Architecture and city. Learning from European Capitals of Culture

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Bibliographic Details
Title: Architecture and city. Learning from European Capitals of Culture
Authors: Adriano Venudo, Thomas Bisiani, Sonia Prestamburgo
Publisher Information: EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste, 2025.
Publication Year: 2025
Subject Terms: European Capital of Culture, ECoC, City architecture, Urban culture, Event city, GO!2025: Nova Gorica, Gorizia, Urban morphology, Borders, Assessment tools, Urban landscape, Socio-cultural ecosystems, Urban history, Architectural and urban design, Landscape
Description: What happens when culture becomes a tool to rethink the city? How can architecture, urban design and cultural policies converge to transform the city? This volume explores forty years of the European Capital of Culture (ECoC) Programme as a critical lens through which to read, design and imagine the contemporary city. Beyond celebratory narratives, the volume analyses ECoCs as complex devices of cultural diplomacy, civic imagination, participation and morpho-functional regeneration of urban space. Through the investigation of 40 case studies, thematic essays and comparative mappings, the thesis of the “city as a cultural project” explores the possible combinations between architecture, temporary and ephemeral events and short, medium and long-term urban strategies, as a vector of new city paradigms. From Athens 1985 to Nova Gorica/Gorizia 2025, the book traces the evolution of the European Capitals of Culture from symbolic events to political and structural projects for the city. The volume is the result of the study and design activity carried out within the RRR Lab - Integrated Design Studio of Architecture and Building in the academic years 2023-24 and 2024-25, thanks to the work of the student collectives COLGO and VAGO, the teachers of the Laboratory and the partners who in these two years have accompanied and supported the teaching and research activities carried out. Written by architects, scholars and designers involved in these paths, between local and global, the book proposes an interdisciplinary approach, which claims the city as a space of collective authorship, as a field of experimentation for the future of Europe and its communities.
Document Type: Book
Language: English
Access URL: https://eut.units.it/it/catalogo/architecture-and-city-learning-from-european-capitals-of-culture/10053
https://hdl.handle.net/11368/3114498
Accession Number: edsair.od......3665..5958e5818d614064806cbd9b04fce910
Database: OpenAIRE
Description
Abstract:What happens when culture becomes a tool to rethink the city? How can architecture, urban design and cultural policies converge to transform the city? This volume explores forty years of the European Capital of Culture (ECoC) Programme as a critical lens through which to read, design and imagine the contemporary city. Beyond celebratory narratives, the volume analyses ECoCs as complex devices of cultural diplomacy, civic imagination, participation and morpho-functional regeneration of urban space. Through the investigation of 40 case studies, thematic essays and comparative mappings, the thesis of the “city as a cultural project” explores the possible combinations between architecture, temporary and ephemeral events and short, medium and long-term urban strategies, as a vector of new city paradigms. From Athens 1985 to Nova Gorica/Gorizia 2025, the book traces the evolution of the European Capitals of Culture from symbolic events to political and structural projects for the city. The volume is the result of the study and design activity carried out within the RRR Lab - Integrated Design Studio of Architecture and Building in the academic years 2023-24 and 2024-25, thanks to the work of the student collectives COLGO and VAGO, the teachers of the Laboratory and the partners who in these two years have accompanied and supported the teaching and research activities carried out. Written by architects, scholars and designers involved in these paths, between local and global, the book proposes an interdisciplinary approach, which claims the city as a space of collective authorship, as a field of experimentation for the future of Europe and its communities.