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Toma Barbu Socolescu

Toma Gheorghe Barbu Socolescu a Romanian architect, son of Toma T. Socolescu[1] and grandson of Toma N. Socolescu, functionalist in spite of himself, he had to espouse the directives of the Socialist Republic of Romania.

Biography

Drawing of Toma Barbu Socolescu (fontains) – 1st mention at Delaon Prize in 1938.
Drawing of Toma Barbu Socolescu (fontains) – 1st mention at Delaon Prize in 1938.

Socolescu was born in Ploiești. An architecture graduate of the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in 1939, he is one of the architects that worked during the time of its studies on the interior of the transatlantic liner SS Normandie, between 1932 and 1935. Initially a university assistant at the Ion Mincu Architecture Institute in Bucharest from 1939 to 1951, he would pursue his career in industrial architecture and large civil buildings.

From 1942 to 1945, he was Design Architect at the CAM (Cassa Autonomă a Monopolurilor Regatului României), a position he would still assume from 1949 to 1951 at the IPC (Institute of Design and Construction). He became Chief Designer Architect at the Design Institute for Industrial Constructions (IPCI) until 1952. From 1952 to 1958, he served as Chief Architect Designer at the Design Institute dor Oil Refineries Institutul de Proiectări pentru Instalații Petroliere IPIP SA). From 1960 to 1967, he acted as Architect Advisor at the Architecture and Buildings Design Institute for Food Industries & Consumers Cooperative Societies.

He ended his career as a professor at the Technical School of Architecture and Town Building (Școala Tehnică de Arhitectură și Construcția Orașelor) from 1967 to 1969.[2]

Barbu Socolescu designed many civil and industrial buildings, including a Pepsi-Cola plant in 1966. Painter, he exhibited his watercolors in an exhibition organized by the Union of Architects of the Socialist Republic of Romania in Bucharest in 1954.

Contests

Drawing of Toma Barbu Socolescu (gardens) – 1st mention at Delaon Prize in 1938.
Drawing of Toma Barbu Socolescu (gardens) – 1st mention at Delaon Prize in 1938.
  1. 1937: First prize for the sketch competition for a casino project for the Astra Română refinery, in Ploiești, co-directed with his father Toma T. Socolescu – Ploiești.
  2. April 1938: 1st mention at concours Paul Delaon – Paris.
  3. 1964: Award of the Architecture and Building State Commission for the canned vegetables factory of Ovidiu, Constanța County.[3]

Memberships

He was a member of several groups of architects:

Architectural achievements

Interior of the liner "Normandie", 1935

Architectural projects

Sketch of a casino project for the Astra Romana refinery, Ploiești, Romania, 1937
Sketch of a casino project for the Astra Româna refinery, Ploiești, Romania, 1937

Sources

See also

Notes and references

  1. ^ Source Family Socolescu: he will make a more modest career than its capabilities did foreshadowed, subjected to political persecution which his family will suffer.
  2. ^ The school changed its name several times until 2001 when it eventually bore the name of his great-uncle Ion N. Socolescu: Colegiul Tehnic de Arhitectură și Lucrări Publice Ioan N. Socolescu [ro].
  3. ^ The factory failed in 2005 and has been liquidated. The factory has been emptied of its machines and tools. As of June 2010, the building and its iron structure still remain:
    • "Munca Ovidiu, intră în faliment". România liberă (in Romanian). June 24, 2005. Retrieved October 14, 2023..
    • "Fabrica "Munca Ovidiu", tăiată la fier vechi". România liberă (in Romanian). October 28, 2005. Retrieved October 14, 2023..
    • Siclitaru, Lavinia (November 18, 2005). "Faliment la Munca Ovidiu". Ziua de Constanța (in Romanian). Retrieved October 14, 2023..
    • "Din fabrica Munca Ovidiu au rămas numai pereții și câțiva paznici". www.uups.ro (in Romanian). June 9, 2005. Retrieved October 14, 2023..
  4. ^ French association: Society of Architects Graduated by the French Government.