During more than 50 years since the establishment of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø, we have collected a large body of material that we call the academic heritage of our institution. These include records, images, symbolic objects belonging to official events and more. We also possess an extensive image archive and aim to achieve a broad overview of historically significant materials worthwhile to document, conserve and make visible for the ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø community.
Surveying ºÚÁϸ£Àû꿉۪s heritage
We aim to gain as complete a picture of the academic heritage of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø as possible. Within various departments and supporting services surveys have been made of items which may be counted as part of that heritage. If you think you possess any kind of item you think is worthwhile to preserve as part of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø's heritage, we always like to hear from you. And if you have any questions, comments or additional information concerning our academic heritage, please contact our academic heritage specialist, Erik Geelen.
ºÚÁϸ£Àû꿉۪s image bank
(ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø in the Picture) is the database in which to search for digital images of life at this university in past and present, both photographs and films. The image bank is updated and expanded regularly. Browse this image bank for a quick and easy search of digital images, historical as well as recent. Series of images on specific topics can be viewed separately (specials).
For current images specifically dedicated to university corporate publications, we also have the a database offered by the Communication Expertise Center.
About the analog academic heritage collection
Besides our digital image bank, we also still possess an extensive analog image collection dating from the earlier decades of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø history. There is a collection of some 10,000 photographs in print. These include prints of photographs from the foundation period of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø made by well-known photographers like Ad van Beurden, Martien Coppens and Frans van Mierlo. The collection of negatives, made mainly by the former ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø photographic service, comprises approx. 100,000-120,000 images. In late 2020 Bram Saeys, photographer with the ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø weekly journal Cursor mainly during the 1990s and early 2000s, transferred his archive of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø work to us. This significant addition to the collection is still in the process of selection and partial digitization.
Collections from ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø departments and services
Through the years, we have made surveys within departments and supporting services of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø of objects and memorabilia that are worthwhile to keep from a historical perspective. Images of most of these objects with descriptions may also be found in ‘’ as special photographic selections. An estimated 300-400 objects of many different kinds have been traced.
ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍøncyclopedie
An interesting resource of information (in Dutch) on the history of Eindhoven University of Technology is the . The editors invite students, (former) staff and alumni to contribute their recollections, anecdotes, photographs etc. to further enrich and enliven the content of the ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍøncyclopedie.
Using the Academic Heritage Collection
Students and employees of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø, and users from outside the university as well, regularly make requests to use items from the academic heritage collection. Examples are journalists from university journals who use photographs to illustrate their articles, students who ask historic photographs to include them in their papers or theses, and authors of publications about university or regional history, or the history of technology in general. During many commemorations of the foundation of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø, special exhibitions were organized in which items from the heritage collection were displayed. The academic heritage collection of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø provides useful sources of information about the development of our university in past and present.
Take a walk through ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø history
If you as a member of the ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø community (student or employee) would like to learn some more about the history of our university, and would like to do so while taking a relaxed walk, a historic campus walk could be a good idea. During such a walk, academic heritage specialist Erik Geelen tells you how the Netherlands' second university of technology came to be founded at Eindhoven, about the early history of the campus and the buildings, and some works of art. The next walks are planned for Thursday September 17th and Tuesday September 22nd. A historic walk takes approximately an hour, and starts off at 12.00 h. from the Market Square at the entrance to MetaForum. Explanation is in English or Dutch, and can be given in both languages if desired. If you'd like to join on one of these walks, you can send an e-mail to Erik Geelen, mentioning the date on which you would like to join. If you and several others from ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø would like to make the walk as a group, you can contact Erik Geelen and arrange a special date for your group walk. The aim is to limit size of walking groups to a maximum of 10-12 persons. Read more about the campus walks in this , published some time ago in Cursor.
The organ in the Auditorium – a trusted sight and a trusted sound
On the occasion of the 10th anniversary of the foundation of ºÚÁϸ£ÀûÍø in 1966, a fine musical instrument was inaugurated in the Auditorium. In the previous years it had become a tradition to install a work of art in or near each new building on the campus. In view of the special occasion, the ten-year foundation day celebration combined with the completion of the Auditorium, it was decided not to go for a sculpture or other kind of visual art work, but for an organ built by the Pels & Van Leeuwen firm of Alkmaar.
The organ in the Auditorium features in many photographs made through the years. Images of the instrument itself during its construction and during musical performances in which it played its part, as well as photos of various activities in the Auditorium with the organ visible in the background. Photographs shown here were selected from , the university historical image bank. They will be on display in the library in MetaForum until well into the spring of 2026.
Compiled by Erik Geelen, LIS
With help from Hannah Poot, student assistant at the Library
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