Team
team - online group photo
Megan Eardley
Temporary Lecturer I Department of History and Theory of Architecture
- Location
- Gottschalkstraße 24
34127 Kassel
- Room
- Gottschalk 24, Torhaus B, Raum 2110
Biographie
Megan Eardley studiert die Überschneidungspunkte von Architektur, Wissenschaft, Technologie und von politischer Philosophie in Südafrika während des 20. und 21. Jahrhunderts. Ihre jetzige Forschung fokussiert sich darauf, wie die Bergbauindustrie Südafrikas während des Kalten Krieges Lebensmodelle und -konzepte im Weltall beeinflusst hat. Unter Einbezug der Geschichte von Arbeit und Geschlechtern bringt sie Fragen über Messung, Standardsprachen und über die Zukunft des Menschen in biologisch gesehen feindliche Lebensumgebungen in den Vordergrund. In den letzten Jahren wurde ihre Arbeit unterstützt durch die NASA, die National Science Foundation, die History of Science Society sowie durch das Canadian Center for Architecture. Von 2020 bis 2021 ist Megan Eardley Doktorandin im Fachgebiet der Architekturgeschichte und -theorie an der Princeton Universität und Gastdozentin an der Universität von Witwatersrand.
Megan Eardley studies the intersections of architecture, science and technology, and political philosophy in southern Africa in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Her current research examines how the South African mining industry shaped models and concepts of life in deep space during the Cold War. While attending to histories of labor, race, and gender, she foregrounds questions about measurement, the language of standards, and the future of 'the human' in environments that are hostile to biological life. In recent years, her work has been supported by NASA, the National Science Foundation, the History of Science Society, as well as the Canadian Center for Architecture. In 2020-2021, Megan is a PhD Candidate in Architectural History and Theory at Princeton University and a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Witwatersrand.
Fellows
Pavel Kuznetsov is an architecture historian, museologist, and curator. He served as the deputy director of Schusev State Museum of Architecture in Moscow (2010-2022) and as the founding director of the State Museum of Konstantin and Victor Melnikov (2014-2022). He had overseen the collections and archives of the Melnikov House and its transition from a private home to a public museum. He led the pre-conservation survey of the house in 2017-2019, supported by Getty Foundation. In 2022-24 he taught the history of the early Soviet modernism in Accademia di Architettura (Mendrisio, Switzerland). Kuznetsov is the author of The Melnikov House: Icon of the Avant-Garde, Family Home, Architecture Museum (Berlin: DOM, 2017, 2021) and the curator of exhibitions Le Corbusier/Melnikov: rencontre à la villa Savoye (2017, Villa Savoye, France), Melnikoff/Мельников(2022, Schusev State Museum of Architecture, Moscow, Russia), Melnikov: Architect of the Impossible (2023, Accademia di Architettura, Mendrisio), and Soviet architectural avant-garde: utopias, theories and practice (2024, Accademia di Architettura, Mendrisio).
Alexander von Humboldt Postdoctoral Fellow
University of Kassel, Department of Architecture, State planning and Landscape design
I am a historian of Soviet urban development. I am interested in urban history and mass housing, socialist architecture, and planning. In particular, I look at Soviet construction projects and development assistance to the Global South. My forthcoming book ‘Experiments in Concrete: Manufacturing Prefabricated Housing in the Soviet Union’ explores the understudied architectural story of the ‘bureaucratic modernism’ of prefabricated housing. In contrast to a rather simplistic view of standardised housing development as the ‘end’ of architecutre, and a takeover of the profession by construction experts, the book reconstructs a complex and uneven history, as the housing drive became central to the formation of late-Soviet design culture, construction industry and urban sociology.
I am currently working on a new project that focuses on urbanisation processes in socialist Mongolia. The project explores how exchanges with the Soviet Union, Eastern European states and China fundamentally reshaped the urban space and daily life in Mongolia. The project establishes a multidisciplinary framework to explore the experiences of local and foreign specialists, workers, and citizens alike, engaged in transnational construction projects. More broadly, the project seeks to provide new understandings about the urbanisation processes in the Global South during the Cold War and sheds light on the complexities and dynamics of transnational cooperation in shaping the built environment.
I have received my D.Phil (PhD) in History from the University of Oxford in 2020 and a specialist degree in the History of Art from Moscow State University in 2014. I was a postdoc at Department of Urban Studies at the University of Basel and at the Jordan Center for the Advanced Study of Russia at New York University.
My fellowship at the University of Kassel has been possible due to the support from the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation. Previously I have benefited from generous scholarships from the Hill Foundation at Oxford and the Swiss Government Excellence Scholarship, among others.
Publications
N. Erofeev, ‘Complementary Assistance: Exchanges Between Mongolia, the Soviet Union, China, and Poland during the Cold War.’ Cold War History (forthcoming, 2024).
N. Erofeev, ‘Building the Space of Internationalism: Socialist Assistance to Mongolia in the 1950s-70s.’ In Rethinking Socialist Space, edited by Marcus Cola and Paul Betts (London: Palgrave MacMillan, forthcoming, 2024).
N. Erofeev, ‘Late-Soviet Collective Housing: Self-Help Construction and Self-Management in Youth Residential Complex Housing Movement’ Journal of Urban History (forthcoming, 2024).
N. Erofeev, ‘Shabashniki.’ In Global Encyclopaedia of Informality, Volume 3, edited by Alena Ledeneva (London: UCL Press, 2024).
N. Erofeev, ‘“Camus est petit, Rozanov est grand”: Soviet housing production and technological transfer from France.’ in Panel Master: the Raymond Camus Story, edited by Natalia Solopova (Dom Publishers, 2024)
N. Erofeev and Ł. Stanek, ‘Integrate, Adapt, Collaborate: Concerns of Comecon’s Technical Assistance to Mongolia During the Cold War.’ In Between Solidarity and Economic Constraints, edited by C. Bernhardt, A.Butter and M. Motylinska, 43-72 (Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter Oldenbourg, 2023).
N. Erofeev and Ł. Stanek, ‘Integrate, Adapt, Collaborate: Comecon Architecture in Socialist Mongolia’ ABE Journal 19 (2021), DOI: 10.4000/abe.12604
N. Erofeev ‘Cybernetics & Standardization: Revisiting a Soviet Vision for Better Urbanism’ Strelka MAG (04.10.2021).
N. Erofeev ‘The I-464 Housing Delivery System: technological transfers from France to Moscow, from Moscow to Alma-Ata, from Alma-Ata to Havana’ Project Russia, 96 (2021), p. 239-64.
N. Erofeev 'The I-464 Housing Delivery System: A Tool for Urban Modernisation in the Socialist World and Beyond' Fabrications, 29/2 (2019), doi:10.1080/10331867.2019.1611255
N. Erofeev and M. Sapunova, 'Urban Standard and Norm and Their (Post)-Socialist Transformation', Urban Studies and Practices, 3/4 (2018), pp. 7-11
DPhil Dissertation
Erofeev, Nikolay. "Experiment in the Architecture of Soviet Mass Housing, 1956–1990."D.Phil thesis, Oxford University, History faculty, 2020.
Book Reviews
N. Erofeev ‘Review: Moscow Monumental: Soviet Skyscrapers and Urban Life in Stalin's Capital, By Katherine Zubovich’ Social History, 46/3 (2021), p.336-338.
Student assistants
Thilo Schulte supports the whole chair through various tasks.
Philip Stöcker supports the work linked to the lecture GdgU (Geschichte der gebauten Umwelt).
Former staff members and doctoral students
Promotion „Annäherungsprozesse an die Innenstadt in der DDR (1949-1990). Zwischen Städtebau, Architektur und Denkmalpflege in Halle (Saale)“ (completed 2024)