- Source: Wessel de Jonge
Wessel de Jonge (born 1957) is a Dutch architect, architectural historian and Professor Heritage & Design at the Department of Architectural Engineering and Technology of the TU Delft. He is specialized in the restoration and re-use of 20th century buildings.
Live and work
Wessel de Jonge is the son of architect Leo de Jonge (1919-2009) and Nelly Burggraaff. He studied at the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment of the Delft University of Technology, where he graduated in 1985.
In 1988 in cooperation with Hubert-Jan Henket he founded Docomomo International, the working party for the documentation and conservation of buildings, neighborhoods and landscapes of the Modern Movement. The organization grew over the years towards 73 chapters worldwide.
Renovation works
Zonnestraal (estate), former Sanatorium Zonnestraal of 1928–31 with Bierman Henket Architects
Dutch pavilion, the Gerrit Rietveld's Biennale Pavilion in Venice of 1953-1954
Van Nelle Factory in Rotterdam (1928–31)
Former Technical Schools in Groningen (1923)
St.Jobs warehouse (1914)
HUF building (1953) in Rotterdam
Social Security Building GAK (1959)
National Aerospace Laboratories NLR in Amsterdam from the 1950s
Revitalisation of 1938 Olympic Stadium in Helsinki
Publications (selection)
Paul Meurs and Marie-Therese van Thoor (eds.), "Zonnestraal Sanatorium - The History and Restoration of a Modern Monument", 18 articles by Hubert-Jan Henket, Ton Idsinga, Wessel de Jonge, Jan Molema, Bruno Reichlin et al., Rotterdam 2010.
Marieke Kuipers, Wessel de Jonge. Designing from Heritage: Strategies for Conservation and Conversion. TU Delft, 2017.
References
External links
Prof.ir. W. de Jonge at tudelft.nl