Practicing Citations

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For example, their iconic 1971 work of the Tinggården in Herfølge, a social housing production that highlighted the idea of community emphasised by the cooperation in design with future residents. [1]

For examples, rooves that double as gardens and Islamic ornaments reinterpreted as geometric elements in homage to Spain’s Islamic architectural history.[2]

Specifically Salmona’s Colombian brick buildings to create diagonal courtyards, the triangular shapes reference to pre-Hispanic architecture.[3]

The following source outlines the Alvar Aalto medal ward rules and jury guidelines. The webpage offers the juries loose criteria to award the medal to an individual who has made a significant creative contribution to architecture.[4]

For example, Dane Utzon’s Sydney Opera House or Steven Holl’s Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma in Helsinki.[5]

Answer to Module 7 Questions

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  1. Picture of purple flowers in the dead of night - flash and street light illuminating flowers.
  2. I photographed the flowers myself.
  3. JPG
  4. Most restrictive acceptable license: {{self|cc-by-sa-4.0}}: Own work; attribution required for reuse; reusers must share alike; version 4.0 of the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA license
  5. Flower photography.
  6. Purple flowers, night, flash



From 3 February 2019 to 5 May 2019, the Alvar Aalto Museum, Jyväskylä held a spring exhibition to celebrate both the medals anniversary and past winners. The exhibition presented the works of medallists from 1967 to 2019. In 2021, the Museum of Finnish Architecture hosted an exhibition for 2020 medallist Bijoy Jain and his architectural office Studio Mumbai. The exhibition ran from 17 May 2021 to 22 August 2021. The display included prototypes and artefacts from Bijoy Jain's past projects.



Alvar Aalto Medal

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Awarded for Recognition for significant contribution to architecture
Sponsored by the Alvar Aalto Foundation, The Finnish Association of Architects (SAFA), the City of Helsinki, Foundation for the Museum of Finnish Architecture and Architecture Information Finland, and The Finnish Society of Architecture
Presented by the Alvar Aalto Foundation
First Awarded 1967; 55 years ago
Last Awarded 2020

Laureates

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Photo Example work (year completed) Jury
 
 
Kulttuuritalo (1958) Awarded by the founding members of SAFA, the Finnish Museum of Architecture and the Society of Architecture.
 
 
Mälarhöjden Church (1929) Alvar Aalto, Aarno Ruusuvuori, Kirmo Mikkola, Heikki Hosia, Kjell Lund, Leslie Martin.
 
 
Southgate Estate (1977) Erik Kråkström, Aarno Ruusuvuori, Kirmo Mikkola, Kjell Lund, James Richards.
 
Bagsværd Church (1976) Aarno Ruusuvuori, Jaakko Numminen, Juhani Pallasmaa, Kirmo Mikkola, Henning Larsen, Roland Schweitzer.
 
 
Church on the Water (1988) Aarno Ruusuvuori, Jaakko Numminen, Juhani Pallasmaa, Kirmo Mikkola, Henning Larsen, Roland Schweitzer.
 
 
Bonjour Tristesse (1984) Pekka Salminen, Jaakko Numminen, Juhani Pallasmaa, Pekka Helin, Carl Nyrén, Kenneth Frampton.
 
 
Berowra Waters Inn (1983) Gunnel Adlercreutz, Pentti Kareoja, Aimo Murtomäki, Juhani Pallasmaa, Sverre Fehn, Kenneth Frampton.
 
 
Kiasma (1998) Jyrki Tasa, Pentti Kareoja, Markku Komonen, Aimo Murtomäki, Niels Torp, Kenneth Frampton.
 
Quimbaya Museum (1986) Kristian Gullichsen, Harri Hautajärvi, Aimo Murtomäki, Pekka Pakkala, Peter Zumthor, Louisa Hutton.
 
Sømærk (2008) Anna Brunow, Mikko Heikkinen, Juha Ilonen, Pekka Pakkala, Matti Rautiola, Yoshio Taniguchi, Gert Wingårdh.
 
Barceló Temporary Market (2011) Rainer Mahlamäki, Simo Freese, Wessel de Jonge, Dorte Mandrup–Poulsen.
Zhang Ke iMAge Toshiko Mori, Asmo Jaaksi, Vesa Oiva, Tina Saaby.
 
Enrique Sobejano, Gunnar Heipp, Pia Ilonen, Ana Puustinen, Jan Utzon.
  1. ^ Eric, Adlercreutz (2009). "Tegnestuen Vandkunsten – community builders". Arkkitehti. 106(2): 14–20.
  2. ^ Ilonen, Jura (2015). "Nieto & Sobejano, archaeologist of architecture". Arkkitehti. 112(2): 24–27.
  3. ^ Havik, Klaske (2017). "Acts of Symbiosis: A Literary Analysis of the Work of Rogelio Salmona and Alvar Aalto". Montreal Architectural Review. 4: 41–60.
  4. ^ Alvar Aalto Foundation (AAF) (2011). "The Alvar Aalto Medal – Award Rules and Jury Guidelines". Alvar Aalto Foundation.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  5. ^ Architecture Exhibitions International (AEX) (2018). "Alvar Aalto Museum Jyväskylä". Architecture Exhibitions International.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)