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Owen Hatherley

Across the Plaza: the Public Voids of the Post-Soviet City

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The vast, proverbially windswept plazas built under “really existing socialism” from the 1920s to the 1980s are widely considered to be useless spaces, designed to intimidate or at least impress. Yet if they are only of use to those in power, why is it they have been used so successfully in protest? From Petrograd in 1917 to Independence Square in Kiev during the Orange Revolution, these spaces have become focuses for mass protest. Beginning in Berlin's Alexanderplatz, and taking in Warsaw, Ljubljana, Kharkov and Moscow, Owen Hatherley heads in search of revolt, architectural glory and horror. Along the way he encounters the more civic squares that replaced their authoritarian predecessors and finds that, paradoxically, the old centres of power are more conducive to dissent than these new, ostensibly democratic plazas.
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97 printed pages
Copyright owner
Bookwire
Original publication
2012
Publication year
2012
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Quotes

  • peolrinahas quoted3 years ago
    allegedly unused and unusable (or more to the point, non-profit-making) space
  • Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
    many remain ambiguous spaces, spaces nobody is quite sure what to do with. Contestable spaces
  • Jan Nohas quoted4 years ago
    the dreamlike ambience of these spaces provides an attraction that is a counter to the chaotic pile-up of the capitalist streetscape.

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