This topics was born following
a trip to the City of Bogotá, on the occasion of a seminar on the
relationship between “the University and the City” promoted
by the Universidad Nacional de Columbia (Bogotá Campus) and the Universidad
Central de Venezuela.
In preparing for a trip to a Latin American metropolis, one is aware
of travelling inside a complex reality where the social polarisation brings
to the forefront the extremes of poverty and wealth. The security of individuals
and society is the dominant theme that emerges, in a variety of circumstances,
in the day-to-lives of both residents and visitors who stay for short
periods of time. Columbia is the site of internal conflicts that have
dragged on for more than forty years, which have gradually lost their
motive and reason for being, but not their military importance and sovereignty
over the region. With its more than 7 million inhabitants, Bogotá
is symbolic of Columbia’s contradictions, as well as of the country’s
numerous indigenous groups, which, while not exactly integrated, carry
on a peaceful coexistence that constitutes a unique situation in the reality
of Latin American.
No matter how important these factors may be, none have lead to the creation
of this topics: not the poverty of its large cities, not the insecurity
and not even the multicultural and multiethnic nature of the country.
The meaning of and the reason for the theme of this topics is more tangible
and circumscribed. The objective is to open a window, perhaps all the
way or maybe only a crack, in order to document the construction of four
new libraries in the City of Bogotá, together with an effective
approach to public transportation: the transmilenio. The libraries constitute
a widespread, ever-present network that connects the main library with
a series of metropolitan libraries, and these with local neighbourhood
libraries (bibliotecas del barrio), in a similar fashion to the network
taking shape under the transmilenio public transport system.
As many observers have noted over the last ten years (for some the last
five), the city has changed significantly. The material gathered in this
topics is meant to illustrate this change. Documenting it with the urban
projects being carried out, while encouraging, with the contribution of
the readers of Planum, reflection on the wider array of dynamics at work
in the construction of Latin American metropolises. The construction of
libraries in large urban parks next to heavily populated neighbourhoods,
together with the efforts of facilitating the mobility of residents, struck
us an important sign that should be observed and acknowledged. What lies
behind these projects is an urban policy that aims at constructing a city
with a greater sense of solidarity. Where education and knowledge are
recognised as essential tools of upward mobility. The initiatives I describe
do not annul the political, social and economic disparities of a country
that is still highly unstable. It is these very conditions, I believe,
that make the importance of the activities all the more significant. As
I see it, the key notions that emerged from the Bogotá workshop
are as follows:
1. In settings such as these major metropolises, it is possible to address
and pursue the challenge of integrating the many different “islands”
that make up today’s big cities;
2. Solutions should be local in nature and should not be taken from the
standard approach utilized in the economic globalisation of urban transformations.
The materials for this topics were collected in most part by Eduardo
Alfonso Parra Chavarro, who compiled the background materials on both
the libraries and the transmilenio. Karen Gonzalez contributed a number
of images of some library models. Marco Negron gave us the permission
to publish an interview he had with the Mayor of Bogotà. I thank
all these individuals for their cooperation and help.