christian Magnus Tømmeraas Berg


Petter Kveseth
Stone is seeing a revival in architectural constructions, but despite both the material beauty and the constructive qualities of stone, quarrying is seen as a destructive industry. The enormity and scale of our stone quarries, not only as industrial sites but as irreversible incisions into our nature, requires us to evaluate our treatment of the place they leave behind

In this project I investigate the latent potential of a granite quarry to become a place of meaning after production has ceased, and how I, by my role as an architect can contribute to make it so.
Tora Lie Brunborg


Erik Fenstad Langdalen
Mari Lending
Alena Beth Rieger
Som en flyvende tallerken i sakte film letter romfartskontoret til Njål R. Eide fra sin plass på Drammensveien 312 på Lysaker sentrum halv ett i natt. Noen timer senere var det på plass på sine søyler på fjellknausen i det gamle fornebu-krysset. 
Asker og Bærums Budstikke, 7. July 1990
Hanna Lie BakkenKine Nordgård Ugelstad


Petter Kveseth
Matthew David Dalziel
The simplicity of the utedo serves as a comprehensible entryway to more complex topics. The initial goal of this project was to build something and to learn from it. Throughout the semester we’ve understood that the topic of the toilet and the utedo is a universal one. And that it connects to cultural, economic, social, environmental and political spheres. Our project does not offer a perfect solution, not for a perfect sewage-system and not for the utedo. For us it has been a tool for learning and a generator of discussions.
Arman Esmaili Sellæg


Lisbeth Funck
Matthew Dylan Anderson
Dagur Eggertson
Kristine Glenna Kragset
Meeting trees is a project that encourages people to view trees as an essential component of the urban environment.
 
With a series of spaces, a depot, a workshop, a cafe, and a garden, the project intends to create awareness and give an understanding of nature’s processes by providing a space where visitors can come and interact with trees and wood as a material.
 
Åse Lilly SalamonsenSofie Finnøy Vestøl


Andrea Caroline Plesner
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«Hun sa at det var en depresjon, men at det kan også være det er en sorg. Jeg hadde jo tapt et svangerskap og en barseltid som skulle ha vært veldig fin. Blir du frarøvet det så kan en sitte igjen med en sorgfølelse for noe du ikke fikk.» 
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Åsmund Endride Ivarjord


Josina Elizabeth Vink
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Local Bloom is an online service providing a fast and simple overview over local manufacturers, including features for formalities. Lowering the threshold from idea to physical product by utilising local industrial facilities.

Vilde Brabrand Urfjell


Kaja Misvær Kistorp
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Suzanne Arnesen


Steinar Westhrin Killi
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Through a research by design approach, this Industrial Design diploma explores the concept of aesthetics as a subjective and emotional experience, created by our perception. At the heart of the project is an experiment, based on the hypothesis of that: “A products aesthetic impression affect how we judge its quality and/or functionality”

Sofie BerggrafAnna Selvåg Braadland


Ted Matthews
22. juli-senteret er et minne- og læringssenter for terrorangrepene som rammet Norge i 2011. Senteret ligger sentralt ved regjeringskvartalet i Oslo, og har en midlertidig utstilling som er åpen for allmennheten. I 2025 flytter senteret til permanente lokaler i høyblokka.

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