ABSTRACT

This extensive text investigates how architects, planners, and other related experts responded to the contexts and discourses of “development” after World War II. Development theory did not manifest itself in tracts of economic and political theory alone. It manifested itself in every sphere of expression where economic predicaments might be seen to impinge on cultural factors. Architecture appears in development discourse as a terrain between culture and economics, in that practitioners took on the mantle of modernist expression while also acquiring government contracts and immersing themselves in bureaucratic processes. This book considers how, for a brief period, architects, planners, structural engineers, and various practitioners of the built environment employed themselves in designing all the intimate spheres of life, but from a consolidated space of expertise. Seen in these terms, development was, to cite Arturo Escobar, an immense design project itself, one that requires radical disassembly and rethinking beyond the umbrella terms of “global modernism” and “colonial modernities,” which risk erasing the sinews of conflict encountered in globalizing and modernizing architecture.

Encompassing countries as diverse as Israel, Ghana, Greece, Belgium, France, India, Mexico, the United States, Venezuela, the Philippines, South Korea, Sierra Leone, Singapore, Turkey, Cyprus, Iraq, Zambia, and Canada, the set of essays in this book cannot be considered exhaustive, nor a “field guide” in the traditional sense. Instead, it offers theoretical reflections “from the field,” based on extensive archival research. This book sets out to examine the arrays of power, resources, technologies, networking, and knowledge that cluster around the term "development," and the manner in which architects and planners negotiated these thickets in their multiple capacities—as knowledge experts, as technicians, as negotiators, and as occasional authorities on settlements, space, domesticity, education, health, and every other field where arguments for development were made.

part I|40 pages

Developmental time

chapter 1|21 pages

Incompletion

On more than a certain tendency in postwar architecture and planning

chapter 2|16 pages

God's gamble

Self-help architecture and the housing of risk

part II|78 pages

Expertise

chapter 3|20 pages

Planning for an uncertain present

Action planning in Singapore, India, Israel, and Sierra Leone

chapter 6|18 pages

“The city as a housing project”

Training for human settlements at the Leuven PGCHS in the 1970s–1980s

part III|54 pages

Bureaucratic organization

chapter 7|18 pages

Folders, patterns, and villages

Pastoral technics and the Center for Environmental Structure

chapter 8|18 pages

The technical state

Programs, positioning, and the integration of architects in political society in Mexico, 1945–1955

chapter 9|16 pages

“Foreigners in filmmaking”

part IV|61 pages

Technological transfer

chapter 10|20 pages

The making of architectural design as Sŏlgye

Integrating science, industry, and expertise in postwar Korea

chapter 11|20 pages

Infrastructures of dependency

US Steel's architectural assemblages on Indigenous lands

part V|106 pages

Designing the rural

chapter 13|19 pages

Globalizing the village

Development media, Jaqueline Tyrwhitt, and the United Nations in India

chapter 14|23 pages

“Ruralizing” Zambia

Doxiadis Associates' systems-based planning and developmentalism in the nonindustrialized South

chapter 15|20 pages

Food capital

Fantasies of abundance and Nelson Rockefeller's architectures of development in Venezuela, 1940s–1960s

chapter 16|20 pages

The Jewish Agency's open cowsheds

Israeli third way rural design, 1956–1968

chapter 17|20 pages

Floors and ceilings

The architectonics of accumulation in the Green Revolution

part VI|53 pages

Land

chapter 19|20 pages

Leisure and geo-economics

The Hilton and other development regimes in the Mediterranean South

chapter 20|15 pages

Antiparochì and (its) architects

Greek architectures in failure