Brasilia, the promised
land, is one of the rare cases in which a dream becomes a reality based on
premises in which faith seems to be the main reason, and is transformed into a
landmark in the history of urbanism and a masterpiece of modernist
architecture. Is the only city the world built in the 20th century to be
granted the status of world Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 1987.
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Leia este artigo em Português
Usually, the
birthplace of a city is chosen by its first inhabitants who settled there for
this to be close to a river or a lake, or for having several advantages related
to topography, climate, geography, etc. In the case of Brasilia, the site was
chosen first, in the midst of a semi-desert savannah region (Brazilian Cerrado)
and only then they built the lake, the weather, and other conveniences suitable
for sustaining human life.
The capitals of Brazil
has always had problems as to its location, The first in “Salvador da Bahia”
from 1536 to 1763 and then, Rio de Janeiro from 1763 to 1960, both located in
strategically vulnerable venues. The idea of moving its capital to further
inland was considered since the time of Brazil colony of Portugal and was
established in Brazilian Constitution of 1891.
One of the reasons
given for the transfer was the sickly condition of Rio de Janeiro, but it was
eliminated with the eradication of the epidemic, during the government of
Rodrigues Alves (1902-1906), who, by the way, improved the appearance of the
city, driving its development.
The other reason was
the strategic vulnerability. History records many attacks against the city of
Rio, starting with the sequence attacks of French conquerors who wanted to
settle there by the16th century to the “Revolta da Chibata” (Revolt of the Whip),
when simple sailors put the government of Marshal Hermes da Fonseca in check,
forcing him to make dishonorable concessions to prevent the bombing of the
city. Later, the 1904 "Guerra da Vacina” (war of the vaccine), the revolts
of 1922, the communist putsch in 1935 and the integralist "Putch" in 1938,
in all of this attacks they took advantage of the fragility of Rio de Janeiro
in terms of defense.
Italian saint Don
Bosco, the founder of the Salesian order had a dream in 1883 in which he
described a futuristic city of prosperity and order that would be Brasília's
location:
"Tra il grado 15
e il 20 grado vi era un seno assai lungo e assai largo que partiva di un punto
che formava un lago. Allora una voce disse ripetutamente, quando si verrano a
scavare le miniere nascoste in mezzo a questi monti di quel seno apparirà quila
terra promessa fluente latte e miele, sarà una ricchezza inconcepibilie" (Memorie
Biografiche, XVI, 385-394 - Between the parallels 15 and 20 degree – south- there was a very long and very large
riverbed from which is formed a lake. Then a voice said repeatedly, when dig
the hidden mines in the midst of these mountains it will appear the promised
land with rivers flowing with milk and honey and with unconceivable wealth).
On May 12, 1892,
Marshal Floriano Peixoto considered unavoidable to comply with the third
article of the Constitution of 1891, and imperiously determined to move the
capital of the Union and organized an exploration to determine the region's
future capital. They’ve chosen the Brazilian astronomer of Belgian origin Luiz
Cruls, to lead the expedition.
Consisting of 22 men,
206 crates and bales (about 10 tons), the Commission headed by Cruls, on June
9, 1892, went by train from Rio de Janeiro to Uberaba (MG) and from there to
the central plateau.
In Pirenópolis, on
August 12, Curls’ staff was divided into two classes, in order to traverse the
Plateau and explore in two different ways. The first group - headed by Cruls -
went directly to Formosa, where he arrived on 23 August. The second, which went
through Corumba, Santa Luzia (now Luziânia), arrived in Formosa on September
14. Both groups were to determine daily the time and latitude. To do so, they
should use any phenomena that might serve to determine longitude, as the first
satellite eclipses and occultation of Jupiter that should be observed at least
in some parts of the itinerary.
Another method used
was to determine the length of lunars or by passage of the moon and/or a star
by the same vertical height or the same, or by differences in height between
the two celestial bodies.
Work completed, much
hope of mudancistas (something like "movers") and nothing else. After
the report of the Commission then convened Poli Coelho, the subject is still
treated with slowness by the Congress for over five years, but then it is
established a new location study, but now it is established a maximum period of
sixty days to the start and three years for completion. It's the Law No. 1803
passed on January 5, 1953 that define studies on the Central Plateau region
between the parallels South 15 º 30 'and 17 and meridians W.Gr.46 º 30' and 49
º 30 '- the so-called “Retângulo do Congresso” (rectangle of Congress) - aiming
the selection of the new capital federal. In the second article, that defines:
"Around this site
will be demarcated, respecting or not the natural boundaries, an approximate
area of 5,000 square kilometers, which should contain at the best way, the
requirements for the constitution of the Federal District and will be
incorporated into the Patrimony of the Union"
Finally, on April 15,
1955, the Committee responsible for the Location of New Capital compares
advantages and disadvantages of the five priority areas for the construction of
the city. They choose the “Castanho” site, 25 kilometers southwest of
Planaltina, they also define the perimeter of the future Federal District area:
about 5850 kilometers square.
In May 1955, Marshal
José Pessoa Cavalcanti de Albuquerque (mastermind of the construction of the
Military Academy of “Agulhas Negras” ) plant a wooden cross at the highest
point, considered crucial milestone of the city. Is the current Praça do
Cruzeiro. The original cross was taken to the Metropolitan Cathedral, where it
is till today.
Now it is time to
build the lake, The Paranoá Lake
Created in order to
increase the humidity in their vicinity. Paranoá Lake is an artificial lake
designed in 1894 by Mission Cruls and materialized with the construction of the
city during the administration of President Kubitschek.
The dammed waters of
the Rio Paranoá formed a lake with 48 square kilometers, maximum depth of 38
meters and about fifty miles in circumference, with some artificial beaches,
such as "Prainha" and "Piscinão do Lago Norte” - Lake North
swimming pool.
A Contest was created
to give the opportunity to a Brazilian urban planner to conceive Brasilia, 5550
people signed up.
Lúcio Costa won the
contest and was the main urban planner in 1957, Oscar Niemeyer, a close friend,
was the chief architect of most public buildings and Roberto Burle Marx was the
landscape designer.
It was Juscelino
Kubitschek de Oliveira, born in September 12, 1902, known also by his initials
JK, a prominent Brazilian politician of gypsy Czech origin that had the honor
to be the man behind the pharaonic construction of Brasilia.
President of Brazil
from 1956 to 1961. He was born in Diamantina, Minas Gerais, and died in 1976.
His term was marked by economic prosperity and political stability.
Brasília was amazingly
built in 41 months, from 1956 to April 21, 1960, when it was officially
inaugurated.
At the northwestern
end of the Monumental Axis are federal district and municipal buildings, while
at the southeastern end, near the middle shore of Lake Paranoá, stand the
executive, judicial, and legislative buildings around the Square of Three
Powers, the conceptual heart of the city.
These and other major
structures were designed by Brazilian architect Oscar Niemeyer. In the Square
of Three Powers, he created as a focal point the dramatic Congressional Palace,
which is composed of five parts: twin administrative towers flanked by a large,
white concrete dome (the meeting place of the Senate) and by an equally massive
concrete bowl (the Chamber of Deputies), which is joined to the dome by an
underlying, flat-roofed building.
A series of low-lying
annexes flank both ends. Also in the square are the glass-faced Planalto Palace
housing the presidential offices, and the Palace of the Supreme Court.
Farther east, on a
triangle of land jutting into the lake, is the Palace of the Dawn (Palácio da
Alvorada; the presidential residence).
Between the federal and
civic buildings on the Monumental Axis is The Cathedral of Brasília (Catedral
Metropolitana Nossa Senhora Aparecida - Our Lady of Aparecida is the patroness of
Brazil), considered by many to be Niemeyer's finest. The parabolically shaped
structure is characterized by its 16 gracefully curving supports, which join in
a circle 35 meters above the floor of the nave; stretched between the supports
are translucent walls of tinted glass. The nave is entered via a subterranean
passage rather than conventional doorways.
Other notable
buildings are Buriti Palace, Itamaraty Palace, the National Theater, and
several foreign embassies that creatively embody features of their national
architecture. The Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx designed
landmark modernist gardens for some of the principal buildings.
How much cost
Brasilia? Eugenio Gudin, Minister of Finance of president Café Filho from
August 1954 to April 1955, a political enemy of JK and intellectual unanimity,
made an estimate of $ 1.5 billion. Only took into account public spending, not
to mention "the tremendous waste in transport indirectly, travel to and
fro, doubles, waste of time," wrote the economist. In today's values,
applying to U.S. monetary correction, the figure would amount to 19.5 billion
dollars. With interest rate of 3% per year, average standard of taxation, we
arrive at a current value of 83 billion dollars.
President Kubitschek
in an interview quoted by the book "Quanto Custou Brasilia" by
journalist Mauricio Vaitsman, defended himself in a populist way, to explain
that he issued 134 million Cruzeiros in five years of government: "This
means that all that plethora of development represented in reality, the
sacrifice of only two Cruzeiros in five years, for every Brazilian. "
He appealed to the
issuance of money, these two cruzeiros per citizen, because all other forms of
financing for construction did not work, especially the sale of land linked to
the so-called "Obligation Brasília," heralded as an excellent business
proposal that few people wanted. The land in the Central Plateau became easy
money and an empty promise.
The amount spent in
Brazilia was never equaled, take for instance Songdo International Business
District (SIBD) a planned international CBD on 1,500 acres (6 km²) of reclaimed
land along Incheon's waterfront, 40 miles (65 km) west of Seoul, South Korea
and connected to Incheon International Airport by a 7.4 mile (12.3 km)
reinforced concrete highway bridge, called Incheon Bridge. Along with Yeongjong
and Cheongna, it is part of the Incheon Free Economic Zone.
The Songdo
International Business District will feature the Northeast Asia Trade Tower and
the Incheon Tower. Schools, hospitals, apartments, office buildings and
cultural amenities are to be built in the district. Replicas of architectural
hallmarks, including New York City's Central Park and Venice's waterways, will
also be incorporated. This 10-year development project is estimated to cost in
excess of $40 billion.
The World or World
Islands is an artificial archipelago of various small islands constructed in
the rough shape of a world map, located 4.0 kilometres (2.5 mi) off the coast
of Dubai, United Arab Emirates will cost something like $14 billion.
The city of Brasilia has
been acclaimed for its use of modernist architecture on a grand scale and for
its somewhat utopian city plan. It has been criticized for the same reasons.
After a visit to
Brasília, the French writer Simone de Beauvoir complained that all of its “superquadras” (superblocks) exuded
"the same air of elegant monotony," and other observers have equated
the city's large open lawns, plazas and fields to wastelands. As the city has
matured, some of these have gained adornments, and many have been improved by
landscaping, giving some observers a sense of "humanized"
spaciousness.
Brasilia International Airport Panels |
Although not fully
accomplished, the "Brazilian utopia" has produced a city of
relatively high quality of life, in which the citizens live in forested areas
with sporting and leisure structure (the superquadras) flanked by small
commercial areas, bookstores and cafes; the city is also famous for its cuisine
and efficiency of transit.
Even these positive
features have sparked controversy, expressed in the nickname "ilha da
fantasia" ("fantasy island"), indicating the sharp contrast
between the city and surrounding regions, marked by poverty and disorganization
in the cities of the state of Goiás, around Brasília.
Nothing dates faster
than people's fantasies about the future. This is what you get when perfectly
decent, intelligent, and talented men start thinking in terms of space rather
than place; and single rather than multiple meanings. It's what you get when
you design for political aspirations rather than real human needs. You get
miles of jerry-built platonic nowhere infested with volkswagens. This, one may
fervently hope, is the last experiment of its kind. The utopian buck stops
here.
— Robert Hughes, The
Shock of the New, Episode 4: Trouble in Utopia
I believe that Hughes
is highly misleading, I was recently in Brasilia and did not see VW pods in
semi-desert streets, nature blooms in their manicured squares and the number of
Porches and BMWs seem to only increase.
Brasilia is still more
photogenic than adequate for walking, but no doubt inspire architects, planners
and science fiction fans to create their utopia. Undoubtedly will not be the
last of its kind.
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