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Promontorio (Hardcover)
Ivan Rupnik; Text written by Nuno Cera, Kenneth Frampton, Rafaël Magrou, Yehuda Safran, …
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R2,211
R1,555
Discovery Miles 15 550
Save R656 (30%)
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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This publication deals with projects that the partnership
PROMONTORIO developed over the past 30 years. They constitute an
impressive body of work for various places across Europe, Africa,
the Middle East and the USA, ranging from city planning, to culture
and education, heritage and conservation, commercial and mixed-use,
in addition to hospitality and leisure. The idea of a reflective
practice, set forth by PROMONTORIO, summons the ability to
critically and ethically reflect on its own actions, while engaging
in a process of continuous adaptation and learning. Perceived as
kind of ‘practicing school’ for various generations in
Portugal, the practice evolved, in both theory and practice, with
the idea that deliberate reflection on experience is essential to
cultivate a developmental insight on architecture.
Baku, the capital of Azerbaijan and formerly part of the Russian
Empire and the Soviet Union, is a city built on and with oil. In
fact, oil and urbanism in Baku have been completely intertwined,
economically, politically, and physically in the spaces of the
city. Its first oil boom in the late 19th century was driven by the
Russian branch of the Nobel family modernising the exploitation of
oil fields around Baku, and local oil barons pouring their new
wealth into building a cosmopolitan city centre. During the Soviet
period, Baku became the site of an urban experiment: the shaping an
oil city of socialist man. This project included Neft Dashlari, a
city built on trestles in the Caspian Sea, housing thousands of
workers, schools, shops, gardens, clinics, cinemas and more. This
first off-shore rig in the world became the emblem of Baku's second
oil boom. Today, Baku is experiencing its third oil boom. For
Baku's city planners and business elites, that future is based on a
careful reading of Baku as a project in which urbanism and oil are
inextricably linked. This new book investigates how oil stimulated
urban development in Baku, and explores in detail the more complex
and important question of how the disparate spatial logics,
knowledge bases, and practices of oil production and urban
production intersected, impacted and transformed one another. Based
on a vast research project and drawing on rich and previously
unpublished material, Baku - Oil and Urbanism is organised into
three broadly conceived historical periods defined by the
political, economic, technological conditions in which the
interwoven evolution of oil and urban production unfolded. The book
also features a new photo essay by celebrated photographer Iwan
Baan.
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