Skip to content

We are live with a new website for Docomomo Belgium. Enjoy the latest version! (But there's still some work to do, as you will notice.)

Landscape Architecture and Infrastructure of the Twentieth Century

Author: editors: Jan Haenraets, Andrew Saniga, Gulnur Cengiz / Editorial assistance: Miles Glendinning, Katti Williams / Series editors: Uta Pottgiesser, Wido Quist
Publisher: Docomomo International
Pages: 280
Language: English
ISBN: ISBN/EAN: 978-90-833867-0-6

Docomomo International Book Series #1
Landscape Architecture and Infrastructure of the Twentieth Century – Selections from the Docomomo Chapters

This book presents a wide range of landscapes that have been integral to the Modern Movement era. It aims to raise awareness of their design significance and to broaden understanding of their diversity. It demonstrates the breadth of roles that landscape architects and affiliated designers have played in response to the demands wrought by social, political and environmental change, particularly in the post-World War II years. In this sense it draws attention to people and places that previously may have been marginally understood—‘invisible’ or ‘dislocated’—thus enabling them to be appreciated in new ways and to be considered more carefully in comparative analyses into the future.

Included in this book are eighty-six landscapes spanning the twentieth century and representing the following thirty-eight countries: Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Finland, France, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala, India, Iran, Israel, Italy, Japan, Lebanon, Lithuania, Mexico, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Romania, Scotland, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Syria, Thailand, the Netherlands, Turkey, United States of America, and Venezuela.

The book is published by Docomomo International as an initiative by the Docomomo International Specialist Committee on Urbanism and Landscape, and received publishing grants from Boston University’s College of Arts and Sciences Humanities Research Fund and the Australian Centre for Architectural History, Urban and Cultural Heritage at the University of Melbourne.

Download the publication as pdf-document

source: docomomo.com

View Publication