Nikolaos Magouliotis
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Last Name
Magouliotis
First Name
Nikolaos
ORCID
Organisational unit
09605 - Delbeke, Maarten / Delbeke, Maarten
32 results
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Publications 1 - 10 of 32
- Not Wood Enough: a peasant’s closet and a bourgeois garden pavilion in SwitzerlandItem type: Journal Article
D:STIGMO - Trial and ErrorMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2025) - Lokale Artefakte, Globale Archetypen - Notizen zur Nutzung des Betons in der griechischen ModerneItem type: Journal Article
ARCH+Magouliotis, Nikolaos (2017) - Ο Μοντερνισμός, το Κιτς και οι Κήνσορες. Ένα σχόλιο για τον τρόπο που συζητάμε την αρχιτεκτονική στο FacebookItem type: Other Journal Item
Archetype magazineMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2019) - Self-doubting intellectuals and primitive alter-egos – The life and times of Zorba and Rodakis in the island of Aegina, Greece.Item type: Journal Article
CARTHA MagazineMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2017) - “What we hold as ugly and infuriating today will be ‘established’ in a decade”: Dimitris Philippides and the historiography of anonymous architecture in GreeceItem type: Journal Article
San RoccoMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2018) - Byzantium, To and Fro: The “Pavillon de la Grèce,” from the Paris 1900 Expo to AthensItem type: Journal Article
Future AnteriorMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2018)The article deals with the “Pavillon de la Grèce”: a modern building inspired by Byzantine architecture, designed by French architect Lucien Magne for the Paris 1900 Expo and shortly afterward transferred to Athens, where it functioned as a church. The transfer of this pavilion signaled a key moment in Greek architecture's transition from a Neoclassical paradigm to one based on the country's Byzantine heritage. The text will mainly focus on the pavilion's design and construction in Paris, its reception in the French and Greek press, and, finally, the circumstances of its transfer and reconstruction in Athens. To contextualize this within a broader historical perspective, it also touches upon the building's roots in the preceding French archaeology in Greece during the nineteenth century, as well as its current situation and perception in contemporary Athens. By examining a series of material and cognitive transfers of Byzantine heritage between France and Greece of the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, this essay argues that this Neo-Byzantine pavilion, although modern and subversive in its conception in Paris, was eventually received in Greece as traditional, a renaissance rather than a break with the past. © 2018 Trustees of Columbia University. - Singular Idiom or Idiosyncratic Personal Trajectory? A comment on the work of the architect Yiannis Koukis.Item type: Book Chapter
The architecture of Yannis KoukisMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2018) - Stanley 55 Combination PlaneItem type: Book Chapter
Extinct: A Compendium of Obsolete ObjectsMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2021) - Learning from ‘Panosikoma’: Atelier 66’s Additions to Ordinary Houses.Item type: Journal Article
Architectural HistoriesMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2018)The work of the Athens-based architectural practice Atelier 66 (est. 1965) has been extensively examined by local and international historiography over the past few decades. Most analyses have focused on the office’s large-scale projects and have associated them with post-war architectural genealogies such as Team X or Critical Regionalism and, more recently, postmodernism. This article focuses on a set of less acclaimed projects within their extensive oeuvre, namely the small-scale additions to existing houses commonly known as ‘panosikoma’. Based on a series of publications on this topic by Atelier 66 from the mid-1970s to the mid-1980s, and on recent interviews with the architects, the article situates Atelier 66’s work in the specific technical and socio-economic conditions of the Greek post-war building boom. It shows how Atelier 66 related to ordinary processes and typologies of housing production in Greece (antiparochi, polykatoikia and panosikoma). Through these minor commissions, the architects theorized and developed their distinct approach to incremental housing via subsequent projects and publications. By concentrating on their ‘ordinary house additions’, this article aims to unsettle the established historiographical reception of Atelier 66 and invite further interpretations of their work. - Two Reverse Urban Artifacts in AthensItem type: Book Chapter
CARTHA – On the Form of FormMagouliotis, Nikolaos (2019)
Publications 1 - 10 of 32