ABSTRACT

Foreword by Adrian Forty.

The Algarve is not only Portugal’s foremost tourism region. Uniquely Mediterranean in an Atlantic country, its building customs have long been markers of historical and cultural specificity, attracting both picturesque driven conservatives and modernists seeking their lineage. Modernism, regionalism and the ‘vernacular’ – three essential tropes of twentieth-century architecture culture – converged in the region’s building identity construct and, often the subject of strictly metropolitan elaborations, they are examined here from a peripheral standpoint instead.

Drawing on work that won the Royal Institute of British Architects President’s Award for Outstanding PhD Thesis in 2013, Algarve Building challenges the conventional inclusion of Portuguese modern architecture in ‘Critical Regionalism’ narratives. A fine-grain reconstruction of the debates and cultures at play locally exposes the extra-architectural and widely participated antecedents of the much-celebrated mid-century shift towards the regional. Uncelebrated architects and a cast of other players (clients, officials, engineers and builders) contributed to maturing a regional strand of modern architecture that, more than being the heroic outcome of a hard-fought ‘battle’ by engaged designers against a conservative establishment, became truly popular in the Algarve.

Algarve Building shows, more broadly, what the processes that have been appropriated by the canon of architectural history and theory – such as the presence of folk traditions and regional variation in learned architecture – stand to gain when observed in local everyday practices. The grand narratives and petites histoires of architecture can be enriched, questioned, revised and confirmed by an unprejudiced return to its facts and sources – the buildings, the documents, the discourses, the agents and the archives.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

‘To Turn the Witchcraft Against the Wizard'

part I|106 pages

From the Centre

chapter 1|36 pages

Regional Formulae on Vernacular Material

Stereotyping the Algarve

chapter 2|68 pages

Architects on the Algarvian Identity

Permanence and Change

part II|218 pages

From the Region

chapter 3|70 pages

Modernism and Vernacular in a Negotiated Identity

The Buildings of Olhão, 1916–1966

chapter 4|62 pages

‘Miracle' in Faro

Towards a ‘New Eclecticism' in the South of Portugal, c.1950

chapter 5|70 pages

Modernist Regionalism

From Alternative to Establishment, 1952–1966

chapter 6|14 pages

The Stock and the Graft

Notes on Modern Architecture, Regionalism and Regional Identity