![]() Next edition: 9–13 October 2024 | |
Location | Rotterdam, Netherlands |
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Language | English |
Website | http://www.affr.nl/ |
Architecture Film Festival Rotterdam (AFFR) is a biannual film festival screening films, shorts, animations and documentaries about architecture, urban development and city culture, for both architects and the general audience. Rotterdam, as a city of architecture and a hub for architectural exchanges, with a dedicated audience[ citation needed ], is an appropriate host for the film festival. The festival takes place at different locations, with its main venue being LantarenVenster.
The first edition of the festival happened in 2000, in preparation of the European Capital of Culture. While AFFR is one of the world's largest architectural film festivals, it has kept its informal atmosphere and small-scale approach, which enables friendly encounters between its visitors.
The festival includes recently made as well as classic feature films with outstanding set design, such as The Fountainhead, Mon Oncle, Silent Running and Blade Runner, while more generally considering the way cities and other built environments are depicted in cinema.
Besides fiction films, the programme includes a large number of documentaries, about well-known architects, such as Louis Kahn or Frank Gehry, next to films documenting the design and construction process of various projects. The festival also provides a stage for experimental films that approach and use space in unconventional ways.[ citation needed ]
An important part of the programme is dedicated to films about the use of space, films that address contested spaces, the social position and responsibility of architecture and planning, and specific themes such as the influence of media on the city.
Besides films, there are usually tours, workshops, presentations, and forum discussions with architects, critics and experts from various disciplines. Special guest in 2023 was Rem Koolhaas.[ citation needed ]
Rotterdam is the second-largest city in the Netherlands after the national capital of Amsterdam. It is in the province of South Holland, part of the North Sea mouth of the Rhine–Meuse–Scheldt delta, via the "New Meuse" inland shipping channel, dug to connect to the Meuse at first and now to the Rhine.
Portmeirion is a folly tourist village in Gwynedd, North Wales. It lies on the estuary of the River Dwyryd in the community of Penrhyndeudraeth, 2 miles (3.2 km) from Porthmadog and 1 mile (1.6 km) from Minffordd railway station. Portmeirion was designed and built by Sir Clough Williams-Ellis between 1925 and 1975 in the Baroque style and is now owned by a charitable trust. It has served as the location for numerous films and television shows, most famously as "the Village" in the 1960s television show The Prisoner.
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The Netherlands Architecture Institute (NAI) was a cultural institute for architecture and urban development, which comprised a museum, an archive plus library and a platform for lectures and debates. The NAI was established in 1988 and was based in Rotterdam since 1993. It ceased to exist in 2013, when it became part of Het Nieuwe Instituut.
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