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Concrete Dreams: Practice, Value, and Built Environments in Post-Crisis Buenos Aires

Author/EditorD'Avella, Nicholas (Author)
ISBN: 9781478006305
Pub Date15/11/2019
BindingPaperback
Pages312
Dimensions (mm)229(h) * 152(w)
Nicholas D'Avella offers an ethnographic reflection on the value of buildings in post-crisis Buenos Aires, showing how everyday practices transform buildings into politically, economically, and socially consequential objects, and arguing that such local forms of value and practice suggest possibilities for building better futures.
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In Concrete Dreams Nicholas D'Avella examines the changing social and economic lives of buildings in the context of a construction boom following Argentina's political and economic crisis of 2001. D'Avella tells the stories of small-scale investors who turned to real estate as an alternative to a financial system they no longer trusted, of architects who struggled to maintain artistic values and political commitments in the face of the ongoing commodification of their work, and of residents-turned-activists who worked to protect the neighborhoods and city they care for from being overtaken by new development. Such forms of everyday engagement with buildings, he argues, produce divergent forms of value that persist in tension with hegemonic forms of value. In the dreams attached to built environments and the material forms in which those dreams are articulated-from charts and graphs to architectural drawings, urban planning codes, and tango lyrics-D'Avella finds a blueprint for building livable futures in which people can survive alongside, and even push back against, the hegemony of capitalism.

In Concrete Dreams Nicholas D'Avella examines the changing social and economic lives of buildings in the context of a construction boom following Argentina's political and economic crisis of 2001. D'Avella tells the stories of small-scale investors who turned to real estate as an alternative to a financial system they no longer trusted, of architects who struggled to maintain artistic values and political commitments in the face of the ongoing commodification of their work, and of residents-turned-activists who worked to protect the neighborhoods and city they care for from being overtaken by new development. Such forms of everyday engagement with buildings, he argues, produce divergent forms of value that persist in tension with hegemonic forms of value. In the dreams attached to built environments and the material forms in which those dreams are articulated-from charts and graphs to architectural drawings, urban planning codes, and tango lyrics-D'Avella finds a blueprint for building livable futures in which people can survive alongside, and even push back against, the hegemony of capitalism.

Nicholas D'Avella is an anthropologist who lives in Brooklyn, New York.

Acknowledgments vii Introduction. Concrete Dreams 1 1. Crisis Histories, Brick Futures: Economic Storytelling and Investments in Real Estate 32 2. A Market in Square Meters: Numbers and Narrative in Real Estate Market Analysis 67 3. Barrio Ecologies: Parks, Patios, and the Politics of Articulation 94 4. Recoding the City: Plans, Codes, and the Politics of Voice 140 5. Architecture is for Everyone: Bodies, Drawing, and the Politics of Care 179 Epilogue. Enduring Values 222 Notes 235 Works Cited 255 Index 271

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