100 let inženirske zbornice Slovenije

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Last edited by Bogo Zupančič
May 1, 2019 | History

100 let inženirske zbornice Slovenije

First edition
  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

History of the Slovenian Chamber of Engineers

Publish Date
Language
Slovene, English
Pages
56

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Edition Availability
Cover of: 100 let inženirske zbornice Slovenije
100 let inženirske zbornice Slovenije
2019, Inženirska zbornica Slovenije
Paperback in Slovene and English - First edition

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Book Details


Table of Contents

Kazalo / Content
4 Predgovor
5 Foreword
6 Bogata tehnična dediščina na Slovenskem
7 Rich technical heritage in the Slovene ethnic territory
14 Tržaška inženirska zbornica leta 1913 in ustanovitev Ljubljanske inženirske zbornice leta 1919
15 Chamber of Engineers of Trieste in 1913 and the establishment of the Chamber of
Engineers of Ljubljana in 1919
20 Ljubljanska inženirska zbornica med letoma 1925 in 1944
21 Chamber of Engineers of Ljubljana between 1925 and 1944
26 Seznami pooblaščenih inženirjev in drugi dokumenti LIZ iz let 1919–1944
27 Lists of authorized engineers and other documents of Chamber of Engineers
of Ljubljana from the period 1919–1944
30 Izbor pomembnih inženirskih objektov zadnjih 100 let, obdobje 1919–1944
31 Selection of important engineering objects of the last 100 years, period 1919–1944
34 Predsedniki LIZ v letih 1919–1944 in predsednika IZS v letih 1996–2019
35 Presidents of Chamber of Engineers of Ljubljana between 1919 and 1944
and Presidents of Slovenian Chamber of Engineers between 1996 and 2019
44 Inženirska zbornica Slovenije med letoma 1996 in 2019
45 Slovenian Chamber of Engineers between 1996 and 2019
48 Izbor pomembnih inženirskih objektov zadnjih 100 let, obdobje 1996–2019
49 Selection of important engineering objects of the last 100 years, period 1996–2019
54 Seznam literature / List of literature
54 Seznam virov slikovnega gradiva
55 List of sources of visual material
56 Imensko kazalo/ Index

Edition Notes

Rich technical heritage in the Slovene ethnic territory

Slovenia lies in the heart of Europe in an important area, on the edge of the Mediterranean, on the southern side of the Alps, between the West and East, North and South of Europe. Due to its strategic position, the territory of today’s Slovenia, which is the crossroads of the Slavic, Germanic and Romanic worlds, was in the past the object of the interest appetites of many conquerors, and state structures and social systems have been changed many times. After wars, in peacetime, there was a lot of trading, and roads, railways, waterways, and other construction objects were built. Innovative spirit has always been present in this area as well as progressive technical solutions and experts, such as the astronomer Ferdinand Avguštin Hallerstein (1703-1774), who worked at the Chinese court, the inventor of the ship propeller Josef Ressel (1793-1857), and the automobile pioneer, constructor Janez Puh, or Johann Puch (1862-1914). Many prominent experts were born in these places, good constructors came to work here, and many engineers and architects left this area and went to the wider world.

The city of Ljubljana, which is more than 2000 years old, has evolved from an Ancient Roman city of Emona, which was at first a military fortress - castrum. The Romans built many with the sewage network equipped cities and connected them to the roads. In the middle ages, many fortified cities with defensive walls and defensive ditches were built in this area. Around 1500, on the western edge of today’s Slovenia, the famous constructor Leonardo da Vinci built military fortresses and with the containment of the Vipava and Soča rivers he wanted to flood the Vipava valley, thus preventing enemies from entering the Apennine peninsula. Among the most important construction interventions in Slovenia before the industrial revolution we can count the Gruber Canal in Ljubljana (1772-80), and after the industrial revolution, in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy and therefore also on the Slovene ethnic territory, the construction of railway lines, stations, viaducts, tunnels and bridges was in full swing. At the end of July 1857, a 578 km long railway connection from Vienna to Trieste was completed. Ljubljana got its prefabricated cast-iron bridge, the Shoemakers’ Bridge, in 1867, and its first reinforced concrete bridge, the Dragon Bridge, in 1901. Between 1903 and 1946, the first urban planner with a doctoral title in the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy, the architect Max Fabiani (1865-1962), born in the Karst region, occupied himself with daring plans how to connect, with the systems of water canals and existing rivers, the Danube river and Vienna with the Adriatic Sea. The plans were realizable, since the construction engineer Josip Pavlin, who worked at the then Imperial- Royal Naval Administration of the port of Trieste, was sent on training in Panama during the construction of the Panama Canal. At the beginning of the 1930s, Ljubljana got its first skyscraper by the architect Vladimir Šubic and the statics expert Eng. Stanko Dimnik, which was for some years the tallest building in Central Europe and for a long time in the Balkans. It is worth mentioning the wooden ski jump from 1936 and of the constructors Ivan Rožman and Stanko Bloudek, which was modernized several years ago, and Slovene hayracks of unusual constructional forms, which are now, with new technologies of drying of hay, slowly disappearing.

During the Austro-Hungarian period, Slovene engineers were mainly educated in Vienna, Brno and Prague, as well as at prestigious foreign technical colleges in European cities, such as Zürich, Berlin and Paris. One of them was a construction engineer Mihael Štrukelj, or Mihael Strukel (1851-1923), who started his study in Vienna and concluded his professional career and path in Finland. The first Slovene professional magazine, Slovene Technician, was published during the Austro-Hungarian period in Prague, on today’s Czech territory, in 1906, as a newsletter of the Club of Slovene technicians in Prague. Its editor was a student Ciril Jekovec, who later established himself in the construction of dams in Argentina. In 1924, the architect Viktor Sulčič, or Victorio Sulcic (1895-1973), also moved to Argentina, and he also succeeded there. The Slovene-Italian architect Anton Laščak, or Antonio Lasciac (1856-1946), constructed for the Egyptian court as well as other palaces in Cairo, Alexandria, Istanbul, and Rome. Architect Ivan (John) Jager (1871-1959), known for his nickname “Builder of Minneapolis”, established himself in Minnesota, USA.

Published in
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Other Titles
100 Years of the Slovenian Chamber of Engineers
Copyright Date
2019

Contributors

Author
Bogo Zupančič
Technical Editor
Bogo Zupančič
Publisher
Inženirska zbornica Slovenije
Editorial
Črtomir Remec
Photograph
Miran Kambič
Photograph
Tomaž Lunder
Photograph
Bogo Zupančič
Photograph
Peter Naglič
Cover photograph
Miran Kambič
Translated for
Nataša Velikonja
Designer
Primož Pislak

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Pagination
56p.
Number of pages
56
Dimensions
31 x 22 x 1 centimeters
Weight
296 grams

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL26870969M
ISBN 10
9789616724340

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May 1, 2019 Edited by Bogo Zupančič Edited without comment.
May 1, 2019 Edited by Bogo Zupančič persons, places, period
April 30, 2019 Edited by Bogo Zupančič Content, description
April 30, 2019 Created by Bogo Zupančič Added new book.