{"title":"日常空间","authors":"Pablo Fuentes-Hernández, Gonzalo Cerda-Brintrup","doi":"10.22320/07196466.2023.41.064.00","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Three articles in this issue of Arquitecturas del Sur are dedicated to collective housing, as the housing shortage has led to new and better forms of citizen participation in its solution. The Indigenous Temporary Accommodation in Florianopolis handles an essentially Latin American problem: access for Indigenous people to protected state housing. In this case, the presence of the city’s original inhabitants examines the possibilities of physical and symbolic spaces in the contemporary city and the professional role that looks into the responses. Next, the text on collaborative housing analyzes the case of Spain, and its relationship with public management mechanisms. The case of Gran Canaria looks at mutual aid issues, transfer of use, cooperativism, and citizen participation. In this way, the self-construction system of the Andalusian Junta, a practice that is as effective as it is controversial, and representative of a socialist cooperativism and cohabitation developed by the Barcelona City Council, converge in the debate on cooperative management. The third text looks into one of the latest events disclosed on CORVI’s actions, before its dissolution in 1976. It explores a management model that revealed the role of construction companies as a new player in the habitational process for the case of the Santiago Amengual Neighborhood. A second thematic group in this issue, materialized in its last 3 articles, returns to the structural issues of modern-day architecture, whose presence is diving deeper into the disciplinary debate. The places of memory seem to exceed the margins of an understanding based on heritage discourse. The memory and belonging of daily spaces, turn one to the nodes of memory and collective coherence. This is the case of the Community School – Center of Memory and Integrated Action to Care for the Forest of Galilea and the Territory of Colombia. Likewise, the individual, isolated, and selective expressions examine those unusual experiences where otherness exercises protagonism over experiences in the architecture and city of Santiago de Chile. Finally, revisiting the works of a master like Niemeyer opens the possibility for rereading, through actions based on the Portuguese decisions in two of his works: the urban complex of Pena Furada, in Portugal (1965), and Plaza XV, in Rio de Janeiro (1991).","PeriodicalId":40227,"journal":{"name":"Arquitecturas del Sur","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2023-07-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Espacio Cotidiano\",\"authors\":\"Pablo Fuentes-Hernández, Gonzalo Cerda-Brintrup\",\"doi\":\"10.22320/07196466.2023.41.064.00\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Three articles in this issue of Arquitecturas del Sur are dedicated to collective housing, as the housing shortage has led to new and better forms of citizen participation in its solution. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
本期Arquitecturas del Sur的三篇文章都是关于集体住房的,因为住房短缺导致了公民参与解决方案的新形式和更好的形式。弗洛里亚诺波利斯的土著临时住所处理了一个本质上是拉丁美洲的问题:土著人民获得受保护的国家住房。在这种情况下,城市原始居民的存在审视了当代城市中物理和象征性空间的可能性,以及审视回应的专业角色。其次,本文分析了西班牙的案例,以及它与公共管理机制的关系。大加那利岛的案例着眼于互助问题、使用权转让、合作主义和公民参与。这样,既有效又有争议的安达卢西亚军政府的自我建设制度,以及巴塞罗那市议会发展的社会主义合作主义和同居的代表,在关于合作管理的辩论中汇合在一起。第三篇文章探讨了CORVI在1976年解散之前披露的最新事件之一。它探索了一种管理模式,揭示了建筑公司在圣地亚哥阿蒙瓜尔社区居住过程中的新角色。本期的第二个主题组,在最后三篇文章中具体化,回归到现代建筑的结构问题,其存在正在深入到学科辩论中。记忆的场所似乎超出了基于遗产话语的理解的界限。日常空间的记忆和归属,将人转向记忆和集体连贯性的节点。这就是社区学校- -照顾加利利森林和哥伦比亚领土的记忆和综合行动中心的情况。同样,个体的、孤立的和选择性的表达也审视了那些不寻常的经历,在这些经历中,他者在智利圣地亚哥的建筑和城市中发挥了主角作用。最后,重温像尼迈耶这样的大师的作品,打开了重新阅读的可能性,通过他的两个作品中基于葡萄牙决定的行动:葡萄牙的佩纳弗拉达城市综合体(1965年)和里约热内卢的15号广场(1991年)。
Three articles in this issue of Arquitecturas del Sur are dedicated to collective housing, as the housing shortage has led to new and better forms of citizen participation in its solution. The Indigenous Temporary Accommodation in Florianopolis handles an essentially Latin American problem: access for Indigenous people to protected state housing. In this case, the presence of the city’s original inhabitants examines the possibilities of physical and symbolic spaces in the contemporary city and the professional role that looks into the responses. Next, the text on collaborative housing analyzes the case of Spain, and its relationship with public management mechanisms. The case of Gran Canaria looks at mutual aid issues, transfer of use, cooperativism, and citizen participation. In this way, the self-construction system of the Andalusian Junta, a practice that is as effective as it is controversial, and representative of a socialist cooperativism and cohabitation developed by the Barcelona City Council, converge in the debate on cooperative management. The third text looks into one of the latest events disclosed on CORVI’s actions, before its dissolution in 1976. It explores a management model that revealed the role of construction companies as a new player in the habitational process for the case of the Santiago Amengual Neighborhood. A second thematic group in this issue, materialized in its last 3 articles, returns to the structural issues of modern-day architecture, whose presence is diving deeper into the disciplinary debate. The places of memory seem to exceed the margins of an understanding based on heritage discourse. The memory and belonging of daily spaces, turn one to the nodes of memory and collective coherence. This is the case of the Community School – Center of Memory and Integrated Action to Care for the Forest of Galilea and the Territory of Colombia. Likewise, the individual, isolated, and selective expressions examine those unusual experiences where otherness exercises protagonism over experiences in the architecture and city of Santiago de Chile. Finally, revisiting the works of a master like Niemeyer opens the possibility for rereading, through actions based on the Portuguese decisions in two of his works: the urban complex of Pena Furada, in Portugal (1965), and Plaza XV, in Rio de Janeiro (1991).