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    relacionado a: aldo van eyck playgrounds

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  1. 31 de jul. de 2019 · Until 1978, Aldo van Eyck designed many playgrounds. He created more than 700 playgrounds, but only a few of them remain intact today. All game elements were equal, there was no hierarchical order between them. These playgrounds were spaces where architecture and imagination worked together. At the same time, the play equipment had the task of ...

  2. NAi Publishers, 2002 - Architecture - 144 pages. Climbing frames, arches, igloos, tumbling bars, jumping stones, and climbing walls all found their way into unsightly wastelands and boring squares thanks to the visionary help of architect Aldo van Eyck, who transformed urban spaces in Amsterdam into more than 700 playgrounds between 1947 and 1978.

  3. 10 de mar. de 2020 · Lia Karsten, “In the footsteps of Aldo van Eyck,” en Aldo van Eyck : the Playgrounds and the City, ed. Liane Lefaivre, Rudi Fuchs, and Ingeborg de Roode (Rotterdam: NAI, 2002), 122-128. -117 ...

  4. This document discusses Aldo van Eyck and his pioneering playground designs in Amsterdam after World War II. It summarizes that van Eyck designed hundreds of playgrounds starting in 1947 using minimal, modular elements like sandpits and tumbling bars that could be recombined to stimulate children's imagination. His designs broke from the functionalist approach dominant at the time by focusing ...

  5. 4 de jul. de 2017 · After World War II, the Dutch architect Aldo van Eyck developed hundreds of playgrounds in the city of Amsterdam. These public playgrounds were located in parks, squares, and derelict sites, and ...

  6. After World War II, the Dutch architect Aldo van Eyck developed hundreds of playgrounds in the city of Amsterdam. These public playgrounds were located in parks, squares, and derelict sites, and consisted of minimalistic aesthetic play equipment that was supposed to stimulate the creativity of children.

  7. vaneyckfoundation.nl › aboutabout

    Aldo van Eyck was born in Driebergen, Holland, on 16 March 1918. At the age of one and a half he moved with his parents and brother, Robert, to England. From October 1919 to July 1935 he resided in London where his father, the poet P.N. van Eyck, was the London – foreign – correspondent of the Nieuwe Rotterdamse Courant, a major Dutch broadsheet newspaper.