296 Pages
by
Routledge
296 Pages
by
Routledge
296 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
The expansion of cities in the late C19th and middle part of the C20th in the developing and the emerging economies of the world has one major urban corollary: it caused the proliferation of unplanned parts of the cities that are identified by a plethora of terminologies such as bidonville, favela, ghetto, informal settlements, and shantytown. Often, the dwellings in such settlements are described... Read more
Introduction; I: Context(s) and Theoretical Underpinnings; 1: Reading the Architecture of the Underprivileged Classes; 2: The Global Context(s): Architecture and Urban Revolution(s) to Transform the Society and the Individual, 1900-2014; 3: Architecture of the Underprivileged Classes and Cubism; II: Sustainable Shared Spaces and Experiences of Modernity; 4: House of Blues: The Shotgun and Scarcity Culture in the Mississippi Delta; 5: Cultural facilities in the Opaque Spaces of Brazilian Cities as Instruments of Resistance; 6: Grass Roots Modernism: Architecture and Organization in Austrian Settlements and Allotment Gardens, 1921-1925; 7: A Tiny Whole World: Sustainable Design Lessons from the Architecture of Underprivileged Classes; 8: The Politics of Nation in the Urban Form of Informal Settlements in Quezon City, Philippines; III: Politics and Urban Regulations: Demolished and Refurbished Neighborhoods; 9: Spatial Misreading: South Africa's Urban Future Seen from Within a Township Shack; 10: Preparations for the Sports Mega-Events in Brazil and the Popular Protests of 2013; 11: On Changes in the Dwelling Conditions of the Romanian Roma under Communism; 12: The Political Economy of Low and Moderate Income Urban Residential Development: A Case Study of Port Harcourt, Nigeria; 13: Invisible Visibility: The Abuja Housing Deficit as a Political Mirage; III: Conclusion
Biography
Nnamdi Elleh is Associate Professor of architecture history and theory, and the Director of the Master of Science in Architecture Program at the University of Cincinnati, Ohio.
’A powerful collection that opens new questions and provides intriguing leads on subjects critical to identities and spaces in cities across five continents, proposing new ways of exploring and understanding relationships between popular and formal design, building and social forms.’ Alan Mabin, University of Pretoria, South Africa ’There are few aspects of 20th-century modernism that have been mostly ignored by architectural historians, but Elleh’s book casts light on one of them: the unplanned areas of cities that the heroic figures of modernism sought to replace. The essays masterfully collected in this volume address neighbourhoods across the globe, and make clear that while the architecture of necessity is modernism’s Other, it is also its parallel. This book doesn’t solve the housing problem, although the knowledge it imparts suggests promising directions. It is difficult for architectural historians to address architecture without architects and without budgets, yet the authors marshalled here demonstrate a thoughtful ability to tackle this unruly and uncomfortable subject. It’s a pleasure to read talented architectural historians and architects who apply their expertise to the thorniest of topics. These neighbourhoods and their creators are not modernity’s opposite, they are a part of it.’ Mark Hinchman, Taylor's University, Malaysia






