City Architecture. The Example of Infante Santo Avenue (1945-1955)

Abstract
Infante Santo was idealized as a modern way of living in a modern avenue, within the existing city. This comprehensive project of city architecture, coordinated by the architect Alberto Pessoa (1919–1985) and built during the 1950s, embodies a site-specific attitude of cultural and urban continuity. During its planning and construction, this major urban project was first exhibited in Lisbon, in 1951, and then in Rome, 1955, London, 1956, Washington, 1958, Brussels, 1958, and also published in the French magazine L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui, in 1960. Today, the absence of a strategy for approaching Infante Santo as a whole is compromising its adaptation for the future.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Infante Santo Avenue, Modern living, Alberto Pessoa.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 38-43
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.MDKGBNW8

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Cassiano Branco. Modern Visions of an “Inconvenient” Architect

Abstract
Cassiano Branco (1897-1970) belonged to the pioneer generation of modern Portuguese architects, who worked during the years of the dictatorship. During the 1930s, Cassiano produced an anti-conservative and eloquent architecture, contrasting with the guidelines of the regime. The discomfort about his personality came also from his ideological opposition to the government. Among his peers he has been considered “an exception to the rule”, working, mainly for private investors, on programs for rental housing, movie theaters and tourism facilities, which were built along the boulevards of Lisbon or in the natural and intact regional areas of Portugal.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Cassiano Branco.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 30-37
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.V6IT95OP

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Porfírio Pardal Monteiro and the Global Design

Abstract
The search for the concept and the practise of a “total project” or “global project” in architecture, in the sense of the project that integrates various artistic and technical disciplines and which reflects itself as a coherent and constructed whole, are the guiding principles to explore the relationship of architecture with works of art and with other diversified technical fields, in reference to the “total work of art” concept. The architectural concept that Porfírio Pardal Monteiro (1897–1957) will come to defend, revolves around the integration of the various fields of engineering and the integration of the plastic arts, assuming that architecture ceases to exist without the interaction of those two domains. A third domain can be added to these two, which is that of industrial (or product) and furniture design.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Porfírio Pardal Monteiro, Total work of art.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 24-29
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.FMTVGMRC

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An Intangible Heritage in Use. Portuguese Institute of Oncology

Abstract
The Portuguese Institute of Oncology (IPO) built in modern Lisbon, between 1927 and 1948, and added to until 1996, is the result of the Francisco Gentil effort to study and treat cancer. It is part of the Portuguese modern healthcare network and a reference concerning social, urban and architecture innovations, where the architects Cristino da Silva (1896–1936), Carlos Ramos (1897–1969), Raul Lino (1879–1974), Ernest Koop (1890–1962), Walter Diestel (1904–) and Raul Rodrigues de Lima (1909–1980) took part. By highlighting its cultural value this essay aims to stress the importance of achieving public and institutional awareness, in dealing with its everyday intensive use and transformation, towards a sustainable future.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Portuguese Institute of Oncology, Healthcare architecture, Cristino da Silva, Carlos Ramos, Raul Lino, Ernest Koop, Walter Distel, Raul Rodrigues de Lima.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 16-23
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.NK2WYINQ

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Towards a Modern Lisbon through the Work of João Guilherme Faria da Costa for the Lisbon City Council (1938-1948)

Abstract
The urban planner João Guilherme Faria da Costa (1906–1971) is a leading figure of the generation of modern Portuguese architects, who distinguished himself by an intense professional activity in the field of urban planning since the 1930s, which is when this discipline was introduced into Portugal. In fact, with the institution of the Estado Novo regime (1933–1974), a completely new era was initiated for Portuguese urban planning, which evolved from being mostly the result of private initiative, to becoming an instrument for the public control of urban transformation. Faria da Costa, who worked for the Lisbon City Council from 1938, participated directly in some of the great urban transformations of the Portuguese capital which took place during this period.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Faria da Costa, Encosta da Ajuda, Restelo, Alvalade, Areeiro, Lisbon Baixa Pombalina.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 8-15
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.F1ER6CCA

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Apropos of Lisbon´s Modern Architecture (1925-1965)

Abstract
The modern experience in Lisbon (and Portugal) deserves a much wider and better dissemination in international terms, not only because of its own intrinsic value, but also because of its specificity, both of which are much more relevant when one considers the country’s peripheral contingency, the respective absence of any of the main premises that generated modernity in European architecture, the political context from which it resulted and the subsequent socio-cultural conservativeness of the country, the city and many of its elites. Even though there can be no doubt, and particularly so in this century, about the growing national recognition afforded to this modern architectural heritage, as expressed by the legal protection given to many of its buildings (which in itself is inseparable from the fertile research and documentation originating, above all, from the academic community), it is no less certain that much of this heritage is located in areas that are themselves being subjected to widespread and highly volatile processes of urban renewal.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning, Public Works, Duarte Pacheco.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 4-7
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.IO0F1LGU

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Lisbon, a Modern City

Abstract
In the words of José-Augusto França, Lisbon is the last of the old European cities and the first of the modern cities, as confirmed by the 1758 Baixa Pombalina plan undertaken for the reconstruction of the city destroyed by the 1755 earthquake, as a pioneering example of modern urban planning. Following the avant-garde plan, modern architecture in Portugal may be envisaged through three main moments according to specific policies undertaken during the long Estado Novo dictatorship (1926-1974).

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Lisbon modern architecture, Estado Novo, Modern urban planning.

Issue 55
Year 2016
Pages 2-3
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/55.A.R7T86U5Q

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In memoriam Ruy Jervis d’Athouguia (1919-2006)

Abstract
To pay tribute to Ruy Jervis d’Athouguia, the modern innovative architect born in Macau 100 years ago, the researchers and professionals engaged with his work were called upon to write about the importance of his legacy on the contemporary theory and practice.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Ruy Jervis d’Athouguia, Portuguese modern architecture.

Issue 57
Year 2017
Pages 86-87
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/57.A.XG4LPHPM

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Fumihiko Maki

Abstract
Contributing to the debate on the development of modern architecture in the Asian countries, in March 2017, Ana Tostões interviewed Fumihiko Maki, one of the greatest Asian architects engaged with the modern project, and member of the Metabolism group. Maki is currently developing a number of projects in Asia, including the Taipei Main Station Redevelopment in Taiwan, Shenzhen Sea World Culture and Arts Center in China, and the New City Hall of Yokohama, Japan.

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Southeast Asian architecture, Modern urban planning, Tropical architecture, Fumihiko Maki, Metabolism.

Issue 57
Year 2017
Pages 82-85
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/57.A.1EPYJ4Q9

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Modern Architecture in Vietnam or Vietnamese Modern Architecture?

Abstract
Architecture is one of the keys to the values of a society, a reflection of a people’s aspiration, and a society’s ideas and technological experiments over periods in its history. This paper will address “modern architecture in Vietnam” focusing on the general course of its development: its practice, discourse and the built environment throughout history. The guiding questions for the main content of this paper are very fundamental: How can we define modern architecture in Vietnam? How was it formed and developed through the modern history of the country? Can we call modern architecture in Vietnam “Vietnamese modern architecture”?

Keywords
Modern Movement, Modern architecture, Southeast Asian architecture, Modern urban planning, Tropical architecture, Vietnamese modern architecture.

Issue 57
Year 2017
Pages 74-81
DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.52200/57.A.2ALYXS4Z

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