A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Architecture in the History/Theory Nexus: Building Critical Regionalism in Frampton’s Greece
This article addresses the unresolved tension between theory and history that lies at the core of critical regionalism. To do so, it unpicks the recuperation of Alexander Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre’s discourse by Kenneth Frampton in the early 1980s. Tzonis and Lefaivre first theorised critical regionalism through the work of Greek architects (Aris Konstantinidis, Dimitris Pikionis, and Suzana & Dimitris Antonakakis) and their use of the historically embedded design principles of the ‘grid’ and the ‘pathway’. With his theoretical ambition to advance a broader critical design practice across cultures, Frampton attempted to generalise Tzonis and Lefaivre’s original account beyond the specific historical context that gave rise to it. But despite the positive contribution of his outward-looking vantage, Frampton’s account effectively circumscribed the two theorists’ original intentions. Instead of advancing a focused return to the region, Frampton’s critical regionalism reflected the broader concerns of Western architectural discourses of the 1980s.
Architecture in the History/Theory Nexus: Building Critical Regionalism in Frampton’s Greece
This article addresses the unresolved tension between theory and history that lies at the core of critical regionalism. To do so, it unpicks the recuperation of Alexander Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre’s discourse by Kenneth Frampton in the early 1980s. Tzonis and Lefaivre first theorised critical regionalism through the work of Greek architects (Aris Konstantinidis, Dimitris Pikionis, and Suzana & Dimitris Antonakakis) and their use of the historically embedded design principles of the ‘grid’ and the ‘pathway’. With his theoretical ambition to advance a broader critical design practice across cultures, Frampton attempted to generalise Tzonis and Lefaivre’s original account beyond the specific historical context that gave rise to it. But despite the positive contribution of his outward-looking vantage, Frampton’s account effectively circumscribed the two theorists’ original intentions. Instead of advancing a focused return to the region, Frampton’s critical regionalism reflected the broader concerns of Western architectural discourses of the 1980s.
Architecture in the History/Theory Nexus: Building Critical Regionalism in Frampton’s Greece
Giamarelos, S (author)
2019-01-01
Journal for Architecture (OASE) , 103 pp. 79-85. (2019)
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
DDC:
720
Resisting Postmodern Architecture: Critical regionalism before globalisation
BASE | 2022
|On critical regionalism saving our architecture design
IEEE | 2008
|