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  1. #1

    Default Yamasaki Lecture, Nov 12, 4pm @ Wayne State's DeRoy Auditorium

    For all you architecture buffs...and cultural center enthusiasts!! Sorry for the late notice....

    The Office of the Vice President for Research is pleased to announce the inaugural lecture of the WSU Yamasaki Legacy Lecture series.

    Please join us on Friday, November 12, 4:00 p.m. at the DeRoy Auditorium for "Serenity and Delight -Minoru Yamasaki’s Architecture at Wayne State University," with guest speaker, Dr. Dale Allen Gyure, asociate professor of Architecture at Lawrence Technological University and adjunct assistant professor of Historic Preservation at Goucher College.

    Dr. Gyure’s research focuses on American architecture of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, particularly the intersections of architecture, education, and society. He has written two books: Frank Lloyd Wright’s Florida Southern College [[University Press of Florida, 2010) and The Chicago Schoolhouse,1856-2006: High School Architecture and Educational Reform [[Center for American Places/University of Chicago Press, 2011).

    Architect Minoru Yamasaki designed four buildings at Wayne State University – the McGregor Memorial Conference Center, the Education Building, Prentis Hall, and DeRoy Auditorium. All were constructed between 1957 and 1965, at a time when Yamasaki was becoming nationally known as an exciting and innovative designer. In this lecture, architectural historian Dale Allen Gyure will explain how these buildings express Yamasaki’s unique form of architectural humanism and his attempt to invoke feelings of serenity and delight in his buildings.

    The lecture is free; registration is required. For more information about this event, please contact Julie O'Connor at 313-577-8845 or julie.oconnor@wayne.edu.

  2. #2

    Default

    The story had went that the reason why the World Trade Centers windows were so narrow was for those who worked in the center wouldnt be afraid of the height being that the two building were 110 stories high. If that was the case; why was the Michigan Consolidated Gas Co building on the foot of Woodward and Jefferson designed the same way five years earlier and the building is only 30 or so stories tall.

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