Territory: On the Development of Landscape and City

How are the hin­ter­lands of cities urbanised—that realm which we pre­vious­ly cal­led land­scape and which, for this inves­ti­ga­ti­on, we now call ter­ri­to­ry? Ter­ri­to­ry replaces the noti­on of land­scape inas­much as it expands the view of the city to include a cate­go­ry of the grea­ter urba­nis­ed surroundings.

ETH Stu­dio Basel’s aim of reco­g­nis­ing and com­pre­hen­ding the various mani­fes­ta­ti­ons of urba­ni­sa­ti­on that we encoun­te­red in our stu­dies beca­me the start­ing point for our enga­ge­ment with the noti­on of ter­ri­to­ry. We were incre­asing­ly con­fron­ted with urba­ni­sa­ti­on pro­ces­ses that were unfol­ding bey­ond the realm of agglo­me­ra­ti­ons and urban regions.

For this book, ETH Stu­dio Basel’s spe­ci­fic rese­arch approach was appli­ed to six seg­ments of the glo­be that are cha­rac­te­ri­sed by very dif­fe­rent urban con­di­ti­ons: the Nile Val­ley, a sec­tion of Ita­ly ran­ging from Rome to the Adria­tic, Cen­tral Flo­ri­da, the Red River Del­ta, Mus­cat and Oman, and Belo Hori­zon­te. We sel­ec­ted lar­ge bands of ter­restri­al surface—each seve­ral hundred kilo­me­t­res in length—that con­tain a gre­at varie­ty of urban situa­tions: urban cen­tres, peri­phe­ral and spar­se­ly popu­la­ted are­as and are­as cha­rac­te­ri­sed by agri­cul­tu­re. The ana­ly­sis then sin­gles out a sel­ec­tion of essen­ti­al ele­ments that also struc­tu­re the publi­ca­ti­on: water, agri­cul­tu­re, extra­c­tion of mine­ral resour­ces, indus­tri­al pro­duc­tion and human settlement.

The stu­dies pre­sen­ted in this book and in the pre­ce­ding stu­dent rese­arch pro­jects, show how are­as of exten­ded urba­ni­sa­ti­on can be exami­ned and ana­ly­sed today, in an exem­pla­ry man­ner. The rich mate­ri­al about six urban ter­ri­to­ries gathe­red over the years pro­vi­des unex­pec­ted insights into con­tem­po­ra­ry urban processes.

Aut­hors: Roger Die­ner, Liisa Gun­n­ars­son, Mathi­as Gunz, Ves­na Jova­no­vić, Mar­cel Mei­li, Chris­ti­an Muel­ler Inder­bit­zin, Chris­ti­an Schmid

Edi­ted by ETH Stu­dio Basel

Zurich: Park Books, 2016
English
17 x 24 cm
228 pages
107 images
ISBN 978–3‑03860–023‑7

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