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Anniversary for Brasilia leaves architect 'sad'

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Meshuga Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Apr-21-10 06:51 AM
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Anniversary for Brasilia leaves architect 'sad'

BRASILIA — Brazil's futuristic capital Brasilia celebrates its 50th anniversary Wednesday, but the architect behind many of its grandiose concrete buildings says he is sad the city fell short of his egalitarian vision.

"Brasilia has changed a lot" from the original "well thought-out" conception, said Oscar Niemeyer, who at 102 years is still drafting and imagining projects in his office in the onetime capital Rio de Janeiro.

Overpopulation, Brazil's enthusiastic adoption of consumerism, and the resulting vast gap between the well-paid public service elite and the struggling service workers catering to them have undermined the hopes Niemeyer, a fierce communist, once had for Brasilia.

"The deep social divisions present in the new capital leave me sad," he said.

Laid out in the form of an airplane (with the government's executive buildings constituting the "cockpit" and offices and residences stretching out into the "wings"), Brasilia today elicits both wonder and unease in visitors.

It resembles a retro-future scene straight from "The Jetsons" or a Jacques Tati film, with UFO-looking domes, ministries atop square ponds, elegant spires and blocky offices deployed along improbably broad avenues where Brazil's normally vibrant flora has been all but razed to fit the rigid, clean lines and vast empty spaces.

But it also reveals the fatal flaw in its designers' plan: the overpopulation of a city originally built for 600,000 residents which today is home to more than four times that, 2.6 million people.

They succeeded to such a point that Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin exclaimed on a visit in 1961: "I feel like I've stepped onto another planet, not Earth."


http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5gXJB3bWsKwIZgr8-CFzY9U390I4A


It is an ugly city. I am not a fan of Niemayer's style, but I appreciate his work.

The Dois Candangos Momument:


The Congress:


The National Cathedral:


The streets were designed in a way to avoid traffic jams:
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