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Master's Dissertation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.11606/D.16.1998.tde-22072022-083747
Document
Author
Full name
Ângelo Bucci
Institute/School/College
Knowledge Area
Date of Defense
Published
São Paulo, 1998
Supervisor
Committee
Almeida, Eduardo Luiz Paulo Riesencampf de (President)
Martins, Carlos Alberto Ferreira
Meyer, Regina Maria Prosperi
Title in Portuguese
Anhangabaú, o Chá e a Metrópole
Keywords in Portuguese
Áreas centrais
Áreas metropolitanas
Espaço urbano
Planejamento territorial urbano
Abstract in Portuguese
Anhangabaú, o Chá e a Metrópole, são três palavras que dão o título deste estudo e fazem o seu roteiro. Anhangabaú é o modo como os índios viam o lugar e como lhe denominaram. Desde então, pela sua natureza, ele era identificado como um recinto e também como referência. Ainda hoje, em certa medida, o vemos e o chamamos do mesmo modo. O Chá é o Viaduto que transpôs o Vale inaugurando a cidade moderna no final do século XIX. É a superação, no que diz respeito a relação da cidade com o lugar. A Metrópole atravessa aquele recinto e lhe confere a grande dimensão, ela multiplica o seu valor simbólico. Três projetos serão analisados à luz destas considerações iniciais. Dois deles são simultâneos, Le Corbusier e Prestes Maia, 1929 e 1930, e representativos de duas linhas opostas do pensamento sobre as questões da arquitetura. O primeiro teve importância na formação dos arquitetos paulistanos e o segundo foi responsável pela construção da São Paulo atual. Finalmente, o projeto de Vilanova Artigas, 1974, representa a síntese que propôs conciliar ação e pensamento, dois universos tragicamente cindidos. É esse o assunto.
Title in English
Not available
Keywords in English
Not available
Abstract in English
Anhangabaú, Chá and Metropolis are three words which give this study both its title and its itinerary. Anhangabaú is the name given to the valley by the native indians, and is their way of seeing it "the devil's hiding place". Since then, because of its topography, it has been seen as both an enclosure and a point of reference. Even today, in some degree, it is seen in the same way. The Viaduto do Chá is the viaduct crossing the valley which announced the birth of the modern city at the end of the 19th century. It is an act of domination, in terms of the relationship between city and place. The surrounding Metropolis gives the place its sense of grandeur and multiplies its symbolic value. Three projects are analysed in the light of these initial considerations. Two of them, by Le Corbusier and Prestes Maia, of 1929 and 1930, are representative of two opposing lines of architectural thought. The first was important in the formation of a São Paulo school of architecture, while the second was responsible for the construction of the city as we see it today. Finally, the project by Vilanova Artigas, of 1974, represents the reconciliation of action and thought, two tragically divided universes.
 
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Publishing Date
2022-08-19
 
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