A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: építészet. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: építészet. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2013. január 13., vasárnap

Second World Urbanity: Between Capitalist and Communist Utopias


Call for Papers
June 21-23, 2013
Location: The Centre for the History and Culture of East Central Europe, Leipzig, Germany


In 1967 the architecture critic Ada Louise Huxtable published a long piece in the New York Times on Soviet advances in urban planning and construction. Surprisingly for the Cold War era, the author openly praised the Soviets for creating a country-wide system of mass production of standardised prefabricated cheap housing, ‘an architectural sputnik’ in her own words. She claimed with great enthusiasm, ‘In size, scope and boldness, in spite of crudities, failure and sometimes ludicrous imperfections it is a singularly important undertaking of the 20th century.’ Moreover, she noted, ‘the latest product is acceptable as architecture.’ Describing new residential neighborhoods mushrooming all across the Soviet Union, she wrote: ‘There is no scale, no variety, no surprise. It is monotony with light, air, sun, and greenery in season, and on sum, that effect is no worse and sometimes a good deal better than a lot of construction on the outskirts of large American cities.’ Admitting all the flaws of current Soviet construction she urged her readers to pay closer attention to this ‘special brand of modern architecture [that] is reshaping the Soviet World.’

Second World Urbanity: Between Capitalist and Communist Utopias seeks to investigate the history of the radical reshaping of the Soviet World (in our words – the Second World), that Ada Louise Huxtable reported on in the late 1960s. This project aims to bring together scholarly contributions on the various endeavors in the Second World to conceive, build, and inhabit a socialist cityscape that was an alternative to the segregated spaces of capitalist cities and the atomized world of suburbia. Imagining and designing urban space were undeniably powerful instruments of forging socialist modernity. Second World Urbanity pays close attention to the tensions between global challenges and locally driven agendas that made architects, planners, and ordinary dwellers alter socialist modernity according to more particular interests. What were the visions and meanings that architects and urban planners sought to communicate through their work? What pre-existing styles did they draw on, reject, and appropriate, and was there a Second World postmodernism? To what degree was the socialist cityscape a product of negotiation between its dwellers and its designers? Where did other local players–such as major industries and local party bosses–fit in such negotiations over the design and construction of the socialist city?

As a venue for opening a conversation about the new approaches to urbanity and planning, this project goes beyond the geographic boundaries of the Eastern Bloc and seeks transnational, comparative, and global approaches to the study of the socialist city. We propose to think of socialist urban planning from Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union to China and Cuba as a distinct and multifaceted division of global urban planning trends. Just as the geographic scope is broad so, too, is our chronological reach, which will span the early post-World War II period through the collapse of state socialism and beyond to the present day. Was there a common denominator to the variety of projects and planning efforts implemented from Cuba to China, from the Urals to Belgrade? Was it socialist in form and national in content as the common formula of Socialist Realism suggested? Or was it modern in form and undefined in content, to paraphrase the formula Kevin Plath and Benjamin Nathans recently coined for describing the nature of late-Soviet culture? In exploring such questions, what do we – urban historians and historians of architecture – have new to say on the history of the Second World? What are the new research questions that our subfield has generated in recent years?

The present stage in our project is a conference that will be hosted at the The Center for the History and Culture of East Central Europe, in Leipzig, Germany, June 21-23, 2013. Paper proposals are solicited for this conference and an edited volume of selected papers on a wide range of topics from (but not limited to) the history of professional networks and institutional organization, monumental projects, mass housing schemes, transfers of technologies and styles, the organization of public and private spaces, the political engagement of urban planning professionals, the treatment of gender, ethnic, and class differences in the socialist cityscape, the role of the state, the ideological premises of urban schemes and visionary projects, everyday life, urban residents’ (mis)uses of planned urban spaces. Papers from all disciplines in the social sciences and humanities will be considered.
Critical information:

Please send paper proposals (a 300-500 word abstract and a 1-page cv) to swurbanity[at]gmail[dot]com by February 1, 2013. Paper proposals will be reviewed by the project’s organizers and program committee. We will announce the papers that have been accepted on March 1, 2013.

If your paper is accepted for the conference, the deadline for submitting your paper will be May 20, 2013. Papers should be no longer than 5,000 words including footnotes or endnotes. Papers will be distributed to conference participants ahead of the conference via our project’s blog.

The project is presently soliciting funds to cover some of the transportation and/or housing costs of participants. We will know whether such funds are available only in Spring 2013. Therefore, interested participants should plan for covering costs through their home institutions. The conference will not have a conference fee.

Program committee: Andres Kurg, Brigitte Le Normand, Daria Bocharnikova, Kimberly Elman Zarecor, Marie Alice L’Heureux, Steven Harris, Vladimir Kulic


2013. január 5., szombat

Az egykori Köztér blog

Volt egy építészek által vezetett kis blog (Csillag Katalin, Gunther Zsolt; csak 2009-ben posztoltak), a Köztér, amely a városi közterek formálódásáról, az élhető és fenntartható terek kialakításáról szólt. Ahogyan a szerzők megfogalmazták:
"Építészek vagyunk, akik nem hagyhatják szó nélkül a budapesti épített és építetlen antikultúrát, éppen ezért be kívánjuk vonni egy szélesebb, véleményformáló kört, hogy – legalább mentálisan – élhetőbbé tegyük környezetünket."
A főcímben pedig:
"Téged érdekel, mi van a küszöbön túl? Ha élhető, milyen hamar tesszük élhetetlenné? Ha élhetetlen, miért nem tesszük élhetővé? Blogunk elsősorban Budapestre fókuszál, és a köztérrel – középületekkel, épített és természeti terekkel - foglalkozik."
Habár a projekt "sikertelennek" tekinthető abból a szempontból, hogy mindössze egy évig futott és később nem vitték tovább, mégis érdemes átpörgetni a városi témák és építéstervezési projektek miatt. Az egykori szerzők egyébként a 3h építésziroda vezetői, amely 2011 óta egy kutatócsoport keretében önfenntartó rendszerek, zöld építészeti megoldások fejlesztésével, magyarországi terjesztésével is foglalkozik.


2012. október 23., kedd

"A Pruitt Igoe mítosz" vetítése az Építészeti filmklubban


Aki még éppen ráér, holnap 19:00-kor a Frisco söröző-kávézóban vetítik az Építészeti filmklub keretében "A Pruitt Igoe mítosz" című dokumentumfilmet. Ez a film már harmadik a sorban, a szabad vetítéseket pedig  kéthetente, szerdánként tartják a Kortárs Építészeti Központ, a Társadalomelméleti Kollégium és az Építész Szakkollégium szervezésében. Ha valaki lemaradt volna a tavaszi Budapesti Építészeti Filmnapokon vetített filmekről, annak itt a lehetőség bepótolni ezt egy kötetlen filmezés formájában!


2012. március 12., hétfő

Border Architectures and Subjectivities: Call for Papers for AAA 2012 San Francisco

Call for Papers for AAA 2012 San Francisco

Border Architectures and Subjectivities: Global Reflections on ‘Border Milieus’


Panel Organisers: Tina Harris (University of Amsterdam) & Malini Sur

(Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research)

Between the excitement in the media over increases in transnational financial flows and alarming human rights violations under new security regimes, borders are becoming more and more relevant as sites of both mobility and enclosure (Heyman and Cunningham, 2004). These geographical edges of states are often the nerve centres of thriving informal commerce and financial flows, and, in more recent decades, zones of new technologies of identification, surveillance, and the frequent suspension of law. In this panel, we argue that the study of borders, border societies, and subjectivities that flow from borders can make critical contributions to the mobile turn or movement-driven social sciences (Urry and Buscher, 2009). We especially seek to explore new elements of connection and disjuncture that converge and produce ‘border milieus’ (Martinez, 1994). The panel proposes to interrogate the material bases of border architectures (such as fences, walls, checkpoints, military camps, and border roads) as objects of memory, artifacts of nation building, and as locations of everyday experiences of border crossings and exchange, bringing to light the multiple ways that on the ground experiences of border apparatuses contribute to the creation of borderland spaces. Contributors examine the varied ways in which these border architectures in heavily militarised border regions and war landscapes are animated, experienced and brought to life through recollections, trans-border friendship, transgendered subjectivities and transnational trade. We invite papers from warring and/or militarised border zones of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, the Americas, and Europe that engage with current debates in the anthropology of globalization, mobility, and violence. We especially seek contributors who investigate border architectures and subjectivities, inspired mobility and impeded mobility, gender and sexuality, race and nation, and trans-border trade and exchange.

Please email abstracts (250 words maximum) to c.h.harris[at]uva[dot]nl and maliniaissr[at]gmail[dot]com by March 20, 2012.

További infók itt.