4,673 research outputs found

    The Creation Process of a Local Museum

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    The present text holds as its main goal the advance of a number of reflections around the potentialities and problems of local museums taken as development instruments. Secondarily, it also intends to provide support to all those who, in one way or another, have faced the issue of creating a local museum. This support is intended not as a manual of the “the museum made easy” kind, but, instead, as the pointing to some pertinent issues and unavoidable options that, if not taken into account, will come to challenge the form and substance of the future organisation

    The Transformation of the Santo Antonio District, in Recife, Brazil, (1938-1949)

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    The city of Recife became a privileged field of experimentation for the new ideas of Urbanism, having many plans made between 1927 and 1943 and attracting the interest of the most important urban planners throughout the country. Initiated by the presence of the French urban planner Alfred Agache, the debate saw a series of proposals, studies, suggestions published in the local and national journals and newspapers. Santo Antonio was the administrative and commercial center of the city, with many public buildings and shops. Most of the debate was centered around the transformation of the central district, the island of Santo Antonio. Financial constraints prevented more expropriations and the project was reduced to a single large avenue and its neighboring blocks of buildings. The new avenue was a brutal intervention in the district, destroying eighteen blocks of the city. From a large square facing the river, the avenue starts 60 meters width, decreasing to 40 in the middle and reaching the 30 meters when arriving at the Independência Square, in the center of the district. Along this length, these volumes are separated by two narrow streets, which are barely perceptible; when one is on the avenue these streets cannot be seen due to the masses of these volumes. The new avenue, later called Guararapes, was intended to modernize the old center, transforming it into a monumental ensemble. Its verticalization, greater density and concentration closely resembled the business-center proposed by Agache for Rio. In the perspective submitted with the plan, one perceives velocity and fluidity, as converging lines and the cornices of the buildings conduct eyes to the vanishing point. The buildings were not there to be individually seen or admired, but to compose scenery. Legislation produced the desired profile (building heights and setbacks) of the avenue. The replacement of the colonial urban fabric by a new pattern was due to the establishment of building codes regulating building codes determined alignment of facades, volumetric unity of blocks and concordance of heights and architectural motifs. The new urban design communicated an intense image of power and discipline through its architectural mass, monumental scale and vast open spaces. It was clearly intended to form of urban scenery, expressing Vargas Regime corporatism, social control, and state regulatory interventionism. This paper explores the role of the building codes in the weaving of urban elements, dynamic forces and desires of patrons, bureaucrats, and architects towards the creation of a modern district
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