Abstract

The aftermath of WWII not only marked the beginning of a new geopolitical order but also once again brought discourses of architecture and planning back to the frontline of the confrontations between the West and the Soviet blocs. Although the immediate need for post-war reconstruction left almost no time for contextual theoretical development in architectural and planning principles, the “occupied” and “liberated” territories became laboratories in which the new concepts of urban form, domestic architecture, and forms of life were tested. During 1945–1967 Tehran became one these experimental grounds in which these planning principles were tested and implemented; a battleground where the socialist and the capitalist ideologies met. The key to this urban development project was an ideologically charged repercussion of the CIAM (Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne) discourse, specifically on Existenzminimum (1929) and Rationelle Bebauungsweisen (1930). While the CIAM’s agenda had already found its way to Iran through one of its founding members, Gabriel Guevrekian, it became operative through the activities of the Association of Iranian Architects who were in charge of major housing developments in Tehran since 1945. Thus, CIAM guidelines were translated into building codes, regulations, and protocols that had the fundamental role in shaping the Middle East’s first modern metropolis. New housing models were developed and proposed by the Association of Iranian Architects that cut ties with the traditional typologies and proposed a radically new urban form, architecture, and forms of life. This project at large, of course, was not politically neutral. This article reviews the role of two protagonists in introducing and revisiting the CIAM discourse in shaping the post-war neighbourhoods and housing typologies in Tehran.

Highlights

  • The early CIAM (Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne) manifestos, on Existenzminimum (1929) and Rationelle Bebauungsweisen (1930), have been extensively discussed in the context of the European Modern Movement and its agency in the postWWII reconstruction of the war-torn cities in Europe

  • Following the enactment in 1944 of the Law of Affordable Housing for Working Class and Governmental Employees initiated in the parliament by the Tudeh Party fraction, the Association of Iranian Architects developed a series of social housing projects in Tehran: the Chaharsad Dastgah (1944–1946), the Kuy-e Narmak (1951–1955), the Kuy-e Nazi Abad (1951–1958), the Kuy-e Nohom-e Aban (1961–1963), and the Kuy-e Kan (1961–1964)

  • Within three decades the typologies experimented in those mass housing projects occupied the entire extent of the territory; an expanding lava of urbanisation spread between the mountains in the north and the desert to the south (Figures 10 and 11)

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Summary

Introduction

The early CIAM (Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne) manifestos, on Existenzminimum (1929) and Rationelle Bebauungsweisen (1930), have been extensively discussed in the context of the European Modern Movement and its agency in the postWWII reconstruction of the war-torn cities in Europe. Keywords affordable housing; Association of Iranian Architects; CIAM; Existenzminimum; Gabriel Guevrekian; mass housing; Silvio Macetti; Société Générale de Construction en Iran; Tehran; Tudeh Party

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