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E-grāmata: Adaptive Reuse in Latin America: Cultural Identity, Values and Memory

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"This book seeks to explore the theoretical and architectural connections between memory, values, cultural identity and adaptive reuse in Latin America. It does so by critically analyzing ideas and work within the context from where they emerge. With rich and layered historic centres, a wealth of colonial and 19th century buildings, and the heritage from the modern era, Latin America offers a unique architectural patrimony and its contribution and impact on contemporary culture and architecture still requires critical study and discussion. The chapters of this timely book consider the conflicted relationship between colonialism, native cultures, and immigration. It also explores the connections between modern projects and national identity, and contemporary interventions serving the needs of diverse societies while being cultural receptacles of memory. While most books on adaptive reuse focus on the larger general concepts, different technical approaches and case studies, this book will contribute to thestudy of adaptive reuse moving away from Europe and North America, focusing instead on cases in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Ecuador, and Peru. This book is an important resource for researchers and students in the area of architecture, cultural, global, and design studies, heritage, geography, sociology, and history"--

This book explores the theoretical & architectural connections.



This book seeks to explore the theoretical and architectural connections between memory, values, cultural identity, and adaptive reuse in Latin America. It does so by critically analyzing ideas and works within the context from where they emerge.

With rich and layered historic centers, a wealth of colonial and 19th-century buildings, and the heritage from the modern era, Latin America offers a unique architectural patrimony and its contribution and impact on contemporary culture and architecture still require critical study and discussion. The chapters of this timely book consider the conflicted relationship between colonialism, native cultures, and immigration. It also explores the connections between modern projects and national identity, and contemporary interventions serving the needs of diverse societies while being cultural receptacles of memory. While most books on adaptive reuse focus on the larger general concepts, different technical approaches, and case studies, this book will contribute to the study of adaptive reuse moving away from Europe and North America, focusing instead on cases in Brazil, Mexico, Argentina, Ecuador, and Peru.

This book is an important resource for researchers and students in the area of architecture, cultural, global, and design studies, heritage, geography, sociology, and history.

Introduction: Expanding and diversifying the field of adaptive reuseJosé
Bernardi

Topic I Whose Memories, whose values? The search for identity

1. Whose memories, whose values? Reflecting on the spatial history of the
Americas.
Fernando Luiz Lara

2. Open Work as a seed for change in adaptive reuse
Ana Etkin

3. Essential Documentation: Lucio Costa and the Modernist MissionaryCatherine
Seavitt Nordenson

4. From a project of modernization to a strategy of community building
Monica Bertolino

Topic II Other Modernities

5. Housing Policies in Brazil and Dwellers perspectives, a Comparative Study

Ana Paula Koury

6. Renovation and reuse in Brazil: Cases in Sao Paulo, Bahia and Porto Alegre


Marta Peixoto

7. Adaptive Reuse in Brazil: Lessons from Lina Bo Bardi

Isabella Trindade, and Ana Luisa Rolim

8. Resilient spaces: modern and historic legacy in Brazilian built heritage

Clįudia Costa Cabral

Topic III Perpetual Transformations: Adaptive Reuse in Mexico City

9. Mexican Iconoclasms: From the Post-Revolutionary Era to the 1980s

Cristóbal Jįcome-Moreno

10. Exhibiting Contemporary Art in a Colonial Context at the Ex Santa Teresa
in Mexico City

Derek Burdette

11. Cosmologies of Ruins and Ruination: Infrastructures and the Anthropocene

Christopher Morehart

Topic IV Places of Defiance and Resilience

12. How body memory actualizes to the architectural heritage the Latin
American dwelling as the new public space

Diana Maldonado

13. Hidden Landscapes of Palimpsestic Urban Memories: The Case of Lima, Peru

Kathryn Golda- Pongratz

14. Reversing neo-Plantations: From Guayusa Monocultures to Chakras and
Managed Forests in Mushullakta

Ana Marķa Durįn Calisto

15. Matachķn Codex Complex

Cristóbal Martķnez
José Bernardi is associate professor in The Design School at The Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts at Arizona State University. His work is focused on modern and contemporary design and architecture in Latin America.