Title: Time, Space, and City
1Time, Space, and City
- Dino Borri
- borri_at_poliba.it
- In Conversation with Students from Adelaide,
Australia - Polytechnic of Bari
- 6.10.2003
2Summary
- Introduction
- Spatio-Demographic and Administrative Profiles
- Diversity and Adaptivity
- Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century - Conclusions
- References
3Introduction
- Longue durée in history of cities and
hybridization of cultures - Intriguing conditions of successful urban
architectures and plans - Environmental aspects and resources as key
features - Evolution of urban structures and events
- Urban poverty and peripheries social
deprivation, criminality, economic crisis
4Spatio-Demographic and Administrative Profiles
- Bari today
- 300,000 residents
- 116 kmq
- 68 of employees in the tertiary sector, 30 in
the secondary sector, 2 in the primary sector - Capital of the region of Puglia (19,000 kmq 4,1
million residents 5 provinces) - Chief town of the province of Bari (5,000 kmq, 48
communes, 1,6 million residents)
5Diversity and Adaptivity
- Evolution of cultures and names from the Greek
and Roman politheism to the Arab (IX-X century
aC) and Cristian monotheism from aristocrats to
merchants from the Greek Barion to the Roman
Barium, the medieval, modern, and contemporary
Bari
6Diversity and Adaptivity
- From the Greeks only a coin with a child on a
boat joking with a dolphin - From the Romans only some ruins and some words
from historians and poets the granite columns
now in the gardens of the eastern part of the
waterfront Orazio, travelling from Rome to
Brindisi and the East, mentions the richness in
fish of the Adriatic sea in Bari
7Diversity and Adaptivity
- From the Arabs the mosque now laying under the
Christian cathedral of St. Sabino, in the old
city - From the Byzantins the casbah, the stronghold of
the Catapanus (the Greek-Turkish governor of the
colonial city), now changed into the Christian
basilica of St. Nicola, in the old city
8Diversity and Adaptivity
- From the confusion of cultures and dominations of
the Middle Age - the old city of today, with its basilica and its
cathedral, its castle, and many of its houses,
was built in XI-XVI century aC, during the Norman
domination (a population from the North of
France, originally Scandinavians), the Anjou
domination (the Earls of Provence came again from
France), the Aragon domination coming from Spain)
9Diversity and Adaptivity
- At the end of the XI century aC fishermans from
Bari steal in Mira, Anatolia (Turkey) the body of
Nicholas, a bishop who lived in the IV century
aC, taking it to Bari the myth of St. Nicola,
still alive, creates the modern Bari and
accompanies the modernization of the local
economy by integrating fishing and rural
activities and commerce
10Diversity and Adaptivity
- Merchants from Bari are among the wealthy people
of the Mediterranean area in the Middle age - Curious merge of tradition Greeks can declare
themselves, in public contracts dealing with
family affairs or commerce transactions, as
living more longobardorum the morginkap
regulates for long time, through different
cultures and social and ethnic groups, the
patrimony of the family and the patrimonial
agreement between husband and wife -
11Diversity and Adaptivity
- Houses are small, initially isolated and
gradually aggregated in rows, built by stone
walls and stone (ground floor) and wood (first
floor) floors, grouped around courts and thin
streets - A special customary law (Consuetudini Baresi)
regulates the building and functioning of these
houses, often invoked in judiciary courts when
conflict among neighbours arise - City structure is dense and non-Euclidean
12Diversity and Adaptivity
- Local population is stable during centuries
because of the recurrent pestilences which were
activated by crowding and poverty - At the end of the XVIII century the 40 hectares
of urban surface inside the fortified walls host
20,000 residents the viceroys (XVI-XVII
centuries) and kings (XVIII-XIX) of Naples do not
authorize urban expansions outside fortifications
13Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Strong growth of local economy during the XVIII
century production and commerce of olive oil and
other agriculture and manifacture goods - At the end of the XVIII (1790) century a plan is
proposed for expanding the city - In 1812 the French king of Naples (Murat, a
general of Napoleon) authorizes the expansion
beyond the fortified walls and charges a local
architect (Giuseppe Gimma) with designing the plan
14Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- The Gimmas plan is based on a Euclidean grid,
with blocks containing gardens inside, in the
yards - Special Statutes (Statuti Murattiani) regulate
city building through original provisions
expropriation of all private (and monastic) plots
in the perimeter of the new town and allocation
of the royal land properties to the new town
allocation to the developers only of surface
rights
15Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Gimma, who was 75 years old at the design of the
plan, introduces into the Statutes the lifelong
position of the City Architect (Architetto del
Borgo) and the right of the City Architect of
taking a royalty from each sq. mt of plot for
buildinng measured and allocated to the
developers
16Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- In fact, the Minister of the Interior wrote to
the Prefect of the Province who charged Gimma
with designing the plan for the new town of Bari
in 1812 well, we approve your decision but we
have to inform you that Mr. Gimma is well reputed
in Naples also for his expensive fees - Lobbyism of Bari merchants and patricians in the
circles of the monarchy in Naples to get the
authorization for the new town
17Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Opposing the old monarchy of Borbone and
supporting the French of Napoleon, Bari succeeds
in getting the political primacy in the province
the aristocratic Trani loses its position of
chief town in the province (1808) - The liquidity of capitals of the Bari olive oil
merchants (in fact, Bari has not important
palaces, as these merchants did not invest in
real estate) gives them economic primacy in the
area
18Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Houses are stereotyped and modular the typical
casa muratiana (Murat house) is designed on a
grid of roughly 5x5 sq mt, with height of roughly
5 mt the three windows (which become three
doors two shops plus the main entrance at the
ground floor) house is the typical cell of the
grid - The architectural style is an austere
neoclassicism
19Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Urban growth is not remarkable in the first half
of the XIX century - Anyway, the grid will be roughly 1kmx1km and
population will be 100,000 at the end of the
century - The national railway will be in Bari in 1863
many industrial buildings (food, mechanic,
textile ecc.) were built along the railway
corridor together with neighbourhoods for the
working class
20Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- The grid continues to grow during the first half
of the XX century, filling the whole space within
the railway perimeter peripheral suburbs grow
along the main radial roads - Growth and decline of Bari population 220,000 at
1940, 250,000 at 1950, 400,000 at 1980, 300,000
at 2000
21Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- In the 1920s and 1930s, during the fascism, the
industrial economy of Bari declines in favour of
a tertiary economy - A plan for rivitalizing the old town is approved
in 1931 this plan is still in force - An long and well designed waterfront is created
- Many buildings for public functions (hospitals,
barracks, offices etc.) are built - Public housing appears along with a growing urban
periphery -
22Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- In the years following the 2nd wordl war a new
industrial economy integrating the persistent
dominant tertiary sector appears the master
plan of 1954 supports increasing density and
heights in the grid of the XIX century, bringing
destruction of the neoclassic houses the master
plan of 1976 (still in force) supports a huge
suburban sprawl with heavy environmental
consequences and agricultural land consumption
23Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- The 1976 plan has a target population of 600,000,
erroneously calculated on the basis of previous
demographic trends - Low rise settlements and tall buildings appear
everywhere, replacing olive trees and
horticolture and invading streams (lame) and
seacoast (see the controversial complex of Punta
Perotti, sequestrated by the Penal Court of Rome
in 2001)
24Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- A big industrial area appears in the 1960s and
1970s in the Western part of the metropolitan
area - Big deprived suburbs mostly of public housing
appear in the outskirts of the urban territory of
Bari, with poor public transport links with the
city center where most urban functions remain
located
25Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Increasing social decay goes along with
increasing environmental and aesthetic decay - New powerful families of developers appear in the
1970s and 1980s, getting hold of economic and
political power - The old criminality changes itself into a new
more dangerous and powerful criminality every
urban district is now controlled by a criminal
family
26Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- In 1995 the richest landlord of Bari becomes
mayor (he is still the mayor of Bari) in the
1990s the family of the mayor starts a new
powerful building company
27Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Contradictions European funds (Urban I) support
in the 1990s revitalization of the old (medieval)
city (Bari vecchia), promoting diffusion of
food and entertainment activities together with
gentrification and expulsion of marginal families
and activities increasing water consumption from
the new activities brings severe water shortage
for the old residents
28Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Partial requalification of urban landscape in the
old town and in some other parts of the city
coexists with abandon and decay of other parts - Public transport (bus transport) remains marginal
- The neoclassic houses of the historical Murat
district continue to be substituted by new
trivial and tall buildings, completing the
destruction of the district (architecture,
spatial density) started in the 1950s and 1960s
29Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Treatment of waste water is managed by the two
plants created in the 1970s at W and E of the
city, now with problems of capacity and quality - New sand beaches have been created at E of the
city, under the skyscrapers of Punta Perotti,
with quite clean sea water but with recurrent
organic pollution from the imperfect drainage
system during heavy rainfalls - Rigorous differentiated waste collection is still
to be introduced so that wastes invade streets
and rats invade schools and other buildings
30Evolution of City Architecture and Plans From
XIX to XXI century
- Grassroot movements begin to appear
- Community groups fight against destruction and
pollution of the environment (see the fight
against filling the sea in the harbour for
creating container parks and parkings see the
fight against petrochemical and asbestos
pollution (Stanic, Fibronit etc.) - The election of the new mayor in 2004 is
considered crucial by these social movements from
below which want a magistrate famous for fighting
against Mafia as next mayor of Bari
31Conclusions
- Local history, local democracy, contexts and the
environment essential to understand city
evolution - Crucial role of local stakeholders in interaction
with regional and state powers - Phases of good urban forms and processes in
alternation with phases of bad u. f. p. - Which perspective from the movements from below?
32References
- Borri, D. (1998), Città e Piano tra Illuminismo e
Riforma Sociale, in Tateo, F. (2000), Storia di
Bari, Rome-Bari, Laterza - Masella, L. and B. Salvemini (1988), Storia
dItalia. Puglia, Turin, Einaudi - Petrignani, M. (1980), Bari, Rome-Bari, Laterza
- Tateo, F. (1998), Storia di Bari, Rome-Bari,
Laterza