No-Stop City
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- | [[No-Stop City]] was a "[[radical design]]" architectural project by [[Archizoom Associati]] first introduced to the public in [[1969]]. It is a critique of the ideology of [[modernist architecture|architectural modernism]] that had reached its limits. [[Andrea Branzi]]: «The real revolution in [[radical]] architecture is the revolution of [[kitsch]]: mass cultural consumption, pop art, an industrial-commercial language. There is the idea of radicalizing the industrial component of [[modern architecture]] to the extreme.» (Branzi) | + | [[No-Stop City]] was a "[[radical design]]" architectural project by [[Archizoom Associati]] first introduced to the public in [[1969]]. It is a critique of the ideology of [[modernist architecture|architectural modernism]] that had reached its limits. [[Andrea Branzi]]: «The real revolution in [[radical architecture]] is the revolution of [[kitsch]]: mass cultural consumption, pop art, an industrial-commercial language. There is the idea of radicalizing the industrial component of [[modern architecture]] to the extreme.» (Branzi) |
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*No-Stop City, Interior Landscape, 1969 [http://www.flickr.com/photos/jahsonic/2321629487/] | *No-Stop City, Interior Landscape, 1969 [http://www.flickr.com/photos/jahsonic/2321629487/] | ||
{{GFDL}} | {{GFDL}} | ||
+ | [[Category:WAC]] |
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No-Stop City was a "radical design" architectural project by Archizoom Associati first introduced to the public in 1969. It is a critique of the ideology of architectural modernism that had reached its limits. Andrea Branzi: «The real revolution in radical architecture is the revolution of kitsch: mass cultural consumption, pop art, an industrial-commercial language. There is the idea of radicalizing the industrial component of modern architecture to the extreme.» (Branzi)
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See also
- No-Stop City, Interior Landscape, 1969 [1]
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