Allegedly bored with all the boxes the International
Style of Modernism produced post CIAM, some architects started to search for a
more expressive design language. This style grew gradually between the 1960s
and 1970s into a movement that was coined Postmodernism. It was especially
prevalent from the 1980s onwards and still influences architecture and urban
design today. The often monochrome, functional and formalised spaces and shapes
favoured by architects of the International Modernist Style (not to be confused
with early European Modernism, which could be decorative, shapely, expressive
and often colourful) were regarded as stark, boring, to isolated from their
context and prescriptive. Postmodernism was a movement encompassing art,
philosophy, literature, design and architecture. Its idea(l)s are most legible
in the work of architects. As a result Postmodernism is often regarded as
simply replacing a reworked Bauhaus-aesthetic by a neo-eclectic use of form and
ornament. And for a lot of the buildings in this style this is certainly true,
I think!
Around the same time Postmodernism took hold urban
design lost its way: creating confusing mazes of winding organic streets with
cul-de-sacs, stand-alone developments aimed at creating contrast often in series
and known as necklaces or multi-local hubs, or large urbanisation schemes that
looked especially great from above, but lacked sufficient visual cues to guide
visitors or make them into a place. This is strange considering Postmodernist
theory expresses the ideas of Contextualism. Contextualism is centred around
the idea that all knowledge is sensitive to its context, either factual or
perceived.
The main aim for both postmodern architects and urban
designers was -so it seems- to be expressive, witty, ironic, virtuosic,
paradoxical, technically clever and ambiguous, not at all relating to the urban
context. Especially early European Modernism reacts with subtlety to its
surroundings, whilst both International Style Modernism and Postmodern favoured
the visible spatial intervention. It is often only at a building level that
both styles express contextuality. In Postmodernism this is mostly achieved
with materials, colour, form, and by citing details and ornamentation from the
buildings in close proximity. A good example of this is the Inverdan Project in
Zaandam.
As a reaction to the endless sameness of many suburban
developments in the United States of America and the (often failed)
redevelopment of urban areas, a movement towards greater urbanity arose. This
was in part incited by Jane Jacobs' book "The Life and Death of Great
American Cities" of 1961. Jane Jacobs is remembered as an advocate of
mindful urban development as she argued that cities are living beings and
ecosystems that were by definition of mixed use. New Urbanism arose in the USA
in the early 1980s as an urban design movement promoting walkability,
cyclability, mixed use developments, mixing housing types and a neighbourhood
approach. New Urbanism is strongly influenced by pre-WW2 planning models and
tries to counter the strong influence of transportation by automobile on the
planning practice.
New Urbanism is basically community based and focuses
strongly on the neighbourhood unit as the scale of intervention. The movement
advocates the benefits of urbanism (as opposed to suburbanism or urban sprawl)
from a multinuclear centralised perspective. It promises a better quality of
life for residents, with a healthier lifestyle, more meaningful relationships
within the local community, more diversity and more open space beyond the urban
environment to enjoy. This is basically the same idea as that central to the
Garden City Movement, but with much higher, but not extremely high building
densities!
The 10 principles of New Urbanism are: 1] walkability,
2] connectivity (of networks), 3] mixed-use and diversity of use, 4] mixed
housing, 5] quality of architecture and urban design (creating a sense of
place), 6] traditional neighbourhood structure, 7] increased density, 8] green
transportation (this means no cars basically), 9] sustainability (the
eco-element) and 10] quality of life.
In some instances New Urbanism has been
misappropriated by developers and architects to diffuse protests against
gentrification and redevelopment. The more lasting influence of New Urbanism on
the planning practice has been the emphasis on Transit Oriented Development.
This is especially true in the vast sprawling cities of the Americas, as the
system has been used for many decades in Scandinavia. It is, again, a planning
device borrowed from the Garden City Movement to realise a different aim. By
planning public transport systems where you want urban development to
concentrate, this (re)development can be directed towards a more compact,
higher density urban environment.
In Europe New Urbanism has fused with certain veins of
Postmodernism (sometimes -superfluously as far as I'm concerned- known as
PostPoMo or MetaMo) into either an environmentally friendly take on
urbanisation, or an aesthetic approach which favours a return to pre-Modernist
architecture. Especially in the Netherlands and Denmark an urban environment
conducive to cycling and walking has been part of the planning practice since
the 1970s. So that very American aspect of the movement had no place to land in
the urban design practice. Even in the United Kingdom, where compactness was
favoured over sprawl as a result of a planning regime based on the principles
of the Garden City Movement, New Urbanism is mostly a push for eco-towns and
promoting cycling, walking and public transport.
Most ecological development in Europe however are to
low-density to be classed as an exponent of New Urbanism. EVA-Lanxmeer does
share the primary focus of New Urbanism on walking and cycling combined with a
favourable position near a train station. The nostalgic vein of New Urbanism,
which wants to restore a recognisable urban environment with reimagined
traditional architecture. Many neighbourhoods developed in America are felt to
be a stage set, artificial and manufactured. I feel some of the European
examples (although these are few in number as compactness is favoured by the
planning systems) are more genuine. That said, many people disagree and feel
these developments are little more than a pastiche of 1930s garden city housing
or traditional town architecture.
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