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Bucarest dal villaggio alla metropoli. Identità
urbane e nuove tendenze.
by Giuseppe Cinà
Paperback: 178 pages
Publisher: Unicopoli, 2005
Language: Italian
ISBN: 884001036x
Prize: € 18,00
Presentation
by Emiliano Bugatti
The actual unification process of the European Union shows that
those countries which some ten years ago seemed not to have the
possibility to join EU are the ones which are actually the pronest
to do it. One of these, Romany, has always been considered apart
if compared to our geographical, political and religious condition,
in the Sovietic block from the post-war period up to Ceausescu’s
fall, and at the border of the Ottoman Empire and of the Ortodox
East, in the past. This particular border condition has always affected
Bucarest’s dynamics of urban transformation.
The title of Giuseppe Cinà’s book itself expresses
what the city of Bucarest has been in the course of the last one
and half centuries: a village which has become a “global”
contemporary metropolis. When the author introduces the idea of
village or of villages as a whole, to define pre-industrial Bucarest,
he refers to a city model non compact and typical of the Ottoman
urban layout, which west of the Balkans has never been considered
as “urban”. The birth of the Rumanian Nation has introduced
in the urban form a new city’s idea: the one of the XIX century
middle class. The Nineteenth century implementations replace the
“Ottoman” village thus giving way to such particular
results that they might even be compared to the most important Parisian
boulevards. Along with the urban reformation new examples of architecture
were built, in accordance with the transformations that were taking
place, but in contrast with the oldest buildings. This necessity
determines a hard cultural and architectural research of a new identity,
wich goes on until the XX century. Inside this gap there finds its
way the neo-Rumanian architecture elaborated by local architects
who had a Beaux Arts’ approach. The above architects borrowing
some typological elements from rural architecture work out a new
style.
Nevertheless, as the author underlines, the neo-Rumanian architecture
doesn’t go further than a figurative re-elaboration on buildings
of new typology. The identity question, marks Bucarest’s cultural
and architectonic events from the XIX century to the earlier XX
century, becoming an obsession in the works of the various architects
who will follow in the course of events. Most curiously inside this
debate which had to legitimate a new architecure if compared to
the traditional one, there found its way also the modern avant-garde
architecture of which Marcel Iancu, who was one of the founders
of the Dada Movement, was a well-known representative all over Europe.
Starting from the Thirties in the city of Bucarest were built excellent
examples of Modern Architecture that if were compared to the ones
of more famous European Masters would prove to be particularly deep-rooted
in the urban context thus becoming, in every respect, patrimony
of the city. At the end of the Second World War when Socialism appears,
the City goes through a new period full of deep transformations
one different from the other, ranging from the buildings perfectly
adherent to the rules of CIAM of the first period, to the absurd
Hyper-monumental expressions of Ceausescu’s era. Watching
from the outside a story which hasn’t yet been metabolised
by the young Rumanian democracy, the author may evaluate, to a certain
extent quite objectively, all the trends which have taken place
in forty years of Communism. The last part of the book is characterized
by the problems connected with the transformation from a collectivist
economy to a commercial one.
The problems concerning privatization, from the public industry
up to the houses of the single inhabitants, have provoked a new
deal in the management of the territory passing from a thorough
control to an absolute deregulation. The author though developing
the text giving a scientific approach to the urban dynamics lingering
on architectures considered quite outstanding, shows a city that
avoids some clichés usually pertaining to architects as well
as to urbanists.The various boxes inside the chapters have this
target. In some passages as well, the author gets rid of the inhibition
due to his being (“a pure researcher”) almost revealing
his personal way to approach and know the reality of Bucarest. In
these passages the author seems to join the interpretations of the
city given by non architects such as writers or artists who, in
their writings, have been able to show the essence of the city that
goes far beyond the analysis of the specialists.
As an example we might quote the psychological descriptions of Montalban’s
Barcelonas as well as the metaphysical Portugueese cities depicetd
by Tabucchi, or the sharp analysis by Maggiani on the origins of
the squares in the “Centro antico” of Genoa. Cinà
succeeded in showing Bucarest’s complicated course of events
always proceeding on both a scientific and emotional approach trying
to draw the reader’s attention on the various aspects of the
urban and architectural events.
The themes in the various chapters do not only deal with a chronological
reproduction of the strain undergone to reach nowadays reality,
but they turn out to be an opportunity to draw the attention on
the various aspects of the urban phenomenon. The reader is thus
enabled to reassemble places, times and themes of the city in a
complex framework giving full meaning to its contradictory portrait.
Emiliano Bugatti, architect, has collaborated
between 2000-05 with Maurice Cerasi, full professor of architecture
at the University of Genoa, in some researches on the historical
centres of the Eastern Mediterranean. He has written in the volumes
“The Istanbul Divanyolu--a Case Study in Ottoman Urbanity
and Architecture” edited by Maurice Cerasi, Istanbul Orient-Institut,
Wüzburg 2004, and in “La città dalle molte culture”
edited by Maurice Cerasi, Libri Scheiwiller, Milano 2005. Now he
is a researcher in Architectural and Urban Design at the Doctorate
School of Architecture at the University of Genoa.
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