1st Edition

Architecture in Development Systems and the Emergence of the Global South

448 Pages 79 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

448 Pages 79 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

448 Pages 79 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This extensive text investigates how architects, planners, and other related experts responded to the contexts and discourses of “development” after World War II. Development theory did not manifest itself in tracts of economic and political theory alone. It manifested itself in every sphere of expression where economic predicaments might be seen to impinge on cultural factors. Architecture... Read more

Introduction

Arindam Dutta, Ateya Khorakiwala, Ayala Levin, Fabiola López-Durán, and Ijlal Muzaffar for Aggregate

Part I: Developmental time

1. Incompletion: on more than a certain tendency in postwar architecture and planning

Arindam Dutta

2. God’s gamble: self-help architecture and the housing of risk

Ijlal Muzaffar

Part II: Expertise

3. Planning for an uncertain present: action planning in Singapore, India, Israel, and Sierra Leone

Ayala Levin

4. To which revolution? The National School of Agriculture and the center for the improvement of corn and wheat in Texcoco and El Batán, Mexico, 1924–1968

Nikki Moore

5. From rice research to coconut capital

Diana Martinez

6. "The city as a housing project": training for human settlements at the Leuven PGCHS in the 1970s–1980s

Sebastiaan Loosen, Viviana d’Auria, and Hilde Heynen

Part III: Bureaucratic organization

7. Folders, patterns, and villages: pastoral technics and the Center for Environmental Structure

Ginger Nolan

8. The technical state: programs, positioning, and the integration of architects in political society in Mexico, 1945–1955

Albert José-Antonio López

9. "Foreigners in filmmaking"

Felicity D. Scott

Part IV: Technological transfer

10. The making of architectural design as Sŏlgye: integrating science, industry, and expertise in postwar Korea

Melany Sun-Min Park

11. Infrastructures of dependency: US Steel’s architectural assemblages on Indigenous lands

Manuel Shvartzberg Carrió

12. Reinventing earth architecture in the age of development

Farhan Karim

Part V: Designing the rural

13. Globalizing the village: development media, Jaqueline Tyrwhitt, and the United Nations in India

Olga Touloumi

14. "Ruralizing" Zambia: Doxiadis Associates’ systems-based planning and developmentalism in the nonindustrialized South

Petros Phokaides

15. Food capital: fantasies of abundance and Nelson Rockefeller’s architectures of development in Venezuela, 1940s—1960s

Fabiola López-Durán

16. The Jewish Agency’s open cowsheds: Israeli third way rural design, 1956–1968

Martin Hershenzon

17. Floors and ceilings: the architectonics of accumulation in the Green Revolution

Ateya Khorakiwala

Part VI: Land

18. Policy regionalism and the limits of translation in land economics

Burak Erdim

19. Leisure and geo-economics: the Hilton and other development regimes in the Mediterranean south

Panayiota Pyla

20. Antiparochì and (its) architects: Greek architectures in failure

Konstantina Kalfa

Biography

The Aggregate Architectural History Collaborative is dedicated to advancing research and education in the history and theory of architecture. Since 2006, Aggregate has held dozens of workshops and symposia throughout North America in partnership with major universities, exhibitions, and research centers. Aggregate presents innovative scholarship on its website we-aggregate.org and has published the collected volumes Governing by Design: Architecture, Economy, and Politics in the Twentieth Century (2012) and Writing Architectural History: Evidence and Narrative in the Twenty-First Century (2021).


Architecture in Development is edited for Aggregate by Arindam Dutta, Professor of Architectural History and Theory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Ateya Khorakiwala, Assistant Professor of Architecture at the Columbia University; Ayala Levin, Associate Professor in the Department of Architecture and Urban Design at the University of California, Los Angeles; Fabiola López-Durán, Associate Professor of Art and Architectural History at Rice University; and Ijlal Muzaffar, Associate Professor of Modern Architectural History at the Rhode Island School of Design.

"Brilliantly questioning the figure of 'development' that haunts modernism, Aggregate gets down to the dirt of the Bretton-Woods world: the entanglement of architectural discourse in food insecurity and mining infrastructures, debt servicing and dictators, supply chains of materials and expertise. A must-read for architectural thinkers."

Swati Chattopadhyay, University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

"This timely book addresses a major blind spot in contemporary architectural scholarship: the central role of the design disciplines in the processes of modern, postcolonial development in creating the exclusions and inequalities of our time."

Fernando Lara, Potter Rose Professorship, University of Texas at Austin, USA