TY - CHAP
T1 - Demystified Territories
T2 - City Versus Countryside in Andrea Branzi’s Urban Models
AU - Martinez Capdevila, Pablo
PY - 2019/2/3
Y1 - 2019/2/3
N2 - This chapter analyzes the relationship between city and countryside in the urban proposals by Italian architect Andrea Branzi (Florence 1938). It starts by examining the No-Stop City (1969–71) a project that arose from a political critique of the capitalist city aimed at demystifying it, that is, at making the hidden structures of the capitalist system visible. While this uncommon agenda entailed a radical reconsideration of the territory, implying the end of the city–countryside dialectic, it is argued that the proposal is ultimately ambiguous about the outcomes of such radical shift. The chapter goes to examine Agronica (1995), a later urban model by Branzi that poses a decided hybridization of city and countryside. Despite the stark differences between the two, it is claimed that Agronica can be read as a logical evolution of the No-Stop City that clarifies some of its contradictions. Finally, it is argued that the politically rooted realism underpinning the No-Stop City opened the door to an original and inspiring territorial vision that could allow us to reconsider, not only the relations between urban and rural, or between artificial and natural but, even, the very nature of these categories.
AB - This chapter analyzes the relationship between city and countryside in the urban proposals by Italian architect Andrea Branzi (Florence 1938). It starts by examining the No-Stop City (1969–71) a project that arose from a political critique of the capitalist city aimed at demystifying it, that is, at making the hidden structures of the capitalist system visible. While this uncommon agenda entailed a radical reconsideration of the territory, implying the end of the city–countryside dialectic, it is argued that the proposal is ultimately ambiguous about the outcomes of such radical shift. The chapter goes to examine Agronica (1995), a later urban model by Branzi that poses a decided hybridization of city and countryside. Despite the stark differences between the two, it is claimed that Agronica can be read as a logical evolution of the No-Stop City that clarifies some of its contradictions. Finally, it is argued that the politically rooted realism underpinning the No-Stop City opened the door to an original and inspiring territorial vision that could allow us to reconsider, not only the relations between urban and rural, or between artificial and natural but, even, the very nature of these categories.
KW - Archizoom
KW - Andrea Branzi
KW - Agronica
KW - No-Stop City
KW - Marxism
KW - Realism
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85162200857
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-01866-5_3
DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-01866-5_3
M3 - Chapter
SN - 9783030018658
T3 - Cities and Nature
SP - 29
EP - 43
BT - Planning Cities with Nature
A2 - Lemes de Oliveira, Fabiano
A2 - Mell, Ian
PB - Springer
CY - Cham, Switzerland
ER -