Making of Mexico City’s Historic Center: National Patrimony in the Age of Urban Renewal/
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Item type | Current library | Collection | Vol info | Status | |
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Library, SPAB | E-Journals | Vol 19 (1-4) / Jan-Dec 2020 | Available |
This article focuses on the origins of Mexico’s Federal District Planning Commission (1950–1953) and the consequences of its failure to implement a major urban renewal project in downtown Mexico City. In the 1950s, Mexico’s leading urbanists hoped to resolve the city’s severe traffic congestion through a new grid design and, in the process, transform it into a mecca for Mexican modernity. These efforts were thwarted by an independent coalition of residents and historic preservations in a movement that reflected the uneasy tensions between urban modernity and national patrimony in mid-century Mexico.
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