Abstract

What are the consequences of the use of the palimpsest metaphor on the construction of the contemporary project? The metaphor casts criticism on the modern project and opens to the long-term (longue durée). The investigation of territorial rationalities brings to the fore these temporal dimensions and the organizational structures of space. Understanding territorial rationalities is inescapable to define the basis of any exploration of the future of territorial, urban-rural configurations. The metaphor of the palimpsest alludes to the meeting/clash between different times, endless modifications and transformations. Until the use of the support is not so serious as to question its very existence, directions, dynamics and, at times, fortuitous encounters interweave on its shriveled skin; forms of power and violence are measured there, which, in turn, will generate new conflicts. “Unintentional monuments” are places where this intensity of pure overlapping disconnected intentions become monumental and the substance of a project, revealing, celebrating and exposing their landscapes, as episodes of collective human and environmental history. The palimpsest as a figure in the contemporary project is not only a criticism of the modern space, but the expression of a change of direction in the design activity, of its social role and of the theories intended to support it: Design space in the second degree.

Highlights

  • There is great convergence on the figure of the palimpsest

  • Architects, urban planners, landscape designers, sociologists and naturally historians of the city all seem to agree on the usefulness of the metaphor of the territory as a palimpsest

  • What are the consequences of the use of this metaphor on the construction of the contemporary project?

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Summary

Introduction

Architects, urban planners, landscape designers, sociologists and naturally historians of the city all seem to agree on the usefulness of the metaphor of the territory as a palimpsest. What are the consequences of the use of this metaphor on the construction of the contemporary project?. André Corboz’s article “Le Territoire Comme Palimpseste” (Corboz, 1983) starts with a clear criticism of the tabula rasa of the modern project, in which the territory has no form or resistance; it does not need to be known or described, as the project will inevitably be strong enough to incorporate and rethink everything. Corboz belongs to that set of scholars and intellectuals who achieved detachment from the modernity of. The metaphor of the palimpsest calls into question and radically denies the tabula rasa as an operating field on which the project unfolds

Territorial Rationality
The Unintentional Monument: A Space in Common
Design Space in the Second Degree
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