English [en], .pdf, 🚀/lgli/lgrs/upload/zlib, 39.3MB, 📘 Book (non-fiction), upload/degruyter/DeGruyter Partners/Updates 11-6-23 [RETAIL]/10.9783_9781512823868.pdf
Constructing Gardens, Cultivating the City: Paris’s New Parks, 1977-1995 🔍
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc., Penn Studies in Landscape Architecture Ser, Maidenhead, 2023
Amanda Shoaf Vincent 🔍
description
Paris’s late twentieth-century parks—ambitious, innovative, controversial—illustrate the height of postmodern design and urban planning. Amanda Shoaf Vincent examines five major parks to reveal how they draw upon garden models, the city’s history, and their local context to redefine the relationship between green space and the urban environment.
Constructing Gardens, Cultivating the City is the first cultural history of major new parks developed in Paris in the late twentieth century, as part of the city’s program of adaptive reuse of industrial spaces. Thanks to laws that gave the city more political autonomy, Paris’s local government launched a campaign of park creation in the late 1970s that continued to the turn of the millennium. The parks in this book represent this campaign and illustrate different facets of their cultural and historical context.
Archival research, interviews, and analyses of the parks reveal how postmodern debates about urban planning, the historic city, public space, and nature’s presence in an urban setting influenced their designs. In sum, the city adopted the garden as a model for public parks, investing in complex, richly symbolic and representational spaces. These parks were intended to represent contemporary twists on traditional designs and serve local residents as much as they would contribute to Paris’s role as a world city.
The parks’ development process often included points of conflict, pointing to differing views on what Parisian space should represent and fundamental contradictions between the characteristics of public space and the garden as it is traditionally defined. These parks demonstrate the ongoing cultivation of the city over time, in which transformed sites not only fulfil new functions but also engage with history and their surroundings to create new meaning. They stand for landscape as a form of signifying cultural production that directly engages with other art forms and ways of knowing. Just as the Luxembourg Gardens, the Tuileries, and the Buttes-Chaumont parks exemplify their eras’ cultural dynamics, such parks as the Jardin Atlantique, Parc André-Citroën, and the Jardin des Halles express contemporary French culture within the archetypal space of their era, the city. Finally, they point the way to current trends in landscape architecture, such as citizen gardening and ecological initiatives.
Constructing Gardens, Cultivating the City is the first cultural history of major new parks developed in Paris in the late twentieth century, as part of the city’s program of adaptive reuse of industrial spaces. Thanks to laws that gave the city more political autonomy, Paris’s local government launched a campaign of park creation in the late 1970s that continued to the turn of the millennium. The parks in this book represent this campaign and illustrate different facets of their cultural and historical context.
Archival research, interviews, and analyses of the parks reveal how postmodern debates about urban planning, the historic city, public space, and nature’s presence in an urban setting influenced their designs. In sum, the city adopted the garden as a model for public parks, investing in complex, richly symbolic and representational spaces. These parks were intended to represent contemporary twists on traditional designs and serve local residents as much as they would contribute to Paris’s role as a world city.
The parks’ development process often included points of conflict, pointing to differing views on what Parisian space should represent and fundamental contradictions between the characteristics of public space and the garden as it is traditionally defined. These parks demonstrate the ongoing cultivation of the city over time, in which transformed sites not only fulfil new functions but also engage with history and their surroundings to create new meaning. They stand for landscape as a form of signifying cultural production that directly engages with other art forms and ways of knowing. Just as the Luxembourg Gardens, the Tuileries, and the Buttes-Chaumont parks exemplify their eras’ cultural dynamics, such parks as the Jardin Atlantique, Parc André-Citroën, and the Jardin des Halles express contemporary French culture within the archetypal space of their era, the city. Finally, they point the way to current trends in landscape architecture, such as citizen gardening and ecological initiatives.
Alternative filename
lgrsnf/10.9783_9781512823868.pdf
Alternative filename
lgli/10.9783_9781512823868.pdf
Alternative filename
upload/degruyter/DeGruyter Partners/University of Pennsylvania Press [RETAIL]/10.9783_9781512823868.pdf
Alternative author
Vincent, Amanda Shoaf
Alternative edition
United States, United States of America
Alternative edition
uuuu
metadata comments
degruyter.com
metadata comments
producers:
iTextSharp 5.0.6 (c) 1T3XT BVBA
iTextSharp 5.0.6 (c) 1T3XT BVBA
Alternative description
Contents 5
Introduction 7
Chapter 1. Jardin Atlantique: From Modernism to Postmodernity in Maine-Montparnasse 38
Chapter 2. Jardin des Halles: A Garden at the City Center 74
Chapter 3. Gardening and Meaning in the Parc André-Citroën 111
Chapter 4. Bercy’s “Jardin de la Mémoire”: Ruin, Allegory, Memory 149
Chapter 5. The Promenade Plantée, or Coulée Verte: Practices and Perceptions of Movement 184
Conclusion. The City as a Site of Constant Cultivation 216
Notes 231
Bibliography 273
Index 285
Acknowledgments 297
Introduction 7
Chapter 1. Jardin Atlantique: From Modernism to Postmodernity in Maine-Montparnasse 38
Chapter 2. Jardin des Halles: A Garden at the City Center 74
Chapter 3. Gardening and Meaning in the Parc André-Citroën 111
Chapter 4. Bercy’s “Jardin de la Mémoire”: Ruin, Allegory, Memory 149
Chapter 5. The Promenade Plantée, or Coulée Verte: Practices and Perceptions of Movement 184
Conclusion. The City as a Site of Constant Cultivation 216
Notes 231
Bibliography 273
Index 285
Acknowledgments 297
date open sourced
2023-08-21
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