HomeStore

Sérgio Ferro – Design and the Building Site and Complementary Essays

Product image 1
1 / 6

Sérgio Ferro – Design and the Building Site and Complementary Essays

Dating from the early 1970s, ‘Design and the Building Site’ is Sérgio Ferro’s most influential theoretical work. Written just after Ferro had arrived in France after fleeing the military dictatorship that took power in Brazil in 1964 and arrested him in 1970 for his involvement in active resistance, the essay reflects much of what he had left behind: encounters with Brasilia’s harsh construction sites; experiences with the collective Arquitetura Nova; work on the editorial committee of the journal Teoria e Prática; and the year Ferro spent in prison, befriending construction workers and reading Freud. The text constitutes a critique of architectural production under capitalism, surveying the political economy of architectural production and its influence on the contemporary practice of architecture. Half a century after its first publication, and in the face of capitalism’s greatest crisis, it has never offered such a pressingly relevant call for action. 

This edition contextualises and expands on Ferro’s essay with earlier and later texts, clarifying both the contextual and theoretical elements at play in its argument. A preface written by Ferro especially for this first English-language edition recounts his journey from Brasilia’s building sites to the experiments of Arquitetura Nova, as well as a topic he has rarely touched on before: postmodernism. ‘Production of Houses in Brazil’, from 1969, analyses the Brazilian dwellings from popular self-builds to the luxury and mass markets, offering both a historical report and a blueprint for deciphering the social relations of architectural production in other contexts. Finally, ‘Against the Grain’, a recent and previously unpublished essay, interprets architectural modernism as a Hegelian ‘determinate negation’ of nineteenth-century eclecticism.  

Together, these texts constitute a deeper exploration of the theory introduced in Architecture from Below: An Anthology, and offer a broad range of challenging and vital ideas to builders, thinkers, and architects today.

280 pages, 16.5 x 22.5 cm, hardcover, MACK (London).

$42.05
Sérgio Ferro – Design and the Building Site and Complementary Essays
$42.05

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Dating from the early 1970s, ‘Design and the Building Site’ is Sérgio Ferro’s most influential theoretical work. Written just after Ferro had arrived in France after fleeing the military dictatorship that took power in Brazil in 1964 and arrested him in 1970 for his involvement in active resistance, the essay reflects much of what he had left behind: encounters with Brasilia’s harsh construction sites; experiences with the collective Arquitetura Nova; work on the editorial committee of the journal Teoria e Prática; and the year Ferro spent in prison, befriending construction workers and reading Freud. The text constitutes a critique of architectural production under capitalism, surveying the political economy of architectural production and its influence on the contemporary practice of architecture. Half a century after its first publication, and in the face of capitalism’s greatest crisis, it has never offered such a pressingly relevant call for action. 

This edition contextualises and expands on Ferro’s essay with earlier and later texts, clarifying both the contextual and theoretical elements at play in its argument. A preface written by Ferro especially for this first English-language edition recounts his journey from Brasilia’s building sites to the experiments of Arquitetura Nova, as well as a topic he has rarely touched on before: postmodernism. ‘Production of Houses in Brazil’, from 1969, analyses the Brazilian dwellings from popular self-builds to the luxury and mass markets, offering both a historical report and a blueprint for deciphering the social relations of architectural production in other contexts. Finally, ‘Against the Grain’, a recent and previously unpublished essay, interprets architectural modernism as a Hegelian ‘determinate negation’ of nineteenth-century eclecticism.  

Together, these texts constitute a deeper exploration of the theory introduced in Architecture from Below: An Anthology, and offer a broad range of challenging and vital ideas to builders, thinkers, and architects today.

280 pages, 16.5 x 22.5 cm, hardcover, MACK (London).

You may also like

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

51N4E - Double or Nothing

$48.36

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Atlas of the Conflict: Israel-Palestine

$51.86

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

North North West

$44.85

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

20/20: Editorial Takes on Architectural Discourse

$23.83

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Robin Evans - Translations from Drawing to Building and Other Essays

$29.43

-70%
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Jason Griffiths - Manifest Destiny

$36.44

$10.93

-70%
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

God & Co: François Dallegret, Beyond the Bubble

$61.67

$18.50

-70%
Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Bureau B+B: Urbanism And Landscape Architecture 1977–2010

$63.07

$18.92

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Aaron Levy and William Menking - Four Conversations on the Architecture of Discourse

$15.42

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Erik van der Weijde – Superquadra

$43.45

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

First Works: Emerging Architectural Experimentation of the 1960s & 1970s

$73.58

Thumbnail 1Thumbnail 2

Lars Lerup - One Million Acres & No Zoning

$41.35