WA-AW. Arquitectura moderna para la salud pública: un análisis a partir de proyectos de Wladimiro Acosta y Amancio Williams

After the mid 1930s in Argentina, as in other Latin American countries, the government, through its public works, began to use modern architecture as a vehicle of communication, to create a public image of progress and technical efficiency. This impulse is evident regardless of the ideological funda...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Müller, Luis
Format: Online
Language:spa
Published: Universidad del Bío-Bío, Chile 2013
Online Access:https://revistas.ubiobio.cl/index.php/AS/article/view/765
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Summary:After the mid 1930s in Argentina, as in other Latin American countries, the government, through its public works, began to use modern architecture as a vehicle of communication, to create a public image of progress and technical efficiency. This impulse is evident regardless of the ideological fundaments of the different governments. Sometimes young architects were incorporated into the technical divisions of public offices (thereby redefining professional relationships) while other times prestigious architects were employed for projects. In both cases, technical knowledge, mediating between politics and society, was placed in a symbolic position of neutrality and administrative rationality. (Liernur, 2001)The purpose of this article is to account for transformations that occurred within project design processes and logic in little over one decade, based on an analysis of Amancio Williams and Wladimiro Acosta’s proposals for public hospitals.