International Conference: The City as a Laboratory – Building, Urban
Infrastructures and Knowledge-Making in the Early Modern Period.
Organisers: Christine Beese, Junior Professor at the Department of Art
History at Ruhr University Bochum (Germany) and Merlijn Hurx,
Professor at the Department of Architecture at KU Leuven (Belgium).
Contact: Svenja Schürmann, cityaslab2026ruhr-uni-bochum.de
Main Supporter: Fritz Thyssen Foundation
Today, cities and metropolitan areas have emerged as leading hubs of
innovation across the globe, driven by favourable ecosystems that
combine high concentrations of tech enterprises, universities, and
capital. This dominance has deep historical roots, reaching back to
the late medieval and early modern periods, when cities began to
function as experimental laboratories. Urban centres served as
so-called trading zones where actors from diverse backgrounds actively
engaged in creating, implementing, and disseminating knowledge to
shape and advance urban conditions. From scientists to craftspeople,
from the church to the courts, people with different institutional,
social, and cultural backgrounds contributed to the formation of an
urban body that was constituted by and continually reshaped through
their knowledge-making.
This conference aims to shed light on the city as a contact zone and
as both a subject and an object of knowledge-making. We situate
architecture and civil engineering within a broader field of knowledge
production in order to explore the paths and conditions of
technological and cultural change.
Programme:
30.09.2026 Wednesday
09:30–10:15 Christine Beese (Bochum, Germany) and Merlijn Hurx (Leuven, Belgium): Welcome and Introduction
10:15–11:00 Nicole Falconi (Bochum, Germany): Constructing Anatomical Theatres in Ibero-American Hospitals: Surgeons, Architects and Craftsmen as Collaborators in the 18th and 19th Centuries
11:15–12:00 Giedrė Jarulaitienė (Drammen, Norway): Johan Daniel Berlin: Architect of the Enlightenment City
12:00–12:45 Sebastian Fitzner (Bochum, Germany): Scaling the City – Architectural Models as Knowledge Repositories in the Early Modern Period
13:45–14:30 Marc Nötges (Kaiserslautern, Germany): Imagined Cities, Model Worlds: Architectural Capricci as Pictorial Models
14:30–15:15 Pedro Gonçalves (Paris, France): Pierre Patte’s Organic Vision of the City
15:30–16:15 Caroline Fußbach and Maurice Parussel (Bochum, Germany): The City Book ‘Civitates Orbis Terrarum’ Between Geography and Chorography
16:15–17:00 Marie Krüger (Bochum, Germany): Shaping the City of Knowledge: The Leiden University Print Series
17:15–18:45 Bert De Munck (Antwerp, Belgium): Crafting the Urban Body Politic: The Epistemological Foundations of the Early Modern City (Keynote)
01.10.2026 Thursday
09:30–10:15 Davide Martino (Brussels, Belgium): Terraqueous Cities: The Early Modern Art of Governing Water
10:15–11:00 Fatma Sarıkaya-Işık (Ankara, Turkey): Measured Waters: Water Infrastructure and Urban Knowledge in Early Modern Istanbul
11:15–12:00 Ludovica Galeazzo (Padua, Italy): Building and Governing a Watery Periphery: The Venetian Lagoon Archipelago in the Early Modern Period
12:00–12:45 Emma Bekaert (Leuven, Belgium): From Galley to Ground: The Venetian Arsenal and the Development of Early Modern Foundation Expertise
13:45–14:30 Vincent Vanhamme (Leuven, Belgium): Searching for Knowledge: Governing the Construction of the Sixteenth-Century Sassevaart
14:30–15:15 Nicoletta Marconi (Rome, Italy): Building in Rome Between the 17th and 19th Centuries: A Crossroads of Practices, Technical Experimentation, and Dissemination of Knowledge
15:30–16:15 Elisabeth Deans (Cambridge, England): Architectural Intelligence: Building as a Matter of the State
16:15–17:00 Anna-Luna Post (Leiden, The Netherlands): Cities, Essay Prizes, and Academies in the Eighteenth-Century Dutch Republic
02.10.2026 Friday
09:30–10:15 Cristiano Guarneri and Ines Ivić (Venice, Italy): Circulation of Architectural Knowledge in Ragusa (Dubrovnik) After the Great Earthquake of 1667
10:15–11:00 Charles van den Heuvel (Amsterdam, The Netherlands): Mechanics Mosaics: Interwoven Knowledge of Engineering in the Low Countries (ca. 1570–1670)
10:00–11:45 Karel Davids (Amsterdam, The Netherlands): The Limits of Innovations: Urban Infrastructures in Early Modern Amsterdam Compared with Other European Cities
11:45–12:30 Final Discussion
14:00–16:00 Guided Tour to the Top of the Bell Tower of Salvator Church in Duisburg and Visit to the Duisburg City Museum
Further information can be found here: https://kgi.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/portfolio-item/conference_city_as_laboratory_2026/.
Quellennachweis:
CONF: The City as a Laboratory (Essen, 30 Sep-2 Oct 26). In: ArtHist.net, 14.07.2026. Letzter Zugriff 14.07.2026. <https://arthist.net/archive/53467>.