EAEA Association

European Architectural Endoscopy Association

The eaea reflects on the visualization of space in architecture and urban planning as tool for perception and planning. Endoscopy as technique had shifted the tradition of small scale architectural models towards perspective viewing and its immediate interpretation. Apart from the technical side the intention is to provide a suggestive view on an architectural vision that is a comprehensive visual explanation of architectural ideas. The purpose of simplifying abstraction and reinterpreting spatial perception is the relation between Space and Projection.

A conference takes place biannually in changing places.
Conferences by today: Tampere University of Technology, Vienna University of Technology, Delft University of Technology, Dresden University of Technology, Essen University of Technology, Slovak University of Technology Bratislava, University of Applied Sciences Dortmund, Moscow Institute of Architecture

Scientific Committee

Prof. Dr. Peter Kardos – Slovak University of Technology Bratislava
Prof. Dominik Lengyel – Brandenburg University of Technology
Prof. Dr. Leandro Madrazo – Universitat Ramon Llull Barcelona
Prof. Dr. Bob Martens – Vienna University of Technolog
Prof. Dr. Ryuzo Ohno – Tokyo Institute of Technology
Dr. ir. Martijn Stellingwerff – Delft University of Technology
Graham Stretton – De Montfort University Leicester
Dipl.–Ing. Catherine Toulouse – Brandenburg University of Technology
Prof. Dr. Ralf Weber – Dresden University of Technology

 

 

LINKS
 Past Conferences
 EAEA Statutes
 Cumincad

CUMINCAD is a bibliographic index that compiles papers related to computer aided architectural design. Implemented with a database, it allows searching and browsing in the ways usual on the Web. It provides a 'historical evolution' to learn from previous efforts and draws attention to older original works that could have been ignored because they could not be found on the Web otherwise. CUMINCAD work started in 1998. It contains papers from the 1960s to the present.