Una profesión en desarrollo: John F. C. Turner en Arequipa

Authors

  • Helen Gyger Investigadora independiente e historiadora de arquitectura

    Es autora de Improvised Cities: Architecture, Urbanization, and Innovation in Peru (Universidad de Pittsburgh Press, 2019) y coeditora de Latin American Modern Architectures: Ambiguous Territories. (Routledge, 2013).
    Tiene una Maestría en Estudios Liberales por la New School for Social Research de Nueva York y un Doctorado en Historia y Teoría de la Arquitectura por la Universidad de Columbia. Actualmente es investigadora independiente.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/ensayo.202102.002

Keywords:

Barriadas, Aided self-help housing, Anarchism, Mutual aid, Comisión para la Reforma Agraria y la Vivienda (CRAV)

Abstract

This article explores the intersection of aided self-help housing and modernist architectural culture through the early career of the English architect John F. C. Turner, who emerged as a prominent theorist of aided self-help housing beginning in the 1960s. The focus is on Turner’s development of an architectural practice following his arrival in Peru in 1957, at the invitation of architect and planner Eduardo Neira. Turner spent the next couple of years in Arequipa, working for a government agency charged with regularizing the city’s urbanizaciones populares. This culminated in a trial aided self-help housing project initiated after an earthquake in 1958 caused widespread damage to Arequipa’s housing stock. The article explores how these seminal on-the-ground experiences informed Turner’s later theoretical writings.

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Published

2021-02-15

How to Cite

Gyger, H. (2021). Una profesión en desarrollo: John F. C. Turner en Arequipa. Ensayo: Revista De Arquitectura, Urbanismo Y Territorio, (2), 37–55. https://doi.org/10.18800/ensayo.202102.002

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Articles