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El urbanismo de Alejandro de la Sota en la colonización española: La Bazana
Author(s) -
Rubén Cabecera Soriano
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
vlc arquitectura
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2341-3050
pISSN - 2341-2747
DOI - 10.4995/vlc.2016.4330
Subject(s) - population , colonisation , architecture , humanities , geography , political science , archaeology , sociology , art , demography , colonization
The Spanish civil war caused the emerging development of the urban theory to come to a standstill, especially in the rural areas which had began to appear at the end of the XIX century, mainly in Europe and the United states. The need to urgently develop a process of interior colonisation in the most disadvantaged areas was solved in favour of the theories of concentration supported by José Tamés facing the colonist disintegration defended by Víctor D’Ors. The system disguised by Tamés –head of the Service of Architecture of the National Institution of Colonisation (NIC)– created population centres distributed throughout the territories colonised by the NIC, whose projects were developed by a large number of architects that formed a genuine architectural and urban laboratory. Alejandro de la Sota was one of these architects and his work for the NIC leaves us with an imprint of an urban planning which could very well be seen on any front cover of a specialised journal. In La Bazana (1954, Badajoz) De la Sota combines with mastery the criteria imposed by the NIC with his unique interpretation of the territory, the landscape, the site, sun exposure and the way the colonists lived

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