- Hannskarl Bandel
Hannskarl Bandel (
May 3 ,1925 Dessau, Germany -December 29 ,1993 Aspen, Colorado , United States), was a German-American structural engineer.Hannskarl Bandel's father was an architect who owned a construction firm, and his mother came from the
Bechtel family, which owned the construction giant of the same name. This may have been a contributing factor in his choice of profession and study: he took adoctorate in engineering at theTechnical University of Berlin . After working in the Germansteel industry , he came to the United States afterWorld War II with no money and two suitcases full of books, hoping to buildsuspension bridge s. Three years after joining the New York firm of engineerFred Severud , he was made a full partner.With Severud, he made crucial, creative structural contributions to important mid-century architectural projects such as:
* the cylindrical Marina Towers in
Chicago, Illinois
* theToronto City Hall
*Ford Foundation Headquarters inNew York City (the jungle building)
* the cable-suspension system for the roof ofMadison Square Garden inNew York City
* theKennedy Center for the Performing Arts inWashington DC
*Philip Johnson 'sCrystal Cathedral inGarden Grove, California
* theSunshine Skyway Bridge inSt. Petersburg, Florida (demolished)It was Bandel who modified the inverted
catenary shape forEero Saarinen 'sGateway Arch project. When Saarinen tried to demonstrate his desired shape with a chain suspended in his hands, he couldn't achieve the slightly elongated, "soaring" effect he wanted; Bandel asked for the chain, came back in a few days, and delighted the architect by producing Saarinen's curve, as if by magic. Bandel had replaced some of the constant-sized links with variable links, thus changing the weight, the distribution of the weight, and the shape.In 1978, he was elected a member of the
National Academy of Engineering . After Fred Severud's retirement, the firm, despite Bandel's objections, was bought by a Hungarian engineer. Bandel left the firm and became the senior vice-president ofDRC Consultants , working on cable-stayed bridges and various other structures. He was offered the chair of structural engineering at theUniversity of Graz , Austria, in 1980, but turned down the offer, saying that his challenging assignments in America were more important to him than a prestigious professorship in Europe.Bandel was also an expert on creative structural renovation and retrofitting. According to Benjamin Horace Weese, Bandel personally saved the deteriorating
Guastavino tile dome at theCathedral of Saint John the Divine byNew York City in 1972 by recommending that its supportinggranite piers be insulated. In later years Bandel produced an innovative study for three-dimensional trusses to be assembled without tools inzero gravity , for theNASA Mars Pathfinder project.Bandel died of heart failure while
skiing atAspen Highlands inAspen, Colorado .
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