Development Visions in Ghana: From Design Schools and Building Research to Tema New Town

IF 0.1 2区 历史学 0 ARCHITECTURE
I. Jackson
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Abstract

ABSTRACT This article investigates a series of development strategies pursued in Ghana from the mid-1940s under British colonial rule to the early independence period of the 1960s, seeking to understand how the pace and location of development affected the wider built fabric and especially housing production. While two contrasting visions emerge — of rural extractive agriculture versus industrial urban manufacturing — the impact of these endeavours was most strongly felt in the accompanying housing developments. Attempts to create a new artisan school capable of manufacturing building materials, and a laboratory tasked with developing new local building materials, sought to preserve a mainly rural-based population and lifestyle while reducing costs and making dwellings more durable. However, with advancing industrialisation and rapidly expanding urban centres, efforts to accommodate this change with revised urban boundaries and new construction standards failed adequately to address the housing issues and revealed fundamental problems in the governance of newly urbanising and suburban settlements. Could the solution be to ’start again’, to build a new town without the difficulties of the past? This was the approach of the elected nationalist government that commissioned the new town of Tema, east of the capital Accra. As one of the grand projects of the then prime minister, Kwame Nkrumah, Tema has been the focus of much scholarly attention, but a new source has recently come to light that changes understanding of the project. The notebooks kept by Michael Hirst, one of those charged with its design and realisation, show how Tema became an unwitting design school with its own series of trials and tests performed by a team of newly qualified architects. It was not only a political new beginning, but also an experimental attempt to create a new urban environment built on the promise of an industrialised future.
加纳的发展愿景:从设计学校和建筑研究到特马新城
本文研究了从20世纪40年代中期英国殖民统治到20世纪60年代早期独立时期加纳的一系列发展战略,试图了解发展的速度和位置如何影响更广泛的建筑结构,特别是住房生产。尽管出现了两种截然不同的景象- -农村采掘农业与工业城市制造业- -这些努力的影响最强烈地体现在伴随的住房发展中。试图创建一个能够制造建筑材料的新工匠学校,以及一个负责开发新的当地建筑材料的实验室,试图保留主要以农村为基础的人口和生活方式,同时降低成本,使住宅更耐用。然而,随着工业化的推进和城市中心的迅速扩张,通过修订城市边界和新的建筑标准来适应这种变化的努力未能充分解决住房问题,并暴露了新城市化和郊区住区治理中的根本问题。解决办法是“重新开始”,建立一个没有过去困难的新城镇吗?这就是民选的民族主义政府的做法,该政府委托在首都阿克拉以东的特马(Tema)新建城镇。作为时任总理夸梅·恩克鲁玛(Kwame Nkrumah)的宏伟工程之一,Tema一直是学术界关注的焦点,但最近曝光的一个新消息改变了人们对该工程的理解。迈克尔·赫斯特(Michael Hirst)是负责设计和实现的人之一,他保存的笔记本显示了Tema如何在不知情的情况下成为一所设计学校,由一群新获得资格的建筑师进行了一系列的试验和测试。这不仅是一个政治上的新开端,也是一次实验性的尝试,旨在创造一个建立在工业化未来承诺基础上的新城市环境。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
25.00%
发文量
0
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