Abstract

The Pontine Plain exemplifies the controversial shift from the Modernist radical attempt to reshape the landscape and the likewise radical return to bare nature of recent decades. The wildest European landscape extended very close to Rome for many centuries, until the Fascist Swamps Battle invented the Agro Pontino. Recently, marshy places have been recreated as plant-based sewage-treatment facilities, mimicking natural plots, into the Thirties’ grid. So, while the Fascist remediation deleted the swamp’s ecological thickness, lately no less doctrinal positions plead for the atonement of its ecocide. Today the Plain is a huge agricultural area undergoing changes: wetlands sometimes emerge through the grid of roads and Eucalyptus-lines, side by side the agricultural fields, dotted with industrial plants and weekend-home resorts, while local people use canals and floodable areas for leisure time, suggesting unpredictable new rural/urban/wild public spaces. How can we deal with this dynamic landscape and combine rural fruitfulness, historical heritage, ecological culture and new ways of living? We propose a general strategy, inspired by the Italian ancient agricultural practice of the marcite, and introduce productive wetlands, combining the bold 1930s’ layout with wetlands wig-wag; the farm production with new social behaviour; the historical identity with ecological processes. The aim is to overcome the cliché of dualistic opposition (water/land, marshes/farming, settlements/wilderness) in favour of coexistence, overlapping, simultaneity, negotiation.

Highlights

  • Becoming the Agro PontinoFor many centuries, the wildest European landscape extended very close to Rome

  • The wildest European landscape extended very close to Rome. It was the Pontine Plain, a 310 square mile marsh in central Italy, facing the Tyrrhenian sea – between the Colli Albani volcanic hills and the Circeo headland – soaked by many streams unable to find outlets to the sea because of impeding dunes extending for 28 miles along the shore

  • The Pontine Plain exemplifies a recurrent stance in the contemporary debate in landscape architecture for multifunctional rural sites, focusing on the balance among design, production and ecology, even more delicate when dealing with historic sites, inherited by a controversial modernity

Read more

Summary

Becoming the Agro Pontino

The wildest European landscape extended very close to Rome. It was the Pontine Plain, a 310 square mile marsh in central Italy, facing the Tyrrhenian sea – between the Colli Albani volcanic hills and the Circeo headland – soaked by many streams unable to find outlets to the sea because of impeding dunes extending for 28 miles along the shore. Similar to what is happening in many cities, where vacant private lots are managed by the public administration as temporary shared facilities, the abandoned fields where swamps are emerging could be managed by the Pontine Marsh Consortium as new commons, counterbalancing the total eradication of commons by the Fascist land reallocation that basically imposed the absence of non-strictly productive land and of available space for the necessary ecologically-supportive landscape infrastructure. The Agro would be endorsed as a multifunctional landscape platform, able to give back food, beauty, ecology, health and leisure

Open advancement
Findings
Short resumes
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call