Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

This book examines the skyline as a space for radical urban politics. Focusing on the relationship between aesthetics and politics in London’s tall-building boom, it develops a critique of the construction of more and more speculative towers as well as a critique of the claim that these buildings ruin the historic cityscape. Gassner argues that the new London skyline needs to be ruined instead and explores ruination as a political appropriation of the commodified and financialised cityscape. Aimed at academics and students in the fields of architecture, urban design, politics, urban geography, and sociology, Ruined Skylines engages with the work of Walter Benjamin and other critical and political theorists. It examines accounts of sometimes rebellious and often conservative groupings, including the City Beautiful movement, the English Townscape movement, and the Royal Fine Art Commission, and discusses tower developments in the City of London – 110 Bishopsgate, the Pinnacle, 22 Bishopsgate, 1 Undershaft, 122 Leadenhall, and 20 Fenchurch – in order to make a case for reanimating urban politics as an art of the possible.

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Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

This book examines the skyline as a space for radical urban politics. Focusing on the relationship between aesthetics and politics in London’s tall-building boom, it develops a critique of the construction of more and more speculative towers as well as a critique of the claim that these buildings ruin the historic cityscape. Gassner argues that the new London skyline needs to be ruined instead and explores ruination as a political appropriation of the commodified and financialised cityscape. Aimed at academics and students in the fields of architecture, urban design, politics, urban geography, and sociology, Ruined Skylines engages with the work of Walter Benjamin and other critical and political theorists. It examines accounts of sometimes rebellious and often conservative groupings, including the City Beautiful movement, the English Townscape movement, and the Royal Fine Art Commission, and discusses tower developments in the City of London – 110 Bishopsgate, the Pinnacle, 22 Bishopsgate, 1 Undershaft, 122 Leadenhall, and 20 Fenchurch – in order to make a case for reanimating urban politics as an art of the possible.

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Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

by Günter Gassner
Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

Ruined Skylines: Aesthetics, Politics and London's Towering Cityscape

by Günter Gassner

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Overview

This book examines the skyline as a space for radical urban politics. Focusing on the relationship between aesthetics and politics in London’s tall-building boom, it develops a critique of the construction of more and more speculative towers as well as a critique of the claim that these buildings ruin the historic cityscape. Gassner argues that the new London skyline needs to be ruined instead and explores ruination as a political appropriation of the commodified and financialised cityscape. Aimed at academics and students in the fields of architecture, urban design, politics, urban geography, and sociology, Ruined Skylines engages with the work of Walter Benjamin and other critical and political theorists. It examines accounts of sometimes rebellious and often conservative groupings, including the City Beautiful movement, the English Townscape movement, and the Royal Fine Art Commission, and discusses tower developments in the City of London – 110 Bishopsgate, the Pinnacle, 22 Bishopsgate, 1 Undershaft, 122 Leadenhall, and 20 Fenchurch – in order to make a case for reanimating urban politics as an art of the possible.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781351602518
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 07/30/2019
Series: Routledge Research in Architecture
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 220
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Günter Gassner is Lecturer in Urban Design at the School of Geography and Planning, Cardiff University, Wales, and an architect. His research and teaching interests lie at the intersection of critical theory and spatial practices. He specialises in questions about relationships between aesthetics and politics, history and power, and urban visions and visualisations.

Table of Contents

List of figures

Acknowledgments

The new London skyline

  1. Conservative representations
  2. A tall-building boom

    Conservatism

    Ruination

    Outline of the book

  3. Visual and political representativeness
  4. The notion of the skyline

    Form, power, finance, function

    Political skylines

    Agency

  5. Composition
  6. Western views

    Compositional wholeness

    Townscape

    Image

    Wholeness

  7. Sequence
  8. Skyline profiles and sky gaps

    Linear sequence

    Occupying the line

    Optical space

  9. Aesthetic and speculative value
  10. Reframing building height

    Aestheticising and beautifying

    The skyline as a monad

    Open totality

  11. History
  12. Enshrinement as heritage

    History as a process

    Inward history

    Historical progress

    The orderly city

  13. Meaning
  14. Linear and painterly

    Religion as capitalism

    Allegories and symbols

    Baroque folding

    Resistance

  15. Political images

    Ruination

    Conservatism

    A tall-building boom

Index

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