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EL CROQUIS 208: DOGMA

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EL CROQUIS 208: DOGMA 2002/2021

This edition begins with a conversation with Pier Vittorio Aureli and Martino Tattara, the founders of Dogma (> Biography), an architectural firm concerned with the relationship between architecture and the city. By focusing mostly on urban design and large-scale projects, they consult with municipalities and agencies for urban planning and architectural issues. Atypically, El Croquis is this time only featuring plans not yet constructed, including a model for a city of 4,000,000 Inhabitants, a proposal for 44 social housing units, and a prototype for boarding houses in London. Timely articles about urban transformation follow, including an interesting genealogy of housing for the laboring classes.

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Veste editoriale: Softcover
Formato: 25×34
Pagine: 320
Immagini a colori:
Immagini b/n:
Lingua: E-GB
Anno: 2021

ISBN: 9788412333114

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CONTENTS

Biography
Articulating Opposites
A Conversation with
Pier Vittorio Aureli y Martino Tattara
TATIANA BILBAO
Familiar / Unfamiliar
NEERAJ BHATIA
Theoretical Model for a System of University Campuses
Masterplan for a New Multi-Functional Administrative City
Model for a City of 4,000,000 Inhabitants
Masterplan for the Osong Biovalley
Proposal for 44 Social Housing Units
Reinterpretation of Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s Campo Marzio
Proposal for the Vlora Waterfront
Reorganization of the Tirana-Durrës Corridor
Study for the Transformation of an Office Park
Housing Prototype for 50 artists
Project for the New Central Park of Prato
A Short History of Minimum Dwelling
Prototype for Boarding Houses in London
General Local Plan for the Territory of Tropoja
House for Living and Working
Masterplan for the ex-Caserma Sani
Project for Two Social Housing Blocks
Transformation of a Street and Adjacent Archaeological Site
A Genealogy of Housing for the Laboring Classes
Housing Model for the Community Land Trust Brussels
Urban Transformation and New Housing Typology in the Dender Valley
On the Relationship between Images and Projects in Our Work