Architects and Engineers: Journeys in the Polytechnic Culture. Networks, Media, and New Destinations Since 1794
Two centuries ago, engineer Johann Gottfried Tulla and architect Friedrich Weinbrenner played pivotal roles in establishing the Polytechnische Schule in Karlsruhe. Their efforts were preceded by Tulla’s official study tour to France between 1801 and 1803, during which he observed state infrastructure projects in water management, dike construction, and lock engineering. Most influential, however, was his time as a student at the École Polytechnique in Paris—founded in 1794—where he gained lasting insights that would profoundly shape the curriculum and methods at the new Karlsruhe Institute.
It was at this intersection that the distinct travel traditions of Tulla’s Ingenieurschule (engineering school) and Weinbrenner’s Bauschule (architecture school) converged. During a period of profound societal transformation, scientific and technological revolutions also redefined the nature of travel culture. The aristocratic Grand Tour rapidly evolved into bourgeois tourism, spurred by the expansion of the European railroad network and the advent of steam navigation. As Orlando Figes explores in The Europeans (2019), this shift contributed to the emergence of new cosmopolitan identities within the framework of increasingly global nation-states. These identities were reflected in the architecture of elite travel destinations such as Baden-Baden, which became hubs of cultural innovation. In an age of political, social, and technological upheaval, the newly compact travel guidebooks offered a normative educational canon that inspired the reform of cultural institutions across Europe—including schools of architecture and engineering. Polytechnic universities were deeply embedded in this cultural transformation. The rise of cosmopolitan identities influenced the development of architecture and engineering as both scientific and artistic disciplines.
Over the broad span of time from the late eighteenth century to the late twentieth century, how did the gaze of architects and engineers trained at polytechnic schools evolve through travel? What were the points of convergence and divergence between architects and engineers in observing the material, technical, and structural aspects of buildings or infrastructures? And what types of travel were involved? Beyond educational journeys, architects and engineers trained at polytechnic institutions often undertook professional travels—among them, missions commissioned by private clients or public bodies.
On the occasion of the bicentenary of the Karlsruhe Polytechnic School (now the Karlsruher Institut für Technologie) the conference invites participants to explore the evolution of the polytechnic travel culture through international case studies, focusing on the role of travel as a dynamic cultural practice. Since 1794, architect’s and engineer’s journeys have helped to shape polytechnic culture in the midst of tensions between revolution and tradition, nationality and cosmopolitanism, technology and art, as well as general education and vocational training.
Programm
• 4 panels in two days with 16 presentations in total
• Keynote speakers: Andrea Maglio (Naples), Werner Oechslin (Einsiedeln – to be confirmed)
• Optional trip to Baden-Baden: Saturday 8th of November
Abstract Submission
• Submisson deadline: 14:00 h (GMT+1) May 31, 2025, via: https://bg.ikb.kit.edu/1645.php or bagikab.kit.edu
• Abstracts (2500 characters maximum, spaces included) + short author biography (500 characters maximum, spaces included)
• Notification of abstract acceptance or rejection: June 30, 2025
Languages
The official languages of the meeting are English, French, German, Italian and Spanish.
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Organizing Institution
Karlsruher Institut für Technologie
Fakultät für Architektur
Institut für Kunst- und Baugeschichte (IKB)
Englerstr. 7
76131 Karlsruhe
Germany
Scientific Coordination Committee
Alexandra Axtmann (KIT)
Inge Hinterwaldner (KIT)
Oliver Jehle (KIT)
Joaquín Medina Warmburg (KIT)
Oliver Sukrow (TU Darmstadt)
Organizing Committee at IKB-Professur Bau- und Architekturgeschichte
Joaquín Medina Warmburg
Anette Busse
Federico Garrido
Marco Silvestri
Gudrun Schütz
Scientific Coordination of the International Meetings Cycle
Antonio Brucculeri, AHTTEP/AUSser, ENSA Paris-La Villette (FR)
Massimiliano Savorra, Università di Pavia (IT)
Scientific Committee of the International Meetings Cycle
Paola Barbera, Università di Catania (IT)
Antonio Brucculeri, AHTTEP/AUSser, ENSA Paris-La Villette (FR)
Juan Calatrava, Universidad de Granada (ES)
Vassilis Colonas, University of Thessaly (GR)
Cristina Cuneo, Politecnico di Torino (IT)
Marie Gaimard, ATE, ENSA de Normandie (FR)
Marilena Kourniati, AHTTEP/AUSser, ENSA Paris-La Villette (FR)
Fabio Mangone, Università di Napoli Federico II (IT)
Caroline Maniaque, ATE, ENSA de Normandie (FR)
Joaquín Medina Warmburg, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie (D)
Nabila Oulebsir, Université de Poitiers (FR)
Sergio Pace, Politecnico di Torino (IT)
Carlos Plaza, Universidad de Sevilla (ES)
Massimiliano Savorra, Università di Pavia (IT)
Quellennachweis:
CFP: 6th International Meeting “The Architect’s Journeys” (Karlsruhe, 6-7 Nov 25). In: ArtHist.net, 24.04.2025. Letzter Zugriff 25.04.2025. <https://arthist.net/archive/47328>.