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Figure 1: Hans Foramitti (1963)
2. HANS FORAMITTI’S CURRICULUM VITAE
“Born on 20 March 1923 in Vienna. He finished school in 1941
and was on military service in World War II from 1942 —1945.
In 1952 he graduated from the Faculty of Architecture of the
University of Technology Vienna as Diplom-Ingenieur for
Architecture. During the vacations he spent time at the
Academy of Arts and at the Academy of the Louvre in Paris.
His first job was as a junior assistant at the Institute of Building
Art, Building Survey and Preservation at the University of
Technology Vienna and at the same time he worked for an
architect on the reconstruction of the Church on the Leopolds-
berg, Vienna. Foramitti was wholly responsible for the
technical planning as well as for the reconstruction works. In
1955 he went to Italy to study the archaeological works under
St.Peter’s Cathedral and the conservation of the grave of
St.Peter.
1955 to 1957 Foramitti had a position in the Austrian Board of
Works II and was actively involved in the construction of the
Federal Research Institute Arsenal. 1957 to 1959 he served as
Librarian at the University of Technology and at the Austrian
National Library, receiving a further qualification for higher
library service, specially also for preservation and stewardship.
During this time he finished his thesis on “Orcival and the
Roman Pilgrim Churches of the Auvergne” and received his Dr.
of Technical Sciences at the University of Technology Vienna.
End of 1959 he moved to the Austrian Board of Works I and
was delegated to the Department of Architecture of the Federal
Federal Office for Preservation of Monuments and Sites
(Bundesdenkmalamt, BDA), where he finally served in the rank
ofa Chief Councillor (Oberrat).
International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B5. Istanbul 2004
Already in the early sixties he started to test architectural
applications of photogrammetry in order to overcome the
difficulties he had with often dangerous, incomplete and
unreliable manual surveys of inaccessible areas, e.g. high up on
unprotected scaffolds, where he preferred to do the work
himself instead of sending one of his collaborators. In 1963 he
bought the first instruments, 1964 saw the arrival of the first
measuring camera, and in 1966 the photogrammetric unit of the
department of architecture was officially founded, becoming a
department in 1968.
Figure 2: Foramitti at dangerous recording work high up on a
scaffold (St.Stephen, Vienna 1960)
In 1968 Foramitti was also entrusted with the international
contacts of the Federal Office. Foramitti spoke perfect French,
German and also English. In 1964 he participated in the Venice
conference of architects and conservationists where he played a
role in the foundation of ICOMOS, the International Council on
Monuments and Sites. (The author met him by chance at the
railway station when he came back to Vienna. He was smiling
and happy about the results and mentioned that it would bring
about the chance to more easily introduce photogrammetry to
conservation)
Some years later he became the first Director of the UNESCO-
ICOMOS Documentation Centre in Paris, another centre
founded by him and his international friends. In Austria he was
Vice-President of the National ICOMOS Committee, and he
became the head of the Austrian Convention Bureau, i.e. the
person responsible for the 1954 Hague Convention for the