Tim Altenhof, Breathing Space: The Architecture of Pneumatic Beings
Breathing Space is a compelling and wide-ranging analysis of pneumatic phenomena in modern culture. Architect and historian Tim Altenhof brilliantly explores the physiology of breathing and its reciprocal relationship to bodies and buildings, both of which share a common atmosphere. Because breathing is controlled by the autonomic nervous system and cannot be willfully overridden, it takes place unconsciously and involuntarily—most of the time. However, beginning in the mid-nineteenth century, attitudes toward breathing changed significantly. Breathing became a widely investigated cultural and physiological phenomenon and was the basis for techniques and bodily practices that heightened pulmonary awareness. New understandings of air pollution and disease stimulated a widespread preoccupation with ventilation, impacting architecture in countless ways. Altenhof’s close readings of built structures show how the science of breathing was incorporated into architecture, whether in the design of factories, residences, or medical facilities. The lungs form a major part of the respiratory system and like no other organ tie the living body directly to its surroundings. Yet the role of lungs also poses a topological problem: engaging in atmospheric transfer, they dissolve the division between inside and outside, and despite being an internal organ, they sustain a permanent and living connection to the external world. This ambiguity and permeability constitute the spatial dimension of breathing.
Reviewed in the January issue of Architectural Record
Reviewed in Publishers Weekly
Tim Altenhof, “Out of the Ordinary: A Day with Peter Haimerl”
Log, no. 61 (Summer 2024): p. 63–73.
Giacomo Pala: "Do Blue Roses Wilt?"
Daidalos, 5/29/2024

Bettina Schlorhaufer: "Architektur wird Region / Dall’architettura alla regione / Architecture becomes Region"
Project lead, exhibition and publication (Birkhäuser, Basel, 2017)

Tim Altenhof: “Inhabiting the Atmosphere: The Architecture of the Queen Alexandra Sanatorium”
Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 82, no. 3 (September 2023): p. 314–34.
Giacomo Pala: "Pineapple Modernity"
Daidalos, 4/27/2023

Bettina Schlorhaufer: "Siegfried Mazagg"
Neue Biografie für „Artists of the World“ (2024)
Bettina Schlorhaufer, Joachim Moroder: ''Siegfried Mazagg. Interpret der frühen Moderne in Tirol"
Monografie (Springer, Wien - New York, 2013)
Tim Altenhof, “Mendelsohn’s Rudderless Ship"
Ra. Revista de Arquitectura, no. 25 (2023): p. 92–103.
Giacomo Pala: "Conjunctions or Space as Oxymoron"
Architectural Design, no. 93 (6) (November 2023): p. 64-71.
Bettina Schlorhaufer: "Theodor Prachensky"
Neue Biografie für "Artists of the World“, 2024
Bettina Schlorhaufer, Matthias Boeckl: „Theodor Prachensky – Architekt und Maler“
Monografie (Kunstinitiative Tirol, Innsbruck, 2006)

Tim Altenhof: “The Aesthetics of Blurred Boundaries: From Wölfflin’s Baroque to Giedion’s Interpenetration”
21 Inquiries into Art, History, and the Visual 3, no. 4 (December 2022): p. 817–61.
Tim Altenhof: “Function Follows Facade”
Log, no. 55 (Summer 2022): p. 31–37.
Giacomo Pala: "Let’s Call the Whole Thing Off"
Gizmo, 06/11/2018

Giacomo Pala: "Günther Domenig’s Rational Centre: A reading of the Steinhaus"
"Activism at Home, Architects dwelling between politics, aesthetics, and resistance" (edited by Isabelle Doucet and Janina Gosseye, 2021)
Giacomo Pala: "Anthropocene, architecture, and modernity"
Antennae: The Journal of Nature in Visual Culture 56 (2021): p. 143-153.
























