Citizenship from the power
Oscar Olinto is an extraordinary professor who tempers the soul, he becomes a bridge and asks his students to cross it. An architect with a degree from the Central University of Venezuela, and a Master’s degree in Urban Planning from the London Architectural Association, and a doctor’s degree in Urban Regional in London also. He is one of the most lucid minds in the field of urban development and housing in Venezuela.
Thinking about Caracas’ future necessarily implies considering our society’s future. What kind of society will support it, generate it and traduce it spatially? Each society organizes its space according to territorial scales, based on its nature and political, economic, social and cultural contents. That is the historical dialectic relationship between space and the society producing it. Accordingly, it is necessary that a political, non nineteenth century model should prevail, of which its process and result be decentralized, democratic.
Caracas and the slums. Independently from the political model being established from power, the slums’ priority consideration in the city of the future imposes its assumption as the society’s great urbanism priority. One may not keep ignoring this priority at a political, union, professional levels, and at many universities; it deserves attention form 47% of the Caracas population, not shaping another city, incorrectly named «the informal one»; on the contrary, its inhabitants are a significant part of the city’s urban dynamic structure holding them.
Citizenship from the power. One must shape citizenship from the power. And in its conditions one finds the auspice of a restorative thinking of the Caracas slums, based on a permanent policy of urban inclusion generating a less polarized social wealth at the capital by the Venezuelan Government.
There is no ideal future city. There is no ideal society. That is a desideratum. Villanueva said 50 years ago that more important than making a city, is to think how the society supporting the city will be. In this thought of the maestro there is evidence of the unequivocal relationship between space and the society generating it under its different territorial scales.
Caracas and the future formal optics. Caracas may not be thought in its future only under the isolated formal optics. The good architecture of the city of Caracas should be fostered from the public, institutional and private sectors, and its mutual conjunction and understanding are ideal for the quality of architectural production, one being conceived as a mean for the production of urban spaces exalting with their results a high architectural and urbanism quality. From the power it must be assumed and understood that without this permanent imbrication and demands the city’s architecture and urbanism won’t have any glorification.
City, power and culture. The city is the territorial basis of progress, of intelligence, of urban culture, of all representing social advance. From the heads of power the vectors aiming at that goal should be fostered.
Human organization in national and municipal power, as well as its actors’ cultural level, must improve in the future in order that Caracas may count with «thinkers-executors» allowing to transcend local and metropolitan scales, in order to equally project Caracas in its international presence’s reconquest.
There is almost always a relationship between the culture in power and the urban planning and architectural results in the cities whose management is interwoven with knowledge, culture, education and the soul’s necessary sensibility required in order to understand architecture in and for the city.
Public space and future Caracas. Future enjoyment of public spaces will depend on the valuation maintained of their city by caraqueños. One must seek an amiable, secure city in order to relive the caraqueño’s moral and existential valuation, of what its city is expected to be, and to be able to give it its soul. In the future, the caraqueño must nourish its soul in order to permanently struggle, seeking to reach in the future a level of fullness multiplying its citizens’ enjoyment’s offer.
Future Caracas and the private sector. Without private property nor private production there is no development. Of course, the State must regulate, in the goods sense, its operation with social purpose, Historically, the city and business are indivisible, on top of the toning that they give to the city.
Caracas and its future projects. One must open Caracas’ «door to the sea», currently ignored. It is necessary to develop its shores’ costal skyline. Great Caracas must overrun what is provincial and local, and think from the power about its international character and its position on the Caribbean. That would give it a major economic turnout, especially to the metropolis and the country.
New investments must be made in infrastructure, big macro projects transforming the city and transforming the country, joined by the new information and communication technologies, massive and efficient transportation collective public systems in order that Caracas may fulfill its future innovative and high prospective productivity role. Nowadays, knowledge is what induces the nations’ progress and the great ideological added value.
Finally, the model to be followed is the innovative thinking one, based on knowledge development. If this model is not successfully developed, the future of Caracas will remain in torpor, under temporary social and spatial drowsiness.
100 commemorating actions
William Niño Araque
Defined as an optimist without remedy, William Niño Araque always defended that Caracas was a splendid open laboratory and a privileged city to live in. In 1993 he published an article in El Diario de Caracas in which
he proposed «one hundred ideas», concrete urban ideas,
as a requirement for the city’s transformation and to
place it on its holy place.
Caracas… needs an abbot to make it sacred, an archangel to protect it, a cardinal to put order in it, a monk to clean it, a gardener to trim it, a carpenter to varnish it, a conqueror to discover it, a discoverer to seduce it, a passion to heal its injuries, to make it tidy, sacred, beautiful, passable, virginal and possible, made of architecture.
The choice of a repertoire of 100 actions or announcements commemorate the architectural events acting over an already created city, one highly dense, with minimal available spaces, and with the sole resource of disorganization. This end of century’s challenge (the new century) is to build on what has already been built, reordering, welding, recovering, mending, sanitizing and revitalizing what already exists.
Opening Caracas’ door to La Guaira. Defining the law for the protection of the highway as a landscape prelude facing the Caribbean. Put order in the door-buildings pointing out Catia’s access to he city. Include in the regulations an architectural strategy governing the city’s growth and allowing the inclusion of typologies; corridor building, corner building, bridge building, patio building.
Maintain as a priority the culmination of the Vargas Park and the realization of the Fifth Centenary Square,declare those today’s city’s central pieces. Eliminate the ugly statue of Bolívar at the Vargas park. Eradicate the Nuevo Circo bus terminal at La Hoyada and declare it a cancelled chapter of Caracas’ history.
Assume the eastern freeway with its huge and displaced landscape potential as a symbol of the city, fostering in it the continuity of new events opening the city towards the North, South, East and West.
Recover the La Estrella square at San Bernardino, revalue the Titania and Astor buildings.
Implant seven promenades in some sort of law of the street: 1. Pérez Bonalde square, Sucre avenue, The Calvary; 2. Artigas square, San Martín, O’Leary; 3. The Lions bridge, La Paz avenue, Madariaga square; 4. O’Leary square, Vargas park, Venezuela square; 5. the Three Graces square, Los Ilustres promenade, Los Próceres; 6. Sabana Grande, Chacaíto, Altamira, 7. Parque del Este, Petare.
Use El Silencio’s experience as the most significant contribution of Caracas’ condition; the horizontal block and the closed block around a patio, something that could be reproduced at other sectors of the city. Foster the execution of urban monuments dedicated to its great promoters: Luis Roche, Manuel Mujica Millán, Carlos Raúl Villanueva, Luis Malaussena and Carlos Guinand Sandoz.
Declare the Savoy, Polar and Coca Cola signboards at the Venezuela square as monuments. Recover the Bello Monte and Las Mercedes Art Deco bridges. Make public the Bicentenary square. Walk during four hours a week (mayor’s duty). Restore the old PanAm building of the Urdaneta avenue. Intervene along the horrible Lecuna and North San Agustín avenues.
Clean, relocate and recover of El Paraíso’s La India splendor and axis. Point out Petare as one of the city’s doors, demarcate its acropolis. Restore the Simón Bolívar Center’s towers. Recover the Narváez Dolphins’ water, Restore the Humboldt hotel.
Eradicate, irrevocably, the peddlers’ progressive invasion, visually contaminating the city’s main multiple axis. Retake the Museo del Oeste in its condition of balcony-terrace. Transform the heavy, outdated, bastard and destructive ordinances carried out by donkeys, into light, flexible regulations, under the command of virtuous people.
Protect La Candelaria as a singular landmark. Promote a new interest towards unexplored sectors as Gramovén, La Silsa and Los Flores. Assume La Urbina, Santa Rosalía, San José o Parque Central, as the paradigm of brutal, ugly and clumsy experiences.
Typologically repeat the experience of the Altolar building. Retake Alcock’s idea to recover a series of locations within a system spread along the Guaire river. Recover the city’s Caribbean atmosphere starting from water and arborization. Take off the hindrances or «works of art». Eliminate the visual pollution blocking the sidewalks. Open the city’s perspectives towards the mountain. Recover its brooks and streets. Create a city, without extending its dominions, but recovering its forgotten fragments.
Recover the North-South street going from the Country Club towards the Tamanaco hotel. Build urgent communication bridges over the Guaire river. Free the viaduct on top of the Tamanaco as a visual extension of Las Mercedes main avenue and develop a small square and a fountain in that confined space. Recover El Calvario and the normal use of the Cagigal Observatory as something to be used every day by citizens. Restore the water of all the city’s fountains. As an ethical and honorable condition, save Las Guaycas house at Campo Alegre as the first monument of Caracas’ modernity… cut, weld, sew… place the city at its holy place.