The noted Austrian architect, painter and lecturer on
city planning, Camillo Sitte, spent most of his life in Vienna, where he was
born (in 1843) and died (in 1903). He was a great influence on the development
of city planning as a separate profession in continental Europe. Together with Reinhard
Baumeister he is famous for reinstating the role of urban design and city
planning at the end of the nineteenth century. He travelled extensively and
visited Italy, Egypt, Bohemia, France, Germany, The Low Countries and Greece.
In 1871 at 28 years of age he was employed in his father's architecture firm.
In 1875 he took the position of director of the Staatsgewerbschule (a technical college) in Salzburg. In 1883 he
transferred to the compeer in Vienna as a teacher. He became the director of
this technical college in 1899.
Camillo Sitte is most famous for his 1889 book: Der Städtebau nach seinen künstlerischen
Grundsätzen (City Planning According to Artistic Principles). This
well-known book is foremost a textbook born from the lessons he taught and his
dislike of what was then common practice in expanding cities. He tries not to
give a complete overview, but rather inspire and elaborate on his ideas on
better ways of planning cities. His book was a great inspiration to the Garden
City Movement, especially in Europe, and much later again to New Urbanism.
I have the 1991 Dutch translation -by prof. dr. Auke van
der Woud- of Camillo Sitte's book in my office. I bought this after I had read
the original German version from the university library as a student. The
translation stays close to the original text (in contrast to the English
version) but does away with the flowery language with extremely long sentences.
Sitte's book is not a criticism of architectural shape;
although the reader can distil his critical attitude towards the eclectic use
of historic architectural styles from his proposals for specific situations in
Vienna around the Ringstrasse. Rather, it is an aesthetic criticism of late
nineteenth century urban design and planning characterised by axial
compositions, axial interventions and grid layouts for streets in new
developments. Examples of this type of urban design include: Leopoldsburg, the
grid expansion of Düsseldorf, the expansion of Pest (with axial compositions),
the expansion of Munich (with axial interventions), and the axial interventions
in Berlin and Brussels. Prying city planning and urban design from architects
as a separate consideration beyond the mere buildings erected, his book was
greatly influential, also on architects. Between 1889 and 1922 the book was
edited five times. It was translated into French in 1902. The first English
translation came into circulation in 1945. This, however, doesn't mean the book had no influence in the
English-speaking countries, but it was, admittedly, rather limited and indirect.
Sitte sees the city as more than a collection of
buildings, but rather as an artistic expression of human culture. By
considering the quality of urban space the whole of the urban environment is
more than the sum of its parts, so he argues. He contends that planners had
only focussed on producing efficient plans on paper with room for traffic and
repetitive parcelations and neglecting the three dimensional reality of the
city. He proposes an aesthetically conscious manner of city planning instead.
For this he seeks inspiration in existing urban environments that are cultured
and aesthetically pleasing. The richly illustrated books shows instructive
examples from Italy and Germany together with classical examples. Baroque
interventions also feature in his book, so it is by no means singularly
focussed on the medieval period.
Sitte mainly focuses on squares in his book as a way
of creating an aesthetic urban landscape by artistic principles. He illustrates
the virtues of situating prominent buildings on the edges of open spaces and
making sure the space has differentiated sides. He emphasises that the middle
of any public space is the least favourable place to erect any structure (e.g.
statue, monument, fountain, music pavilion). Besides aesthetic arguments he
also puts forward the idea of traffic vacuums where no people or carts go, that
are most suited for such monuments and fountains. Schematics of this are
included in the book.
In the book Camillo Sitte defines a typology of
squares, loosely based on their main function. All these examples are noted for
their lack of obsessive order and irregularity. He defines a square as an
outdoor room, as an enclosed space. He thus opposes the orthogonal systems then
favoured in urban planning, the axial treatment of special buildings, the
wideness of routes and the regularity of spaces in favour of a succession of
open spaces of irregular and different shapes logically connected by streets.
He doesn't advocate recreating ancient or medieval examples, but to only design
the general structure and position of open spaces within this and leave the
rest up to private initiative, as in his historical references. The urban
environment should work for today's people in today's society. This is true
still in the twenty-first century!
Some sketches redrawn after Sitte's book. The first is
typical of a whole series of medieval squares with a partially built-in church
to one side (A). This type contrasts heavily with the axial orthogonal approach
(B) as for instance advocated by R. Baumeister with the church in a central
position on the square. A sketch of urban spaces that are linked creating
interesting spaces around a town hall (C) underlines the importance Sitte
places on a succession of spaces. He also gives examples of improvements to the
then preferred orthogonal layout (D), he stresses the importance of T-junctions
and a differential treatment of the corners and approaches to an urban space
-square- to also allow for the placement of fountains and monuments along the
edges keeping the centre clear as was the norm in ancient cities. Baroque
examples are also included. Sitte especially appreciates the three winged
structure that creates two subspaces in logical spatial and often functional
relation, as shown by the sketch of the Palace of Würzburg (E). Based on this
he also includes new ways of incorporating such schemes in present-day urban
planning. He includes several sketches of which a drawing of an example with
a large church, school or concert hall with a formal axial approach on each
side is shown here (F).
The book was meant to be inspirational, and it can
still be if one reads concerns for traffic congestion by horse-drawn carriages
and wagons as congestion by cars and bicycles and filters out other typically
nineteenth century concerns and assumptions, for instance on the type of
buildings that make up the urban landscape. His proposed succession of spaces
fits well with research into spatial psychology. What's amazing is that he has
no proposals of using greenery as elements to create urban spaces; as an
architect he focuses only on buildings. This omission is not reconciled by his
article on Green in the City that was added to the fifth edition of his book as
an extra chapter (and is also included in the Dutch version). Instead he
postulates avenues and tree-lined streets as an unnecessary waste of space or, an
unwanted element blocking views and the availability of sunlight and clean air
in the houses. Luckily this has been rebuked by German research from the early
twentieth century.
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