Ingeborg Kühler (born 25 May 1943, in Dachau, Bavaria) is a German architect, engineer and university lecturer.[1] She was the first female design professor at a West German architecture faculty and designed the plans for the Technoseum in Mannheim.[2]
1983–1889: Studio of the South German Radio in Mannheim
1983–1990: State Museum for Technology and Work "Technoseum" in Mannheim, 1990
1990–2001: Residence in Berlin-Kladow, 2001
2008: 1st exhibition of drawings and watercolors
Awards
Förderungspreis des Kunstpreises Berlin for the field of architecture, together with the garden and landscape architect Dirk Jürgen Zilling, 1986
European Award for Museum Design, 1992, for the "Technoseum" State Museum of Technology and Labor
BDA Award for Good Buildings, 1990
German Steel Construction Award, recognition
30 September 2017 – 8 March 2018, FRAU ARCHITEKT: In the film and exhibition at the German Architecture Museum in Frankfurt and in the catalog for the exhibition FRAU ARCHITEKT.
Literature
Karin Wilhelm: "Das Auge wandert mit": Die Architektin Ingeborg Kuhler. In: Mary Pepchinski et al. (eds.): Frau Architekt. Seit mehr als 100 Jahren: Frauen im Architektenberuf. Wasmuth, Tübingen 2017, Шаблон:ISBN, p. 221–225, 299.