Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community

Hagerman makes the impossible come true: to dignify people and rescue their cultural values with a shared in common and democratic sense; this is the intention behind his designs. He is not intended to be rural but authentic, working from the ethics rather than the aesthetic. His main talent is the...

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Main Author: Vera, Paloma
Format: Online
Language:spa
Published: Facultad de Arquitectura, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 2011
Online Access:https://www.revistas.unam.mx/index.php/bitacora/article/view/25114
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spelling oai:ojs.pkp.sfu.ca:article-251142021-01-26T18:47:07Z Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community Los pequeños universos de Oscar Hagerman Arquitectura y diseño para todos Vera, Paloma Hagerman makes the impossible come true: to dignify people and rescue their cultural values with a shared in common and democratic sense; this is the intention behind his designs. He is not intended to be rural but authentic, working from the ethics rather than the aesthetic. His main talent is the sensitivity for listening. His wise moves: imagination and obduracy, for not surrendering work in precarious conditions. His intention has always been to look for the easily appropiated designs, directly originated from the user's needs and with the best solutions for the. He is trying to use their aesthetic characteristics according to the place, instead of trying to aaesthetize poverty. In the strictest sense, Hagerman not only makes architecture and design for the community, he does it to help organize cooperatives that promote communitarian work, so that the same social network stays and generates work at the own localities. In his architecture, design and social participation projects, coherence and logic, with a place and a user, has always been his fundamental concern. The first stage of his professional experience was fundamentally urban. In the seventies he constructed a weekend house for his family in Valle de Bravo from a room that already existed in the land. This house is one of the first works he designed and that better explains the principles of his architecture: a simple house in town, integrated to the landscape, he protects because that house is made to inhabit itself, covering the most essential of human necessities. In the sixties, he crossed the border between urban and rural projects with Don Emiliano's Cooperative of Carpenters in Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl. With the Cooperative he made many designs for children's furniture, among them the Arrullo chair (1968), which gained the IMCE (Instituto Mexicano de Comercio Exterior, Mexican Institute of Foreign Trade) prize in 1974. The objects and furniture he designs to be constructed by cooperatives always have an expression related to materials, to the natural thing, as in sculpture factories of the Renaissance where learning began by knowing the materials in order to make; Hagerman recognizes the value of senses, touching and learning as original as possible, ergo forms must harmonize with the structure of material, body and culture as well. Oscar Hagerman se recibió como arquitecto por la UNAM en 1961. Su trayectoria profesional comprende dos etapas. Una primera en la que realizó principalmente proyectos de viviendas, escuelas, planeación de oficinas y mobiliario para producción industrial en la ciudad; y una segunda que abarca los últimos 40 años en la que ha trabajado en proyectos rurales apoyando a cooperativas y organizaciones en el diseño mobiliario, productos y arquitectura en diferentes comunidades. Facultad de Arquitectura, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 2011-05-12 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion application/pdf https://www.revistas.unam.mx/index.php/bitacora/article/view/25114 10.22201/fa.14058901p.2009.19.25114 Bitacora Arquitectura; No. 19 (2009): Bitácora 19; 32-39 Bitácora Arquitectura; Núm. 19 (2009): Bitácora 19; 32-39 2594-0856 1405-8901 10.22201/fa.14058901p.2009.19 spa https://www.revistas.unam.mx/index.php/bitacora/article/view/25114/67662 Derechos de autor 2011 Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
institution Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
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author Vera, Paloma
spellingShingle Vera, Paloma
Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
author_facet Vera, Paloma
author_sort Vera, Paloma
title Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
title_short Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
title_full Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
title_fullStr Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
title_full_unstemmed Oscar Hagerman's Enclosed Universes Architecture and Design for a Community
title_sort oscar hagerman's enclosed universes architecture and design for a community
description Hagerman makes the impossible come true: to dignify people and rescue their cultural values with a shared in common and democratic sense; this is the intention behind his designs. He is not intended to be rural but authentic, working from the ethics rather than the aesthetic. His main talent is the sensitivity for listening. His wise moves: imagination and obduracy, for not surrendering work in precarious conditions. His intention has always been to look for the easily appropiated designs, directly originated from the user's needs and with the best solutions for the. He is trying to use their aesthetic characteristics according to the place, instead of trying to aaesthetize poverty. In the strictest sense, Hagerman not only makes architecture and design for the community, he does it to help organize cooperatives that promote communitarian work, so that the same social network stays and generates work at the own localities. In his architecture, design and social participation projects, coherence and logic, with a place and a user, has always been his fundamental concern. The first stage of his professional experience was fundamentally urban. In the seventies he constructed a weekend house for his family in Valle de Bravo from a room that already existed in the land. This house is one of the first works he designed and that better explains the principles of his architecture: a simple house in town, integrated to the landscape, he protects because that house is made to inhabit itself, covering the most essential of human necessities. In the sixties, he crossed the border between urban and rural projects with Don Emiliano's Cooperative of Carpenters in Ciudad Nezahualcóyotl. With the Cooperative he made many designs for children's furniture, among them the Arrullo chair (1968), which gained the IMCE (Instituto Mexicano de Comercio Exterior, Mexican Institute of Foreign Trade) prize in 1974. The objects and furniture he designs to be constructed by cooperatives always have an expression related to materials, to the natural thing, as in sculpture factories of the Renaissance where learning began by knowing the materials in order to make; Hagerman recognizes the value of senses, touching and learning as original as possible, ergo forms must harmonize with the structure of material, body and culture as well.
publisher Facultad de Arquitectura, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México
publishDate 2011
url https://www.revistas.unam.mx/index.php/bitacora/article/view/25114
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