Abstract

ABSTRACT In the late 1990s, a sustained outreach campaign saved the former headquarters of Belgium’s national public broadcaster from demolition. This article analyses the heritage designation for the Maison de la Radio in the context of the emotional value attributed to it at different moments of its existence. In the 1950s and 1960s, Brussels became synonymous with widespread urban renewal practices, and the radio building’s preservation has come to symbolise a turn to more conservationist urban planning policies. Only by accounting for the often unspoken and hidden memories of the radio-listening public’s emotional connection to the building can we understand how this iconic Art Deco structure withstood the tide of demolitions in a politically fragmented country where little value was accorded to modern and functionalist architecture. Drawing on sound studies, emotions history, and recent work questioning ‘authorised heritage discourse,’ this article analyses both the campaign itself and the way public memory of the building developed through its broadcasting past. It argues that preservation efforts in the present are implicated in sensorial and emotional understandings of urban space that are constructed through deeper historical time, exemplifying the extent to which materiality and emotion are imbricated in conceptions of heritage.

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