Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Eliseu Gonçalves
Data de Publicação: 2021
Tipo de documento: Livro
Idioma: por
Título da fonte: Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)
Texto Completo: https://hdl.handle.net/10216/138179
Resumo: Right through the history of social housing in Portugal, a first cycle can be circumscribed that closes in the 1930s. Here the degree of intervention of the central administration for the resolution of the decent housing deficit had been previously discussed and simultaneously the construction of a diverse set of solutions which functioned as models to test against slums. On the one hand, the so-called "casa barata" (cheap house) began to be seen as an important political instrument in the struggle for power and social control; on the other hand, it continued to be understood as desirable real estate integrated in the complex fabric of economic interests woven into urban housing production. Although the operations conducted in this period and dominated by the First Republic were episodic and insignificant compared to the country's housing needs, some continue to have historical relevance as test balloons in the positivist laboratory that was the universe of republicanism.1 Some neighbourhoods were authentic condensers of the complex debate inherited from the eighteenth century, which, based on scientism, sought in this way the orderly and progressive reform of society2 in order to, among other issues, solve the so-called social question in which the problem of working-class housing was included.3 Confronted with the overwhelming rhythms of social and technical-scientific progress of the first decades, affordable housing was to be one of the most sensitive architectural programmes in the synthesis between tradition, history and modernity. In the disciplinary field of architecture, in many cases the economic, social and cultural valuation of the new dwelling and its particular technical and formal constraints redirected the modus operandi and the professional interest of the architect onto other themes hitherto adjacent to the central problem of style. In this transformational process of the architectural field, one of the aspects that must be mentioned concerns the regulation and normalization imposed by the hygienist rationality, putting the binomial art and science at stake. Thus, the main objective of this paper is to contribute to a reading of some pre-1933 economic districts centred on the international effect of hygiene considered as scientific knowledge and, also, a programme of values. In particular, in the light of a more precise explanation of modern breathing in the late 1920s, the document is structured in two parts, comprising, respectively, the definition of control measures imposed on house design , and use of a formal, clearly purified and diaphanous lexicon, determined by the triangulation between art, economy and hygiene.
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spelling Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in PortugalHumanidadesHumanitiesRight through the history of social housing in Portugal, a first cycle can be circumscribed that closes in the 1930s. Here the degree of intervention of the central administration for the resolution of the decent housing deficit had been previously discussed and simultaneously the construction of a diverse set of solutions which functioned as models to test against slums. On the one hand, the so-called "casa barata" (cheap house) began to be seen as an important political instrument in the struggle for power and social control; on the other hand, it continued to be understood as desirable real estate integrated in the complex fabric of economic interests woven into urban housing production. Although the operations conducted in this period and dominated by the First Republic were episodic and insignificant compared to the country's housing needs, some continue to have historical relevance as test balloons in the positivist laboratory that was the universe of republicanism.1 Some neighbourhoods were authentic condensers of the complex debate inherited from the eighteenth century, which, based on scientism, sought in this way the orderly and progressive reform of society2 in order to, among other issues, solve the so-called social question in which the problem of working-class housing was included.3 Confronted with the overwhelming rhythms of social and technical-scientific progress of the first decades, affordable housing was to be one of the most sensitive architectural programmes in the synthesis between tradition, history and modernity. In the disciplinary field of architecture, in many cases the economic, social and cultural valuation of the new dwelling and its particular technical and formal constraints redirected the modus operandi and the professional interest of the architect onto other themes hitherto adjacent to the central problem of style. In this transformational process of the architectural field, one of the aspects that must be mentioned concerns the regulation and normalization imposed by the hygienist rationality, putting the binomial art and science at stake. Thus, the main objective of this paper is to contribute to a reading of some pre-1933 economic districts centred on the international effect of hygiene considered as scientific knowledge and, also, a programme of values. In particular, in the light of a more precise explanation of modern breathing in the late 1920s, the document is structured in two parts, comprising, respectively, the definition of control measures imposed on house design , and use of a formal, clearly purified and diaphanous lexicon, determined by the triangulation between art, economy and hygiene.20212021-01-01T00:00:00Zinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/bookapplication/pdfhttps://hdl.handle.net/10216/138179porEliseu Gonçalvesinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos)instname:Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãoinstacron:RCAAP2023-11-29T12:38:35Zoai:repositorio-aberto.up.pt:10216/138179Portal AgregadorONGhttps://www.rcaap.pt/oai/openaireopendoar:71602024-03-19T23:24:00.707036Repositório Científico de Acesso Aberto de Portugal (Repositórios Cientìficos) - Agência para a Sociedade do Conhecimento (UMIC) - FCT - Sociedade da Informaçãofalse
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
title Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
spellingShingle Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
Eliseu Gonçalves
Humanidades
Humanities
title_short Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
title_full Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
title_fullStr Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
title_full_unstemmed Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
title_sort Republican Affordable Housing: Art, Hygiene, and Modern Architecture in Portugal
author Eliseu Gonçalves
author_facet Eliseu Gonçalves
author_role author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Eliseu Gonçalves
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Humanidades
Humanities
topic Humanidades
Humanities
description Right through the history of social housing in Portugal, a first cycle can be circumscribed that closes in the 1930s. Here the degree of intervention of the central administration for the resolution of the decent housing deficit had been previously discussed and simultaneously the construction of a diverse set of solutions which functioned as models to test against slums. On the one hand, the so-called "casa barata" (cheap house) began to be seen as an important political instrument in the struggle for power and social control; on the other hand, it continued to be understood as desirable real estate integrated in the complex fabric of economic interests woven into urban housing production. Although the operations conducted in this period and dominated by the First Republic were episodic and insignificant compared to the country's housing needs, some continue to have historical relevance as test balloons in the positivist laboratory that was the universe of republicanism.1 Some neighbourhoods were authentic condensers of the complex debate inherited from the eighteenth century, which, based on scientism, sought in this way the orderly and progressive reform of society2 in order to, among other issues, solve the so-called social question in which the problem of working-class housing was included.3 Confronted with the overwhelming rhythms of social and technical-scientific progress of the first decades, affordable housing was to be one of the most sensitive architectural programmes in the synthesis between tradition, history and modernity. In the disciplinary field of architecture, in many cases the economic, social and cultural valuation of the new dwelling and its particular technical and formal constraints redirected the modus operandi and the professional interest of the architect onto other themes hitherto adjacent to the central problem of style. In this transformational process of the architectural field, one of the aspects that must be mentioned concerns the regulation and normalization imposed by the hygienist rationality, putting the binomial art and science at stake. Thus, the main objective of this paper is to contribute to a reading of some pre-1933 economic districts centred on the international effect of hygiene considered as scientific knowledge and, also, a programme of values. In particular, in the light of a more precise explanation of modern breathing in the late 1920s, the document is structured in two parts, comprising, respectively, the definition of control measures imposed on house design , and use of a formal, clearly purified and diaphanous lexicon, determined by the triangulation between art, economy and hygiene.
publishDate 2021
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