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Capital of Brazil since its inauguration
in 1960, the construction of Brasília was determined by the President of the Republic,
Juscelino Kubitschek in 1956 and is now registered by UNESCO as
a world heritage site. A national contest was held to decide on
the design of the new city and the jury consisted of the Englishman,
William Holford, the Frenchman, André Sive, the Greek, Stamo
Papadaki and the Brazilians Paulo Antunes Ribeiro, Horta Barbosa,
Israel Pinheiro (chairman) and Oscar Niemeyer, the architect responsible
for the city's main architectural works.
Lúcio Costa was announced the winner on March 16th, 1957,
and the other qualifying designs were those submitted by the teams
formed by B. Milman, J.H. Rocha and Ney Gonçalves (in second
place), Rino Levi and associates and M.M.M. Roberts (joint third
place). The design submitted by the team of young São Paulo
architects, which included Joaquim Guedes, contained ideas and
forms that were similar to those of the winning entry, evidence
of the importance of road axes and a linear structure in the definition
of contemporary town planning.
The draft scheme submitted by Lúcio
Costa was in the form of an airplane or a cross; the wings (north and south) consisted
of a road axis with lateral axes (east and west) incorporated and
bordered by multi-family units in large squares, formed by rectangular
blocks of six and three floors, intersected by streets for businesses
and premises for schools and leisure activities. The complex of
the four large squares was called the Neighborhood Unit, as it
contained residential and every day facilities.
On the smaller arm of the cross or the aircraft
wings, the local and federal government offices are arranged in regular rows, comprising
the Esplanada dos Ministérios, grouped around areas at the
poles to create the Praça dos Três Poderes occupied
by the federal government, the Paço Municipal in the Praça
do Buriti. The unusual structure of Brasília Cathedral,
adorned inside by an imaginary nun designed by the sculptor Alfredo
Ceschiatti, lends emphasis to the surrounding paved area with a
backdrop consisting of the monumental domes of the National Congress.
In this immense area, where the sign of the
cross is expressed in a directly symbolic way according to the rules laid down by
Lúcio Costa in the explanatory notes accompanying his initial
sketch, the buildings of the different government departments are
intermingled with areas concerned with business, leisure and public
transport. The areas designed to accommodate this mixture of functions
are located at the intersections and consist of theatres, shopping
centers, banks and roads.
The areas where the embassies and the University of Brasília
are situated are an excellent example of Brazilian and international
architecture and house centers of advanced research in various
disciplines. Facing the vast artificial lake to the east of the
city, these areas are also occupied by clubs, parks and housing.
The recent use of the lakeside for highly sophisticated shopping
and recreation is a move towards making Brasília a tourist
attraction as well as being a political and administrative center,
expanding the potential for the development of the Center West
in accordance with the objectives of the then President Kubitschek.
by Cêça de Guimaraens
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