Abstract
In continuity with the author’s longstanding research on forms of open, continuous and temporary space launched in the late sixties together with the Archizoom Associati (1969–72) and in accordance with his custom of using the urban project as social and cultural critique, Agronica is one of the author’s best-known theoretical projects.
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Notes
- 1.
I refer to their research on “No Stop City”. See Branzi, A. (2006). No-stop city: Archizoom associati. Orleans: Hyx.
- 2.
See Waldheim, C. (2010, November). Notes toward a history of agrarian urbanism. Places Journal. and Waldheim, C. (2018). Industrial economy and agrarian urbanism. In P. Viganò, P. Cavalieri, & M. Barcelloni Corte (Eds.), The horizontal metropolis between urbanism and urbanization. Springer.
- 3.
See Branzi, A. (2006). Modernità debole e diffusa (pp. 9, 10, 132). Milano: Skira.
- 4.
See Branzi, A. (2003) «Weak and spread». Rotterdam, The Netherlands: Public lecture at the Berlage Institute.
- 5.
Branzi, A. Donegani, D. Petrillo, A. Raimondo, C. with Tamar, B. D. (1995). Metropoli simbiotiche: Agronica. In E. Manzini & M. Susani (Eds.), The Solid Side. Naarden: V+K (pp. 101–120). Reprinted courtesy of A Branzi.
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Branzi, A. (2022). Agronica (1995). In: Barcelloni Corte, M., Viganò, P. (eds) The Horizontal Metropolis. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-56398-1_27
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