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1963. In Bogotá, Rogelio Salmona takes old bricks to a new dimension in Torres del Parque

  • Luis E. Carranza and Fernando Luiz Lara
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Modern Architecture in Latin America
This chapter is in the book Modern Architecture in Latin America
© 2021 University of Texas Press

© 2021 University of Texas Press

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vi
  3. Foreword xi
  4. Acknowledgments xv
  5. (Notes Toward an) Introduction 1
  6. 1903. Francisco Pereira Passos begins a project to “civilize” Rio de Janeiro by applying Baron Haussmann’s ideas as an answer to the tropical (lack of) urbanism 7
  7. 1904. Víctor Meano, Francisco de Oliveira Passos, and Emile Jéquier build a Latin American character with a classical vocabulary 10
  8. 1906. Julián García Núñez’s Hospital Español defines a characteristic search for a new language: Secession/Art Nouveau 14
  9. 1914. Jesús T. Acevedo and Federico Mariscal lecture in Mexico on the character, importance, and role of the Spanish colonial legacy 18
  10. 1915. Antonin Nechodoma introduces the Prairie style to Puerto Rico 21
  11. 1922. In an attempt to create a building expressive of the “cosmic race,” José Vasconcelos inaugurates in Mexico City the headquarters of the Secretaría de Educación Pública and formalizes the muralist project 23
  12. 1923. Mario Palanti: Palacio Barolo and Palacio Salvo 28
  13. 1924. Martín Fierro presents Alberto Prebisch and Ernesto Vautier’s Ciudad Azucarera en Tucumán and formalizes the connections and interests in architecture among the literary and artistic avant-gardes 30
  14. 1924. Martín Fierro presents Alberto Prebisch and Ernesto Vautier’s Ciudad Azucarera en Tucumán and formalizes the connections and interests in architecture among the literary and artistic avant-gardes 34
  15. 1925-a. Estridentópolis en 1975: Literary Architecture and the Avant-Garde 38
  16. 1925-b. José Villagrán García, Instituto de Higiene y Granja Sanitaria 40
  17. 1928. The Columbus Memorial Lighthouse Competition sparks an investigation into what architecture for Latin America should be like 42
  18. 1929-a. The Ibero-American Exhibition opens in Seville, revealing the complex and contradictory relations between Spain and its former American colonies 47
  19. 1929-b. Le Corbusier’s first encounters with South America: lectures and early projects for Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay 51
  20. 1929-c. With the History of the Skyscraper, Francisco Mujica articulates the skyscraper’s Latin American dimension 55
  21. 1929. Sergio Larraín and Jorge Arteaga’s Oberpauer Building initiates a new direction in Chilean architecture 59
  22. 1930-a. Getúlio Vargas takes power in Brazil and appoints twenty-eight-year-old Lúcio Costa as director of the Escola Nacional de Belas Artes (ENBA) 61
  23. 1930-b. Commemorating the centenary of its independence, Uruguay takes the first Soccer World Cup at home, and Montevideo is at the center of its modern ambitions 64
  24. 1930. Flávio de Carvalho, “City of the Naked Man” 69
  25. 1931. Juan O’Gorman, Diego Rivera and Frida Kahlo Houses and Studios 71
  26. 1933. In his Pláticas sobre arquitectura lecture, Juan O’Gorman highlights the existing polemics between functionalism and academic architecture 73
  27. 1936. Le Corbusier is back in Rio de Janeiro 77
  28. 1936-a. The Kavanagh Building is finished, becoming the tallest skyscraper in Latin America 83
  29. 1936-b. Francisco Salamone: Fascism and Monumental Architecture in the Pampa 84
  30. 1936-c. Julio Vilamajó, School of Engineering 86
  31. 1937. Wladimiro Acosta’s Vivienda y ciudad highlights the relationship between ecology, new forms of leisure, the house, and the city 88
  32. 1937. Cine Gran Rex and Argentine Classicist Modernism 92
  33. 1938. Characteristic of the growing reach of surrealism into architecture and Latin America, the Chilean architect-trained artist Matta publishes “Sensitive Mathematics— Architecture of Time” in Minotaure 94
  34. 1938. Joaquín Torres-García, Monumento cósmico, Montevideo, Uruguay 99
  35. 1939. The European diaspora brings architectural talents to Latin America on an unprecedented scale 100
  36. 1939. The Brazilian pavilion at New York World’s Fair 105
  37. 1941. Pampulha represents an encounter that would change the future of Brazil 108
  38. 1942. Amancio Williams, Casa sobre el Arroyo 113
  39. 1943-a. The Brazil Builds exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York highlights the architectural and political interests of U.S. relations with Brazil 115
  40. 1943-b. Town Planning Associates (TPA) is commissioned to design a new Brazilian town around an airplane factory, Cidade dos Motores. This will be the beginning of TPA’s involvement with Latin America that will include not only plans for Chimbote, Peru, but also master plans for Medellín and Bogotá, Colombia, and Havana, Cuba 118
  41. 1944. Henry Klumb moves to Puerto Rico and formalizes investigations of modern architecture in the tropics 123
  42. 1945. Antoni Bonet, Punta Ballena, Uruguay 129
  43. 1946. Affonso Reidy’s Popular Housing Blocks 131
  44. 1947-a. Luis Barragán and Max Cetto, the émigré German architect, begin working on the design of the first houses in Mexico City’s Jardines del Pedregal subdivision 134
  45. 1947-b. Seeking to symbolize postwar efficiency and organization, Latin American cities embrace the North American “architecture of bureaucracy.” 140
  46. 1947-a. Oscar Niemeyer sketches the UN building in New York but takes no credit 144
  47. 1947-b. Mario Pani—Multifamiliares 147
  48. 1947-c. Agrupación Espacio 149
  49. 1949. La ciudad frente al río is released, showing the transformations of Le Corbusier’s plan for Buenos Aires 151
  50. 1950. Public housing reaches a monumental scale: Mario Pani, Carlos Raúl Villanueva, Affonso Reidy, Oscar Niemeyer 153
  51. 1951-a. Carlos Raúl Villanueva, Villanueva Residence 158
  52. 1951-b. PROA magazine publishes Arquitectura en Colombia, articulating an identity that survived the second half of the century 159
  53. 1951-c. Lina Bo Bardi inaugurates her Casa de Vidro 160
  54. 1952. The debates of plastic integration, modern architecture, and the development of new city forms come to the forefront in two major universities: the UNAM in Mexico City and the Universidad Central in Caracas, Venezuela. The first exemplifies figurative, legible, and socially conscious art; the second, abstraction 162
  55. 1952. Eladio Dieste, Iglesia de Cristo Obrero, Atlántida, Uruguay 170
  56. 1953-a. Affonso Reidy: halfway between the Carioca school and the Paulista school 172
  57. 1953-b. El Eco Experimental Museum in Mexico City opens its doors, advocating for an “emotional architecture.” 176
  58. 1953-c. Max Bill’s critique of the São Paulo Biennial has a significant impact in Brazil: Oscar Niemeyer writes a “mea culpa,” Sérgio Bernardes invests in designing a technological utopia, and João Filgueiras Lima devotes his life to prefabrication 180
  59. 1953-a. Félix Candela, Church of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal, Mexico City 184
  60. 1953-b. Mario Roberto Álvarez, Teatro General San Martín, Buenos Aires 186
  61. 1954. Le Corbusier, Curutchet House, La Plata, Argentina 188
  62. 1955. Eladio Dieste—Tectonics driving the accidental architect 190
  63. 1955-a. Fruto Vivas, Club Táchira 193
  64. 1955-b. The Helicoide in Caracas: The Ultimate Parking and Shopping Center 195
  65. 1955-c. Gio Ponti, Villa Planchart 197
  66. 1956. Brasília: A modernist utopia? 199
  67. 1957-a. Mies van der Rohe, Bacardí Buildings for Havana, Cuba, and Mexico City 206
  68. 1957-b. Lina Bo Bardi, São Paulo Museum of Art 208
  69. 1959. The appeal of Corbusian monumentality and béton brut: Clorindo Testa’s Government Building in La Pampa and, with SEPRA, the Bank of London and South America in Buenos Aires 210
  70. 1961-a. Fidel Castro, in conversation with Ernesto “Che” Guevara, decides to convert a golf course into art schools in Cuba 214
  71. 1961-b. João Batista Vilanova Artigas and Paulo Mendes da Rocha articulate the Paulista school: free ground plan, generous social spaces, and opaque envelopes 218
  72. 1961. João Batista Vilanova Artigas, School of Architecture and Planning, University of São Paulo 221
  73. 1962. Nelson Bayardo, Columbarium, Montevideo 223
  74. 1963. In Bogotá, Rogelio Salmona takes old bricks to a new dimension in Torres del Parque 225
  75. 1964-a. The military dictatorship ends Delfim Amorim and Acácio Gil Borsoi’s investigations into an architecture for the Brazilian northeast 227
  76. 1964-b. Pedro Ramírez Vázquez, Museo Nacional de Antropología, Mexico City 229
  77. 1964-c. Martín Correa and Gabriel Guarda, Las Condes Benedictine Monastery Chapel 231
  78. 1965-a. Parque do Flamengo: Roberto Burle Marx redefines the Brazilian landscape by rediscovering the country’s own local species 233
  79. 1965-b. The (re)invention of Curitiba: from the plan of Jorge Wilheim to the implementation by Jaime Lerner 237
  80. 1965. Juan Borchers, Cooperativa Eléctrica de Chillán, Chile 240
  81. 1966. United Nations as client and advocate: Emilio Duhart’s CEPAL Building in Santiago 242
  82. 1967. Hélio Oiticica builds Tropicália, challenging the traditional boundaries between art, popular culture, construction, and architecture 246
  83. 1967. Jesús Tenreiro-Degwitz—Venezuelan Postmodernism 250
  84. 1968. The Olympic Games provide Mexico City with opportunities for new forms of national representation through architecture; deadly student protests highlight the contested use of public space 252
  85. 1969-a. Inventing new educational paradigms, Alberto Cruz Covarrubias and Godofredo Iommi (poetically) found the Ciudad Abierta in Chile 257
  86. 1969-b. PREVI: Two opposing governments in Peru bring in the best architects in the world to address squatter settlements 262
  87. 1969. Francisco Bullrich publishes on Latin American architecture 265
  88. 1971. Formalizing the legacy of the Madí (Movimiento de Arte de Invención) and utopian urban projects, Gyula Kosice proposes a hydrospatial city 267
  89. 1971. National Theater, Guatemala 272
  90. 1974. Teaching under duress: La Escuelita, dictatorship, and postmodernism in Argentina 274
  91. 1975. Filgueiras Lima, Capela do Centro Administrativo da Bahia 278
  92. 1976. Mexican postmodernism: Teodoro González de León’s Colegio de México expresses modern architecture’s new historicizing sensibilities 281
  93. 1977-a. Éolo Maia, Capela de Santana ao Pé do Morro 287
  94. 1977-b. Bruno Stagno House, Costa Rica 289
  95. 1979. Pampulha magazine is launched in Minas Gerais, marking the beginning of Brazilian postmodernism 291
  96. 1980. The Pritzker Architecture Prize is awarded to Luis Barragán, and photography is at the center of the myth 295
  97. 1983. Niemeyer returns to Rio de Janeiro to design the Sambódromo and the CIEPs: architecture gets closer to popular needs 300
  98. 1983-a. Ramón Gutiérrez publishes Arquitectura y urbanismo en Iberoamérica 305
  99. 1983-b. Severiano Porto, Balbina Environmental Protection Center, Brazil 306
  100. 1985-a. In the midst of a “not-so-lost” decade... 308
  101. 1985-b. Lina Bo Bardi and the SESC Pompéia inaugurate an interest in adapting existing structures 311
  102. 1988. Brazilian Museum of Sculpture 315
  103. 1990. Chilean postmodernism is challenged by José Cruz and Germán del Sol 318
  104. 1991. Angelo Bucci and Alvaro Puntoni win the competition for the Brazilian pavilion at Seville Expo 1992, marking the end of the postmodern reign and the beginning of neomodernism 322
  105. 1993. Pablo Beitia, Xul Solar Museum (Pan Klub Foundation) 326
  106. 1994-a. Quae sera tamen: Architecture for the Favelas 329
  107. 1994-b. As a model for internationalization, NAFTA becomes emblematic of the new character of late-twentieth-century Mexican architecture 333
  108. 1997. Smiljan Radic, Charcoal Burner’s Hut 338
  109. 2000. Colombian Renaissance: In Bogotá and Medellín, mayors and architects work together to create better cities 339
  110. 2000. A lberto Kalach, GGG House, Mexico City 343
  111. 2001. Solano Benítez’s Tomb for His Father, Paraguay 346
  112. 2002. Rafael Iglesia, Pavilions at Parque Independencia 348
  113. Provocations for a Conclusion: Islands no more 351
  114. Notes 361
  115. Bibliography 371
  116. Illustration Credits 385
  117. Index 391
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