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Architecture in Uniform. Designing and Building for the Second World War | Jean-Louis Cohen | 9782754105309

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Architecture in Uniform

Designing and Building for the Second World War

Author:Jean-Louis Cohen

Publisher:CCA

ISBN: 978--2-75410-530-9

  • Hardcover
  • English
  • 448 Pages
  • Apr 8, 2011

While many architects were called to serve as active combatants, others were able to pursue their professional work in the service of an intensified industrial production. The war drew upon every aspect of architectural expertise and led to significant design innovations and advances in technology and production. As a result, architects were almost as strategically indispensable as engineers and scientists in contributing to their respective countries’ war efforts.

“The war was a process of transformation involving all components of architecture in its mobilisation. This militarisation of the field forced the pursuit of the new in order to meet the demands of war production: new materials needed to be implemented in new ways, and new technologies needed to be put to new uses,” states exhibition curator Jean-Louis Cohen, Sheldon H. Solow Professor of History of Architecture at New York University.

While many architects were called to serve as active combatants, others were able to pursue their professional work in the service of an intensified industrial production. The war drew upon every aspect of architectural expertise and led to significant design innovations and advances in technology and production. As a result, architects were almost as strategically indispensable as engineers and scientists in contributing to their respective countries’ war efforts.


“The war was a process of transformation involving all components of architecture in its mobilisation. This militarisation of the field forced the pursuit of the new in order to meet the demands of war production: new materials needed to be implemented in new ways, and new technologies needed to be put to new uses,” states exhibition curator Jean-Louis Cohen, Sheldon H. Solow Professor of History of Architecture at New York University.

Among the defining characteristics of World War II were its total industrialisation and the elimination of the traditional combat front as aerial attacks brought the war to cities far removed from the front line. Architects were involved in defining new offensive and defensive tactics, planned and built factories to realise unprecedented production pressures, devised urban schemes for civilian housing, as well as concentration camps, and influenced the occupation, destruction and reconstruction of cities.

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