An investigation of globalization's effects on architecture and urban
design between the start of World War II and the fall of the Berlin
Wall
To what extent did the circulation of people, commodities and knowledge
affect architecture and urban design between World War II and the fall
of the Berlin Wall in 1989? Swiss urban studies professor Tom Avermaete
teams up with Chicago-based architect Michelangelo Sabatino to
interrogate the influence of globalization on postwar architecture.
Globalization is a complex phenomenon that has profoundly affected the
practice of designers and engineers in the postwar era as it
simultaneously expands and shrinks the world in which we live.
Avermaete and Sabatino arrive at several conclusions through a diligent
analysis of spatial, political and social geographies, from airports and
hotels to construction materials and labor. The Global Turn presents
their findings in a series of six short essays, providing a fresh
viewpoint on a new worldwide environment that gives as much as it takes.