Birgit Cold
Birgit Cold (born 1936) was a Danish-born Norwegian architect and educator. She established her own practice in Trondheim together with Tore Brantenberg and Edvard Hiorthøy in 1964 and became a professor at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology in 1985.[1][2] Her main areas of interest included the school environment and concern for well-being and health.[3] Cold is also known for her sketching which she often used to express her understanding of architecture.[4]
Biography
[edit]Born in Copenhagen on 8 April 1936, Cold studied architecture at Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, graduating in 1961. She then spent a period working with the Danish architect and designer Verner Panton. In 1964, she moved to Norway. There, together with her husband Tore Brantenberg and the Norwegian architect Edvard Hiorthøy, she established the architectural firm Brantenberg, Cold and Hiorthøy in Trondheim and ran it until 2000. The firm is known above all for collective housing developments in new residential areas, earning first prize for designing the housing cooperative in Trondheim Risvollan in 1967.[4]
From 1980 to 2010, she was professor of the Department of Architectural Design and Management at Norwegian University of Science and Technology.[citation needed] She became a member of the university's research team which developed the Skiboli prototype, an experimental attempt at producing energy-saving low-cost housing with high flexibility. A modified version on the university campus is still in use today.[4]
Cold is also known for her sketches, often created with her own architecture project. She also used her sketches as an aid to teaching. In 2008, many were published in her book Skissen som santale (The Sketch for Discussion), published by Tapir Akademisk Forlag.[4]
Recognition
[edit]Cold was a member of the Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences.[5]
Family
[edit]Birgit Cold was the daughter of Sigurd Cold and Kirsten Alma Agga. In 1961, she married the architect Tore Brantenberg. The couple have two children.[citation needed]
Selected publications
[edit]- Cold, Birgit (1995). Within the humanistic tradition: Six perspectives on quality. Research Magazine / Oslo School of Architecture.
- Cold, Birgit (2001). Aesthetics, Well-being and Health, Essays within architecture and environmental aesthetics. Ashgate. ISBN 0-7546-1856-0.
- Cold, Birgit (2001). On the Aesthetics of Architecture. A Psychological Approach to the Structure and Order of Perceived Architectural Space. Journal of Architectural and Planning Research. vol. 18 (2).
- Cold, Birgit (2008). Skissen som samtale (in Norwegian). Tapir. ISBN 9788251922920.
References
[edit]- ^ "Birgit Cold" (in Norwegian). Store Norske Leksikon. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
- ^ "Birgit Cold". archINFORM. Retrieved 10 October 2015.
- ^ Faber, Hege Charlotte; Strandhagen, Brit; Bøe, Solveig (2014). Raw: Architectural Engagements with Nature. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. xvi–. ISBN 978-1-4724-2100-5.
- ^ a b c d "Birgit Cold 1936" (in Spanish). Un día / una arquitecta. Retrieved 11 October 2015.
- ^ Medlemmer, Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences, retrieved 2020-04-04
- 1936 births
- Danish women architects
- Norwegian women architects
- Academic staff of the Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- Architects from Copenhagen
- Architects from Trondheim
- Danish emigrants to Norway
- Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts alumni
- Members of the Norwegian Academy of Technological Sciences